• SoPunny
    link
    241 year ago

    Talk about unalienable rights to life and liberty

    • Dissasterix
      link
      -111 year ago

      Most of the rights after the first 10 are 100% alienable in a naturalist sense. A man in the jungle will speak freely and associate voluntarily… A man in the jungle has a right to not be lorded over for more than 8 years by one individual (a la 25A, for instance)…? The verbiage becomes meaningless.

      • @queermunist
        link
        6
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        Uh if a jungle cat wants you to shut the fuck up then your inalienable right to free speech won’t protect you lol

        • Dissasterix
          link
          11 year ago

          Eh, I could try my primal scream :] Even empty-handed, I’d fight. And you would too!

          • @queermunist
            link
            41 year ago

            Sure! But if you have to fight for a right it’s not really inalienable, is it?

            • Dissasterix
              link
              -21 year ago

              But fighting IS the right ;] Even struggling with in handcuffs is envoking your animal nature.

              • @queermunist
                link
                41 year ago

                And if they shoot you for resisting arrest you won’t be struggling much after that.

                Nothing is inalienable.

                • Dissasterix
                  link
                  01 year ago

                  Yes, I can be killed. And, sure, inanimate objects and the deceased do not have rights. However it would still be questionable as to why a restrained person was shot :p Further, our mortality does not mean that we dont have rights, lol. This is objectively true as you will die yet you have inalienable rights.

                  • @queermunist
                    link
                    31 year ago

                    Our mortality literally does mean we don’t have inalienable rights - rights are things we fight to have and maintain, not something we’re just born with by virtue of being alive. All rights can be taken away if they aren’t protected, they aren’t sacred or magic or God-given.

                    The Founders considered these rights inalienable because they were superstitious and believed in immortal souls. In their minds, death didn’t really rob people of their rights because their spirit would always be free.

                    Without 1700s superstition to justify the concept it doesn’t really work.

      • @pallas
        link
        61 year ago

        The US Bill of Rights only includes the first 10 amendments, so the 25A isn’t included. It also doesn’t itself contain “unalienable”, that being only in the Declaration of Independence, and in the discussions around the proposal of the amendments.

        While the whole unalienable rights of all people that we’re just stating as one country rather seems like Enlightenment ridiculousness and extremely pretentious, and I’ve certainly seen interpretations that are extremely hegemonic, such as arguing that the US Bill of Rights applies to all countries, it doesn’t include later amendments.

        • Dissasterix
          link
          31 year ago

          A man of civics :] Very cool.

          I agree with pretentiousness-- They were trying really hard. By and large I like that, the big ideals. The unavoidable glaring problem is the paradox of freedom AND governance. Like, even lawless pirates begged the question; ‘What do we do with a drunken sailor?’. Its not trivial.