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by rdiddly
2945 days ago
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I spoke very plainly. Banning prostitution and drugs were decisions made by a society, to restrict individuals. How productive they were, you can talk about with someone who wants to change the subject to that. The point was only that those restrictions were made. It happened. Same with myriad others. "The individual" was not held, by those people who enacted those laws, or by the majority of people who voted for those people, to be above the rule of law. Nor was the individual held to be above the rule of law in Enlightenment thought. The law was thought to be made by individuals acting collectively (a departure from having a single individual, i.e. monarch, doing it), so if anything the Enlightenment introduced the "collectivism" by pushing lawmaking down into a demographic that was much more populous. What do you think voting in a constitutional convention is? Individuals collectivizing! Just like Soviet farmers!!!!! Oh no! |
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Correct. And had individual rights been upheld we could have avoided the costly lessons and lives destroyed by those rights-trampling laws.
> Nor was the individual held to be above the rule of law in Enlightenment thought.
The theory of natural rights, which was central to the Enlightenment, held that the laws and governments were formed only to secure individual rights and could not be made to supersede them. A constitutional convention is voting on how to best uphold and respect those rights, not overrule them.