rEvolutionist wrote:
The point about "rights" is that they are meaningless unless they protected by some power/force/whatever. So you might feel legitimate in claiming that you have a natural right to life, and Jonno and I might claim that no such right exists; but without the state (or some other substitute) to protect your "right", we all end up in the same reality - that is, we don't really have a right to life. That's the idea behind a constitution or bill of rights or whatever. Now I know that this is going to set Jonno off on some bollocks (as we've been there and done this with him for years

), so we'll just have to deal with that when it comes. Essentially, the only right you can bank on in the world is "Might is right". It sucks, I know, but that doesn't change the reality. And you're far better off dealing with reality, as shitty as it might be, than living in a fantasy. And if you deconverted from Christianity at some point, then you have already had to deal with a similar issue.

I do, thus far (since no one has yet convinced me otherwise), feel legitimate in claiming natural rights (though I could not give as eloquent a reasoning as several others in this thread have). That said, I also agree with you insofar as rights become
effectively meaningless in the face of a challenge by an overwhelming opponent. I may, in fact, have a right to life, but it means exactly squat if a bunch of hoodlums overpower me and hang me from the end of a rope so that they may help themselves to my property. As you say, "Might is right". It is at this point that you invoke the need for the State (or some other substitute) to protect/grant (MrJonno) my rights. I feel this is premature, however, because we have not yet considered the obvious "first responder" -me. I would venture that this reality is why most of the libertarians I've listened to count the right to armed self-defense just as important as the right to life, liberty, and property. Essentially,
I am the "power/force/whatever" ultimately
responsible for protecting
my rights.
This is, as you succinctly put it, a rather shitty reality. Because it means that I must constantly go about my business armed to the teeth, ever-vigilant for signs someone may be about to deprive me of my rights. I must do this by default, because even though I believe that the vast, vast majority of people are rational actors who would just as soon conduct their business without resorting to force or fraud (particularly if they have not been preconditioned to an entitlement mentality), anyone intending to deprive me of life or liberty is likely not going to announce his/her intention a week in advance. Obviously, this constant state of vigilance and burden of arms is going to interfere with my specialization of labor and productivity, not to mention my happiness.
It is at this point (in this grossly simplified analogy) that I think a legitimate role for the State can be found. Rather than everyone needing to be in a constant state of individual readiness to ward off force or fraud despite the relative unlikelihood that any one of the group will experience force or fraud at any given time, the members of a group agree to create a government. To this government, they grant a few of their (intrinsic) rights, including the right to use force to prevent, halt, or punish the use of force or fraud against an innocent member of the society (including providing for a common defense against "outsiders"). However, any rights the government has were granted it
by those who formed it, and are actually vested in them, and only on loan to the government with the continuing consent of the governed. We agreed to form a government to
specialize in the safeguarding of our rights,
not to grant those rights to us! The idea that my rights are granted to me by some amalgam of nincompoops who couldn't be arsed to get real jobs and instead went into politics defies my capacity for credulity.
At any rate, that is the (very) rough version of my (mis)understanding of political philosophy so far. I expect there are many who disagree with it, and I actually look forward to reading the destruction of my naïveté. Just... be gentle

(ok, not really, have at it, tell me why I'm wrong.)