That is ingrained .i.e., instinct, in us. See E.O. Wilson, "The Social Conquest of Earth"A society is like a family : when one member of a family is ill, others help.
The same way normally when living in a society.
That is ingrained .i.e., instinct, in us. See E.O. Wilson, "The Social Conquest of Earth"A society is like a family : when one member of a family is ill, others help.
The same way normally when living in a society.
Actually that is not quite correct. But I think you must have meant. " it is a right that is inalienable." Some rights may be argued to be inalienable. The right to health care is perhaps one that it can be argued to have become, in modern times, "inalienable'.A right is inalienable.
I'm a trader, my ego was destroyed long ago. The point I was making is my right doesn't require you to do anything. Your benefit requires money. The BIG issue is the difference between a society and a government. The liberal view is that they are one and the same. And that is where we disagree and why we are always arguing over all the ills your misguided view has created for what should be matters that society always has and always will address.Actually that is not quite correct. Some rights may be argued to be inalienable. Imagine we are at the dinner table. I am your older, wiser dad. You say something that is really outrageously stupid. But being your dad, I don't want to put you down or attack your ego, especially in front of your younger siblings. So I say "That's not quite correct...".
As a nice example of an argument based on the idea of inalienability: see Scalia masterful opinion on Heller v District of Columbia.
Patriotism can be a very bad thing, just like an amazing job performance can be a very bad thing. See Mark Twain, who said that the only time you should support your country when it is wrong is when the Republic's life is a stake.I survived Obama and I didn't even get a hat. I won't get anything from any president. How will paying attention to your red flags improve life for anybody? Is that the new message? PLEASE WORRY!!! ??? You have not yet convinced me your fears are grounded because you have not explained what it is he is going to bring to the USA. So just keep waving those red flags and put a maple leaf on it while you're at it. Trump has brought patriotism back to our country. Should I be worried?
You're too fast. You should have better things to do with a Sunday afternoon. I edited heavily.you must have added the Scalia after i replied. What is the gist of Scalias opinion on inalienability, keep it simple, or you could just explain if in your opinion healthcare or education or food clothing and shelter are a right.
Does your benefit not require money? I am more interested in what works in practice, versus what should work, or what I wish would work.I'm a trader, my ego was destroyed long ago. The point I was making is my right doesn't require you to do anything. Your benefit requires money. The BIG issue is the difference between a society and a government. The liberal view is that they are one and the same. And that is where we disagree and why we are always arguing over all the ills your misguided view has created for what should be matters that society always has and always will address.
Does your benefit not require money? I am more interested in what works in practice, versus what should work, or what I wish would work.
In that respect I don't think it much matters whether healthcare is an inalienable right. Universal access to healthcare, as a practical matter, is an essential feature of any modern nation. If your country doesn't feature it, your country is second rate. It is really that simple!!!
There main objective seems to be discrediting of the U.S. media -- try to get the American public to discount everything the mainstream media reports. Your post is just one of many that tells me they are being successful. Amazing!
You pushed the button before you were done editing and I'm too fast? Ok, I'll go back and start all over, the only thing it is keeping me from is preparing my fathers taxes, but to cut to the chase, my right to bear arms does not mean you or the government have to buy me a gun. The rights are enumerated to put the government on notice that they must not infringe. The government is not required to provide me with life or liberty, they just can't take what little liberty and life I have left away.You're too fast. You should have better things to do with a Sunday afternoon. I edited heavily.
To bolster his entire argument, and in this instance consistent with his professed originalism, Scalia fell back on English common law that is the basis for our own U.S. laws. In English law it is clearly established that the right to bear arms is inalienable. In other words if this right is inalienable, like life liberty and the pursuit of happiness is inalienable, then there is hardly a need at all for the second amendment! It was a powerful, over arching argument. In my opinion, it was the most convincing part of his very long opinion. Where his argument was weak was in dispensing with the introductory clause of the second amendment. That part, I don't buy.
The consequences of Scalia's Heller Opinion caould be far reaching. This opinion is now the law of the land. In effect it says even if you amend the constitution. and repeal the second amendment, you can't get rid of the right to bear arms. It is inalienable! Scalia was a lovable, insufferable bastard. He was a table pounder, Evil to the core. He and his clerks were smart as whips.