Both those statements are so jaw-droppingly asinine, and so out of touch with the political realities of modern, civilized, free nations, that I can conclude only that you must be trolling. From now on, I'll ignore you.
Erm yes, I think you might have misunderstood me because I suck at writing. I'm going to reply to you in the hopes that you meant ignore in a metaphorical sense.
1) Of course rights exist, but
rights don't. That is, natural rights don't exist, but rather rights exist merely as (very good) social constructs so as to serve some sort of higher purpose. To put the word right in bold seems to imply that they are something sacred which goes beyond absolutely every other moral standard, and I don't think that's right. I don't think it's all that controversial to deny the existance of natural rights. Of course, maybe I misintrepreted the bold text, and therefore confused things.
2) How can you force a person to do something? Consider the following thought experiment where you have a person sit in a chair and ask them to push a button. You could threaten to kill them, but that's not really forcing, because they could just let you kill them. You could grab their arm and push it onto the button, but that's not really forcing, because they could just try really really hard to resist. Any action can in theory be resisted, unless you go into their brains and take away their ability to resist.
3) I don't see what political realities have to do with anything. Is does not imply ought. I am trying to construct a logical system by which I can determine what is good and what is bad. Allowing myself to be biased by what already exists would be irrational of me. In order to be unbiased, I need to isolate myself from reality as much as possible at look at everything in as hypothetical terms as possible, using reality merely as a case study into how things work.
4) I have not once in this thread made any endorsement one way or another of any actual political action. That would be jumping to conclusions before enough data is in, and would therefore be profoundly unskeptical. Maybe you're right. I just think that the particular arguments that are being used are flawed.