Hakeer wrote:1. Did I say ONLY legal rights matter? No.
You said your legal property "rights" -- actually government-issued and -enforced privileges -- are facts, while everyone else's natural individual rights to life, liberty, and property in the fruits of their labor are merely my opinions.
What I said is that when we go to court, the judge is going to rule that you have no legal right to build your ugly statue 10 feet from my front door.
Or maybe he will rule that I do, if I happen to own that location, or it is public land I have been commissioned to create a statue for, etc. The ugliness of the statue and the proximity of your front door therefore have nothing to do with it. You are just trying to distract attention from the actual issue: your claim to own my right to liberty.
2. I also told you that I believe in human rights,
But in fact you do not, because all your "arguments" come down to your legal property "rights" having unconditional priority over others' human rights to liberty.
and freedom from slavery is a human right.
So is the right to use what nature provided for all to sustain one's own life. You just prefer to own others' rights to do that, because it legally entitles you to
treat them like slaves without all the bother of actually
owning them. We already established that. Remember? Here is the proof again:
"During the war I served in a Kentucky regiment in the Federal army. When the war broke out, my father owned sixty slaves. I had not been back to my old Kentucky home for years until a short time ago, when I was met by one of my father's old negroes, who said to me: "Master George, you say you set us free; but before God, I'm worse off than when I belonged to your father." The planters, on the other hand, are contented with the change. They say: "How foolish it was in us to go to war for slavery. We get labor cheaper now than when we owned the slaves." How do they get it cheaper? Why, in the shape of rents they take more of the labor of the negro than they could under slavery, for then they were compelled to return him sufficient food, clothing and medical attendance to keep him well, and were compelled by conscience and public opinion, as well as by law, to keep him when he could no longer work. Now their interest and responsibility cease when they have got all the work out of him they can.
-- From a letter by George M. Jackson, St. Louis, August 15, 1883, as reprinted in Henry George's Social Problems
Further proof is provided by the fact that slaves in the antebellum South enjoyed much
better material conditions of life than landless working people in Europe at that time: more food, better clothing and housing, shorter working hours, and longer life expectancy.
There is a very good reason for that. Can you guess what it is?
The material condition of the landless has been indistinguishable from that of slaves in
EVERY SINGLE SOCIETY IN THE HISTORY OF THE WORLD where private landowning has been well established but government has not intervened massively -- through welfare, labor standards laws, minimum wages, publicly funded education, pensions and health care, union monopolies, etc. -- to rescue the landless from enslavement by landowners.
It is enshrined by Article 4 of the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
I guess you missed Article 3, where it says everyone has a right to liberty.
I totally oppose it anywhere and everywhere whether legal or not.
No you don't. You insist that private landowners have a right to enslave the landless. Remember?
3. You do not have either a legal right, human right, or any other right to infringe my patent or build your statue in my yard.
I most certainly have a human right to do those things: my natural individual right to liberty. What would stop me but initiation of force by either greedy, evil parasites or government-issued and -enforced privilege?
4. There is a big difference between owning another human being and owning a piece of dirt.
Land is a location on the earth's surface, not "a piece of dirt," and the ONLY difference between owning a slave and owning land is that owning a slave means owning all of one person's rights, while owning land means owning one of all people's rights.
5. You don’t have a legal right to infringe my patent. That is clear. And it not a fundamental human right, either.
It most certainly is, just as it is a fundamental human right to support one's own life using what nature provided for all. What is your patent but a government-issued and -enforced monopoly privilege? Such things never existed in history until a few centuries ago, and everyone had a perfect right to invent, use, produce and sell others' inventions. If they had not, we would still be living in caves, enslaved by greedy, evil parasites.
The consequences do not elevate it to that status, as it does with slavery or murder.
Already refuted. Drug patents HAVE murdered millions of people.
You are free to develop your own drug for the same disease, or market my drug after I have had an opportunity to recoup the $2 billion I invested to bring it to market.
And I would be free to invent, produce, and market "your" patented drug if my natural individual liberty right to do so had not forcibly been stripped from me by government and made over to you as your private property.
6. I believe all people have equal rights under the First Amendment.
Except the rights that you claim legally to own.
However, I don’t believe you or anyone else has a “liberty right” to take or use my property without my consent. You do. That is where we disagree.
<sigh> That "argument" would have applied to chattel slaves in the antebellum South. As I have already informed you many times, any "argument" that would have justified chattel slavery is already known in advance to be fallacious, disingenuous, and evil, with no further argumentation needed.
Yet you keep on making them, over and over again, because you have no other arguments to offer.
If you want to gain even the slightest understanding of these issues, you need to identify a
logically consistent set of
principles that disallows slavery and other invalid and immoral forms of property but allows valid property rights.
I have done so. Can you?
Since we agree on everything you said about patents,
No we don't. You think patents legally establish a pre-existing right.
we are either BOTH right or BOTH wrong. Logic.
8. I explicitly stated that there is no guarantee I will ever recoup my investment.
No, you claimed a patent was to ensure you did. Remember?
If there are safety risks that didn’t arise in clinical trials, I may have to take it off the market and lose most of my investment and pay damages via class action lawsuit.
Or you can just do what the Sacklers did: have their company distribute to shareholders (them) the billions in profits it made by murdering hundreds of thousands of Americans, and let the company go bankrupt when the victims sue, neatly dodging financial as well as criminal responsibility for the murders they committed by hiding behind their legally created limited liability privilege.