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View Full Version : Privilege of the many - rights of the few


andrewlittle
11-05-2008, 09:05 AM
Even while it has been a broad topic of conversation this and other forums in which I participate, I have stayed out of the discussion about California's Prop 8. The reason has not been due to support or lack thereof, but with the major dis-ease I have suffered over the concept of voting on rights. When rights become the purview of the majority to grant or take away, they are no longer rights but privileges.

From American Heritage Dictionary:
Right – noun.
A just claim or title, whether legal, prescriptive, or moral: You have a right to say what you please.
That which is due to anyone by just claim, legal guarantees, moral principles, etc.: (women's rights; Freedom of speech is a right of all Americans.)
[The addition of “inalienable” to “rights” emphasizes the constitutional concept.]

Privilege - noun.
A special advantage, immunity, permission, right, or benefit granted to or enjoyed by an individual, class, or caste.
Such an advantage, immunity, or right held as a prerogative of status or rank, and exercised to the exclusion or detriment of others.
The principle of granting and maintaining a special right or immunity: a society based on privilege.

The amount of money spent on campaigning for denying the “privilege” of marriage to lesbians and gays was enormous, as was that spent on defending the right of all to marry. Beyond the amount of material possessions given to fight this battle, however, is the grim reality that “rights” in this country can now be bought and sold to the highest bidder for the popular vote. It might seem inconceivable that the “success” of the Yes on 8 campaign could precipitate the conversion of other rights to privileges, but that is indeed the danger. Rights that can be popularly converted to privilege are rights no longer, and they are certainly not inalienable.

If marriage is deemed a privilege as opposed to a right, what other roles in society are up for redefinition? Those things we assume are rights – voting, working, owning, etc. – run the risk of becoming privileges that can be taken away when the majority decides it is in their best interest to do so. This, of course, will only logically happen when the majority is threatened in some way real or perceived. Is this not such a time? Has there been a time in our memories when the majority has been threatened to the extent it is now? This is a time of dis-ease that could promote a social disease of even more stringently restricting the rights of others.

Given that the roles of women that were held up in Obama’s acceptance speech only included wives, sisters, mothers, grandmothers and supporters, can we expect the long anticipated change-master to overcome innate privilege and bias to do what is truly right. Missing from the list at the beginning of his speech were women – oh, they were included by inference, just as they are included inferentially in the concept “all men are created equal”, but never mentioned in terms of what women have accomplished. Even the considerable time spent talking about the venerable Ann Nixon Cooper discussed not what she had done, but what she had witnessed. Absent was any acknowledgment of the considerable accomplishments of women, especially women of color, outside of the traditional roles of being supportive of men. This may indeed be an oversight but, as many of us know, oversights give insights into the psyches of leaders.

One of the changes I hope Obama has the courage to make is to bring about a dialogue of the nature of rights. Right now this country has been taught, yet again, that it is the “right” of the majority to ride roughshod over the minority – to vote to limit or eliminate rights. The majority has not exercised its “right”, but rather has shown and used its privilege, granted simply by virtue of being the majority, to extinguish a group of people from the classification so primitively described in the affirmation “All men are created equal.”

tdogg
11-05-2008, 09:50 AM
Thanks for your wise and thoughtful words Andrew. I urge you to write an editorial to our local paper, the Sacramento Bee. I'm not looking forward to the gloating and grins on the faces of those who voted for Prop 8. They seem pleased that rights have been extinguished and they remain privileged while others do not. Actually your post would be the perfect editorial. :love:

Daniel
11-05-2008, 06:26 PM
Andy- thank you for your thoughts, which remind me of the words of De Tocqueville, that is, when he wrote about 'the tryanny of the majority'.

Rick336
11-05-2008, 06:45 PM
Andy - good point, and eloquently said. Thank you.

Rick

christa08
11-07-2008, 02:44 AM
From what I've heard, Prop 8 was passed. I'm very sad to hear this news even though it doesn't affect me personally. I think it's pathetic that in 2008, there are still so many people who don't recognize the fact that whether you are gay or straight, you are a human being who deserves the same rights as everyone else. I'm hoping that this is somehow changed in the near future so that homosexuals are able to marry the people that they love the way I've been so lucky to marry the man that I love. :pray: