The Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English gives this definition of Right:
There may be lots of things that we want, varied things, based on our personal motivations, but to what we have a right is decided in a distinctly impersonal manner. Our rights are awarded by group consensus: you can’t have a personal right to something unless the others around you agree with your claim, or they’ll take it away, an action that we may see as unfair.
I often hear talk about human rights on the news in respect to property ownership and access to services. Answers.com defines human rights as follows:
I can’t see anything in that definition that entitles a person to any of the things I mentioned before, or any physical possession at all, it’s the law that does that, and these laws are the embodiment of group consensus.
We confuse these two, and actually have a right to surprisingly little; except relative freedom to express ourselves, and have a say in the behavioural boundaries that are set by the law.
Just because we want something doesn’t give us the right to get it, and we’re going to have to face this fact in the coming years as we adapt to climate change and the impact of the financial crisis.
We in the UK won’t have the same financial freedom, and our public and private consumerism of the past decade will have to stop; people don’t have the right to own their home, and buy anything on a whim; and when combined with global population control, we have to reassess the right to have children, the acceptable scope of medical care, the cost of travel, and the price we pay for our food.
This might sound grim, but revisiting our attitudes could more evenly distribute genuine rights amongst those that value them, leading to a reduction in global poverty and conflict that would benefit us all.
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