| That's a lot of statements, so I'll dissect them. > People can exercise their rights as people. Or, they can create legal fictions with no rights. How exactly do you think they can create these legal fictions? Through their rights. That's how corporations inherit them. Keep in mind I'm not focusing on LLCs, but the more broader concept, that also includes an organized society under a common set of rules. > There's no intermingling/combination/whatever to call "rights", because there's nothing. There's clearly something, as "Microsoft" and "Google" are distinct entities. To imply there's nothing is to imply there's no difference. > Every action that legal fiction takes is a permission granted to it by society that continues to tolerate its existence. Who is "society" here? Everyone? Clearly not, or else this trial would not have reached this conclusion while others complain in the internet about its results. Generally, it refers to a group of people bound by a set of rules (the constituion, laws, etc.), i.e. a corporation. So it's a bit funny that a legal fiction decides whether other legal fictions exist. > Rights being inherent to people is an interesting but separate topic. We are in a discussion about whether corporations have rights or not. It ultimately will touch on the source of rights and where they are derived from. > We've generally agreed as a society that people have rights. Which doesn't do much against rights being legal fiction. Or corporations having rights. |
I have the legal right as a person to write on a piece of paper "i am a person". That piece of paper does not inherit any rights by my doing so.
Me writing "Microsoft" on one paper and "Google" on another paper certainly means that those two pieces of paper are distinct. Neither one, however, has rights.
What I meant by intermingling/combination/whatever is that, there are no rights to inherit, because a piece of paper has no rights, inherited or otherwise. That includes intermingled rights of people. People may have complex intermingled rights on certain subjects. That is not applicable to legal fictions, because they don't have rights and can't inherit rights.
I think it will become clear as you picture the silly idea of writing "I'm a piece of paper and I have rights" and then expecting that to mean anything. Work backwards from there.