arthwollipot
Observer of Phenomena, Pronouns: he/him
Thomas Jefferson.There is no need for you to be a "twat" just because you haven't asked a question clearly.
Where does the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness come from?
Thomas Jefferson.There is no need for you to be a "twat" just because you haven't asked a question clearly.
Where does the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness come from?
ETA:
Even to this day the Militia Act of 1903 lists militias as:
Organized militia – consisting of the National Guard and Naval Militia.
Unorganized militia – comprising the reserve militia: every able-bodied man of at least 17 and under 45 years of age, who are not members of the National Guard or the Naval Militia.
Even now, under our own laws, militia is defined as "citizen who are part of government organized part time military organization dot dot dot and everybody in your neighborhood who owns guns."
This is all a read herring because the Founding Fathers were 100% clear that they never intended their words to be sacrosanct, Jefferson WANTED the Constitution rewritten in full every, I want to say, 20 years just to keep it from becoming stagnant.
But the idea that as said in the Constitution "militia" only means organized military units is just not true.
There was no question in my text you quoted. I may be unusual but I normally use this symbol '?' to indicate a question.There is no need for you to be a "twat" just because you haven't asked a question clearly.
Where does the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness come from?
Thomas Jefferson.
Where does the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness come from?
I don't know. Ask someone on death row they may have a view.
I don't believe in Gods or a higher authority that grants us these things as a right.
They are, as I see it aspirations humans want but don't always get. I don't see them as a right.
Who do you think gives us those rights and what is the remedy when those rights are taken away, when people die, are incarcerated or unhappy?
My question was rhetorical. A right is inherent, axiomatic. It doesn't "come from" anywhere.
Which rights? The right to rape, the right to torture? The right to own a gun?
Huh? Who has said that that there is a right to rape or torture.
My question was rhetorical. A right is inherent, axiomatic. It doesn't "come from" anywhere.
Huh? Who has said that that there is a right to rape or torture.
Err, you implied it.
Which was why I asked which rights are inherent and axiomatic
I posted your words not what I think you meant. You said "A right is inherent, axiomatic. It doesn't "come from" anywhere."No. That was your failure to comprehend what I said. If you really want to, post what you think I said that meant there is a right to rape or torture, and I'll do what I can to correct your thinking.
My question was rhetorical. A right is inherent, axiomatic. It doesn't "come from" anywhere.
[...]But how are we to decide? Who precisely is the arbiter of right and wrong?
Faced with this question, I’ve long given the same answer: no one is the “arbiter” of right and wrong. Individuals just have to consider the moral issue and form their best judgment. That hardly makes morality subjective. There’s no arbiter of scientific or historical truth, either.
I now realize that my answer could have been stronger all along. Yes, there’s no arbiter of scientific truth, of historical truth, of moral truth. But what truths – if any – do have an arbiter? When, if ever, is there a Decider of truth?
There is a simple answer: arbiters do indeed exist – but only for purely social truths. If your question is, “Are Jack and Mary married?,” an arbiter might exist. After all, to be married is nothing more than to be considered married by a society. If the people in a society accept the Grand Poobah as the arbiter of marriage, then whatever he decides about two people’s marital status is their true martial status.
The converse is also true: If a subject has an arbiter, that subject is fake. The fact that one person’s say-so decides an issue reveals the make-believe nature of the issue. Picture how you’d react if someone claimed to be the Arbiter of Math. Impossible, right? But why? Because math is a real subject with real answers that are right or wrong no matter what anyone thinks.
When people ask, “Who’s the arbiter of morality?,” the correct answer is indeed “No one.” But this answer, though correct, it is woefully incomplete. The critic’s insinuation – morality is subjective because it lacks an arbiter – is the opposite of the truth. If morality had an arbiter, that would be a conclusive sign of its subjectivity. The fact that morality lacks an arbiter is one sign – though hardly a conclusive one – that morality, like science, history, and math – has answers that no one’s mere say-so can undo.
Sorry for not bringing clear. Gun rights folk often refer to the 2nd amendment as allowing them to have guns. As I understand your argument that does not give any rights, it instead says they won't be taken away. You mention codified rights and that is what I would expect. Guns seems an exception, in it does not appear to be codified. I am trying to understand where it comes from.
I was asking where the right to bear arms comes from if the 2nd amendment doesn't give that right rather it says the right won't be removed.
Happy for you to point to where the right to bear arms is in the bill of rights. .
There is no need to be a twat just because you didn't understand my question.
The right to bear arms can be found in the 2nd Amendment: "... the right to bear arms shall not be infringed."
It doesn't need to be a separate specialized thing. It fits within #2 in your quote box, along with the phrase "regularly scheduled".Merriam-Webster says:
...If "well-regulated" has a separate definition specifically for the context of armies and the military, then I guess that's fair enough.
My question was rhetorical. A right is inherent, axiomatic. It doesn't "come from" anywhere.
Rights are legal, social, or ethical principles of freedom or entitlement; that is, rights are the fundamental normative rules about what is allowed of people or owed to people according to some legal system, social convention, or ethical theory.[1] Rights are of essential[citation needed] importance in such disciplines as law and ethics, especially theories of justice and deontology.
The history of social conflicts has often involved attempts to define and redefine rights. According to the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, "rights structure the form of governments, the content of laws, and the shape of morality as it is currently perceived".[1]
Which seems to imply that the right already exists and shall not be infringed upon, no?
Otherwise it would say something like "The people have the right to bear arms."
Exactly.
Rights, if they exist at all, exist before they're codified or recognized by any government. The 2nd Amendment simultaneously affirms this view, and recognizes the right to bear arms.