- Sep 10, 2001
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In the last thread I started, I questioned the current trend by our government to declare something a right when that "right" was really an imposition on individuals to provide a good or service for everyone else. I have been thinking about the cognitive framework surrounding such assertions for some time now. I think I now see the fundamental disconnect between this worldview and my own.
Such a framework is completely upside-down for me because it posits that rights are something granted by government to citizens. This implies that actions are prohibited unless specifically permitted. However, this is precisely the opposite view on which our nation (indeed, all just governments) was founded: "unalienable rights" are intrinsic and governments exist to protect them. In this view, actions are permitted unless specifically prohibited. Further, rights do not require action on the part of another (though upholding them may require inaction - e.g. killing, enslaving, or stealing must not be done as they would infringe rights to life, liberty, and property). Not so for the "new rights" of guaranteed pensions, healthcare, and higher education. Any time your "right" obligates another to give you his time or talent, he is your slave.
We are transforming from a nation based on rights to one based on obligations. It's been a gradual transition over decades. "Ask not what your country can do for you but what you can do for your country" should set off alarms for anyone under the impression that we live in a free, rights-based society. Government creep is very real and occurring at an accelerated rate. Indeed, it was for this very reason that Thomas Jefferson wrote in the Declaration of Independence's list of grievances, "He has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harrass our people, and eat out their substance." The level of government bureaucracy and invasiveness to which we are subject today dwarfs that experienced in the 1700's. Each added government worker is an imposition on the rights of citizens and further imbalances the equation which should govern the federal budget. The longer it takes everyone to realize that the shoe is on the wrong foot the deeper the hole will be.
Such a framework is completely upside-down for me because it posits that rights are something granted by government to citizens. This implies that actions are prohibited unless specifically permitted. However, this is precisely the opposite view on which our nation (indeed, all just governments) was founded: "unalienable rights" are intrinsic and governments exist to protect them. In this view, actions are permitted unless specifically prohibited. Further, rights do not require action on the part of another (though upholding them may require inaction - e.g. killing, enslaving, or stealing must not be done as they would infringe rights to life, liberty, and property). Not so for the "new rights" of guaranteed pensions, healthcare, and higher education. Any time your "right" obligates another to give you his time or talent, he is your slave.
We are transforming from a nation based on rights to one based on obligations. It's been a gradual transition over decades. "Ask not what your country can do for you but what you can do for your country" should set off alarms for anyone under the impression that we live in a free, rights-based society. Government creep is very real and occurring at an accelerated rate. Indeed, it was for this very reason that Thomas Jefferson wrote in the Declaration of Independence's list of grievances, "He has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harrass our people, and eat out their substance." The level of government bureaucracy and invasiveness to which we are subject today dwarfs that experienced in the 1700's. Each added government worker is an imposition on the rights of citizens and further imbalances the equation which should govern the federal budget. The longer it takes everyone to realize that the shoe is on the wrong foot the deeper the hole will be.