Welfare Rights are Wrong
Tibor R. Machan
Ever
since John Locke developed the theory of natural individual human
rights, there has been an ongoing attempt to change his idea to
something very different.
For
Locke the natural rights all human beings have are basically
prohibitions. They forbid people from intruding on other people--from
killing, assaulting, kidnapping, robbing them, and so forth. In the
field of political theory they are referred to as negative rights. They
hold up a sign to all concerning invading people’s lives and spheres
and insist: “Halt, you need permission to enter!”
This
can be well appreciated when one considers that throughout much of
history ordinary folks had been viewed as subjects, not sovereign
citizens. A subject is one who must follow the dictates of some master
or superior. Kings have subjects who must obey their will! Once this
fiction is abandoned, it becomes clear that all adult human beings are
independent agents, no one’s subject!
But
of course many insist that such sovereignty is highly objectionable
because it leaves it to the individual whether he or she will give
support to others and their various projects. Involuntary servitude is
ruled out if we are all sovereign citizens rather than subject to the
will of a king, tsar, or ruler. Even the majority may not ignore this
fact about us, so democracy is properly limited to some very few matters
once the sovereignty of individuals is acknowledged.
But
by introducing the idea of welfare or positive rights, we are back in
the old system since a positive right imposes an enforceable obligation
on one to provide others with goods and services, never mind what one
chooses to do. Thus if people have a positive right to health care or
insurance or education or housing or a job, they must be provided with
this, just as when their right to life or liberty is recognized, they
must not be interfered with.
One’s
basic rights impose obligations on everyone not to violate them. But
negative rights only impose an obligation to treat others without
resorting to coercion, without using them against their will.
Involuntary servitude counters this and sanctions violating such rights
as to one’s life, liberty, property, etc., holding that we are born
with enforceable obligations of various sort of services to others--God,
the state, our neighbors, etc. Instead of seeing us all as free and
independent persons, the positive rights doctrine re-affirms the ancient
idea that we do not have a life of our own.
The
more modern idea is that while we ought to be generous and charitable,
this has to be something we choose! That is the only way our moral
nature is protected and preserved, if the right things we ought to do
are done voluntarily, not forcibly imposed by others.
The basic point here is that the doctrine of positive or welfare rights stands on its had John Locke’s insight about the status of an adult human being in a human community, an insight that had been growing in influence in America and the West until recently. But instead of relying on people’s good will and generosity to help out those in need of various goods and services, the positive or welfare rights doctrine reintroduces the old regime that people in society aren’t free agents but serfs. (Here is the main point of F. A. Hayek’s superb book, The Road to Serfdom [Routledge, 1944] in which he critiques the modern welfare state!)
2 comments:
You fucking worthless racist cunt- You will be beaten to death- that is my prediction. Go fuck yourself.
How civilized you are! Congratulation for helping to make my case, given the quality of my critic!
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