Yes, I dispute this. I have the right to let people into my home, but I do not have the right to let people into your home, and likewise you don't have the right to allow people into mine. And together we don't have a right to let people into Bob's home.
This is obviously a point of much contention then. I think that the rights a person has are the ones that the people in the society around them say that they have. You think that the rights a person has are the ones that you personally say that people have.
It seems obvious to me that pragmatically and philosophically, my answer is the correct one, if not the ideal one. Under the circumstances I described in my last post, for example, someone with your beliefs could complain about the guy who walked into his home without permission, but would be ignored by everyone else, and if the complainer tried to defend his property, the society would lock the complainer up, not the guy who took his stuff.
And then at a later time if the majority of people vote to allow you to be anally raped on the 50 yard line of the super bowl, then I guess they gained that right.
Correct.
This is what I want to improve on. Have a system that better caters to and reflects the views of everyone, not just the majority.
How, and more importantly why? Deciding laws based on what the majority wants is, in general, the best way to create a safe and stable society.
Only those rights that they possess individually.
I don't understand what you mean. The people of a society have the right to decide only those rights that they possess individually? Forgive me if I mangled what you're saying, but I honestly can't make heads or tails of it. Just one paragraph down you say that you think that everyone has natural rights such as the natural right to self ownership.
This is a fairly complicated topic, but it all extends from the one natural right that everyone possess, the right to self ownership.
I asked you where your "natural rights" come from, not what they are.
All other rights are, as you said, just concepts created on top of that (obviously they don't exist in the real world since they can, and are, trampled on all the time).
I think your "natural rights" are the same kind of concept, except that I don't think many would agree with you about them. I think most people would agree with me in my position that all rights come from the society and that natural rights do not exist. If a society has laws that say killing and slavery are okay, it would be a terrible society to live in, but that doesn't change the fact that you would not have your "natural right" to self ownership if you chose to go and live there.
However, there is a natural and logical progression from that toward property rights. The rights that we all possess represent a balance of rights between everyone, "your rights end where mine begin." The maximum set of rights for everyone is that where nobody has the right to remove someone else's rights, when they have not removed anyone else's.
So, that's why I say that no one has a right to harm anyone who hasn't harmed anyone else. Obviously, this is all just philosophical, but I think that it's an excellent logical starting place.
Yes, it is all just philosophical, and that's the problem. This idea might someday be the founding principle of a nation, but it is not a universal truth that applies to everyone across history including people today.
I also think it makes logical sense that one person cannot give rights to another that they do not possess themselves. Any explanation just seems to be tortured rationalisation. The rationalisation seems to primarily be that those rights can be given to government because the majority has declared it so and minority can just lump it. It's not so much a logical construct, but an admission that might makes right.
Again, a right is not a physical object that you have to hand from one person to another. I don't think it takes much work to rationalize the fact that if a society tells you that you have certain rights and you defy them by breaking one of the laws, everyone else will see you as in the wrong and arrest you. Do you at least see that it is pragmatically true that rights come from the society?
More specifically, the idea is that if a law punishes someone for doing something that harmed no one, then that law should be ignored. That's not always practical, I know, there are plenty of laws I follow out of fear of punishment.
The law should never be ignored because, as I said, it is your choice whether you live in the society or not. The entire point is that most people in the society don't want individuals to have the ability to decide for themselves what is right and what is wrong. If you don't like a law, lobby to change it or leave. If your idea about the law is good, then I imagine you will be able to build some support and get the law changed.
It's a good thing that the American Founding Fathers or Ghandi didn't take your advice. I'm not recommending armed conflict, far from it, that would send things backwards. I'm just interested in improving the system in ways that are outside of the narrow set of ways sanctioned by the government.
The American Founding Fathers had the support of large groups of people, and they knew that their decisions reflected the will of those people. You have the support of very few people, and it is my opinion that the decisions you would make to change society reflect the will of almost no one.