Rights? What rights?

“Man descended from apes, therefore we must love one another.”

Vladimir Solovyov

I love this Solovyov quote. Buried within the sarcasm is the reasoning, of course, that the one does not follow the other. That there’s a difference between our concepts of human rights and ethics as matters of opinion versus them being something that is “self-evident.”

But what are the options if our rights aren’t self-evident? Are they derived from the simple axiom of treating others as you would have them treat you? The survival of the species by mutual agreement that it is better not to harm each other? I could see that point, but it still leaves me with a subjective concept of human value that permits whole societies to do as they wish with those whom they deem “less than human” — or at least, whom the government determines doesn’t meet the criteria for counting.

We’ve seen this throughout history – in the genocide of the Native American and enslavement of the black African; in the rounding up and gassing of Jews in Nazi Germany; in the dehumanizing of the baby in the womb. Humanity’s schizophrenia on the matter is only complicated by this view that many hold without even realizing it — that there is, at the root of it all, no real reason for anyone to take human rights seriously.

This may sound like a bold claim – of course we must take human rights seriously.  But why? I suppose we could circle around to the simple answer that we all want our own rights taken seriously – it’s absolutely crucial to our comfort and survival. But really, why should I care for your comfort as long as mine is secure?

On the global stage, even we “innocents” in the West are complicit. We live on goods produced by forced labor of children and “minorities” – if not directly, then at least by partnering with the perpetrators. We certainly don’t have to look far. Our number one business partner is a nation that adheres far more closely to the tenets of secular humanism than we. They’ve rounded up religious minorities and forced them into labor camps. They’ve jailed journalists and lawyers. They’ve forced themselves into previously semi-autonomous cities, installing their own governments and removing monuments to the students they murdered over 30 years ago in the streets of their own capital. And yet, do we have the right ourselves to call them wrong?

We do. We’re right on this because we all [humans] have a unique identifying characteristic that says we are of equal value. The American founders so simply articulated it for us nearly 250 years ago: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”

All of us are created equal and have been given the rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness by our creator. Help me here, because I can see no way around this. Either we get our rights from something in a way that applies equally to all of us, or we don’t.  And if we don’t, then we have little recourse but to allow for what we may ourselves believe to be injustices against humanity because we have no foundation for such beliefs other than our own opinions. And if they’re our opinions we must either respect the opinions of others who feel differently than we, or we must enforce them upon others. There is no moral right in this way. It is simply a matter of having the power to do such a thing. Or, as the saying goes, “might makes right.”

If you think about it though, real life looks to be favoring it that way. While the Nazis were murdering Jews, we did not have the power to stop them until we beat them in 1945. But did that mean they were right up to that point? And right now, although we believe it’s wrong to oppress religious minorities, we do not have the power to stop the oppressors in some countries (some of them even get to hold the Olympics). Does that mean they are right? Again – who’s to say? You? Why?

I ask these questions because I want to make it clear: I believe the murder of the Jews by the Nazis was wrong. I believe the oppression of religious minorities – the oppression of anyone for that matter – is wrong. I believe the murder of babies in the womb is wrong. But not because it’s my opinion that makes it so. It’s because each and every one of the oppressed and murdered have value as ones created in the image of God. A value assigned outside of themselves and against which our opinions have no moral standing.

It is upon this that I can confidently stand when I say that we all have rights. To do otherwise makes no sense.

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Gail
Gail
4 years ago

We could have stopped the murder by Nazis of some of those Jews if we had supported immigration instead of denying visas. Immigration reform and ending the death penalty are 2 human rights issues that get lost behind easier, more glamorous and marketable issues.

Noelle Watson
Noelle Watson
4 years ago

Why do you oppose the death penalty?