Personal Rights as Property Rights
Personal
Rights as Property Rights
A
look at the legal themes of the Imperium
The words rights have been tossed
around quite frequently, thus I thought it might be important to explain the
Concordat’s concept of personal rights and how they evolved from property
rights.
Most people seem to think that personal
rights are somehow independent from property rights, but it is not so. The
modern interpretation of the feudal property rights, they evolved to the
present concept of personal rights from property rights. In much the same way
that fee-simple title is only the modern translation of Feudal Title; the
incorporated city, county, state, province and country still maintains superior
title and hence still can levy taxes, make land use ordnances, and even force
transfer via claims of public domain.
In the same way, personal rights are
just a modern translation of the property rights that were previously only
afforded to royalty and nobility and to a lesser extent to landed aristocracy.
The only change really is that people were said to have the property rights of
their person, and that the person had the right to own other property and be
afforded property rights.
A
special note: property ownership is a right only afforded to the living.
The
concept of "personal rights" only makes sense as property rights.
There is a general wish to preserve the
concept of "personal rights" such as freedom of speech, while denying
the concept to private property.
There are no Personal Rights which are
not also property rights. Personal Rights lose their absoluteness and clarity
and become fuzzy and vulnerable when property rights are not used as the
standard.
There are two senses in which property
rights are identical with Personal Rights:
One, that property can only accrue to
Sophonts, so that their rights to property are personal rights that belong to
Sophont beings
Two, that the person's right to his own
body, his personal liberty, is a property right in his own person as well as a
"Personal Right."
Personal Rights, when not put in terms
of property rights, turn out to be vague and contradictory, weakening those
rights on behalf of "public policy" or the "public good."
Freedom of speech is supposed to mean
the right of everyone to say whatever he likes. But the neglected question is:
Where? Where does a person have this right? He certainly does not have it on
property on which he is trespassing. He has this right only either on his own
property or on the property of someone who has agreed, as a gift or in a rental
contract, to allow him on the premises. There is no such thing as a separate
"right to free speech"; there is only a person's property right: the
right to do as he wills with his own or to make voluntary agreements with other
property owners.
A person does not have a "right to
freedom of speech"; what he does have is the right to hire a hall and
address the people who enter the premises. He does not have a "right to
freedom of the press"; what he does have is the right to write or publish
a pamphlet, and to sell that pamphlet to those who are willing to buy it (or to
give it away to those who are willing to accept it). Thus, what he has in each
of these cases is property rights, including the right of free contract and
transfer which form a part of such rights of ownership. There is no extra
"right of free speech" or free press beyond the property rights that
a person may have in any given case.
Couching the analysis in terms of a
"right to free speech" instead of property rights leads to confusion
and the weakening of the very concept of personal rights. The most famous
example is Justice Holmes's contention that no one has the right to shout
"Fire" falsely in a crowded theatre, and therefore that the right to
freedom of speech cannot be absolute, but must be weakened and tempered by considerations
of "public policy."
If we analyze the fire in a crowded
theatre problem in terms of property rights, there is no weakening of the
absoluteness of rights is necessary. [ Furthermore, the view that the shout of
"fire" causes a panic is deterministic and is another version of the
"incitement to riot" fallacy. It is up to the people in the theatre
to assess information coming to them. If this were not so, why wouldn't
correctly warning people of an actual fire in a theatre be a crime, since it
too might incite a panic? The disruption involved in falsely yelling
"fire" is actionable only as a violation of property rights.]
Logically, the shouter is either a
patron or the theatre owner. If he is the theatre owner, he is violating the
property rights of the patrons in quiet enjoyment of the performance, for which
he took their money in the first place. If he is another patron, then he is
violating both the property right of the patrons to watching the performance
and the property right of the owner, for he is violating the terms of his being
there. For those terms surely include not violating the owner's property by
disrupting the performance he is putting on. In either case, he may be
prosecuted as a violator of property rights; therefore, when we concentrate on
the property rights involved, we see that the Holmes case implies no need for
the law to weaken the absolute nature of rights.
Justice Hugo Black, a well-known
"absolutist" on behalf of "freedom of speech," made it
clear, in a trenchant critique of the Holmes "shouting 'fire' in a crowded
theatre" argument, that Black's advocacy of freedom of speech was grounded
in the rights of private property.
Thus Black stated:
I went to a theatre last night with
you. I have an idea if you and I had gotten up and marched around that theatre,
whether we said anything or not, we would have been arrested. Nobody has ever
said that the First Amendment gives people a right to go anywhere in the world
they want to go or say anything in the world they want to say. Buying the
theatre tickets did not buy the opportunity to make a speech there. We have a
system of property which is protected by the Constitution. We have a system of
property, which means that a person does not have a right to do anything he
wants anywhere he wants to do it. For instance, I would feel a little badly if
somebody were to try to come into my house and tell me that he had a
constitutional right to come in there because he wanted to make a speech
against the Supreme Court. I realize the freedom of people to make a speech
against the Supreme Court, but I do not want him to make it in my house. That
is a wonderful aphorism about shouting "fire" in a crowded theatre.
But you do not have to shout "fire" to get arrested. If a person
creates a disorder in a theatre, they would get him there not because of what
he hollered but because he hollered. They would get him not because of any
views he had but because they thought he did not have any views that they
wanted to hear there. That is the way I would answer not because of what he
shouted but because he shouted. [Irving Dillard, ed., One Person's Stand for
Freedom
The French theorist Bertrand de
Jouvenel similarly called for the weakening of free speech and assembly rights
in what he called the "chairperson's problem" — the problem of
allocating time or space in an assembly hall or newspaper, or in front of a
microphone, where the writers or speakers believe that they have a
"right" of free speech to the use of the resource.
What de Jouvenel overlooked was our
solution to the "chairperson's problem" — recasting the concept of
rights in terms of private property rather than in terms of freedom of speech
or assembly.
Notice that in each of de Jouvenel's
examples — a person attending an assembly, a person writing to a
letters-to-the-editor column, and a person applying for discussion time on the
radio — the scarce time or space being offered is free, in the sense of
costless. We are in the midst of what economics refer to as "the rationing
problem." A valuable, scarce resource has to be allocated: whether it be
time at the podium, time in front of the microphone, or space in a newspaper.
Since the use of the resource is free (costless), the demand for obtaining this
time or space is bound greatly to exceed the supply, and hence a perceived
"shortage" of the resource develops. As in all cases of shortages and
of queuing up caused by low or nonexistent prices, the unsatisfied demanders
are left with a feeling of frustration and resentment at not obtaining the use
of the resource they believe they deserve.
A scarce resource, if not allocated by
prices, must be allocated in some other way by its owner. It should be noted
that the de Jouvenel cases could all be allocated by a price system, if the
owner so desired. The chairperson of an assembly could ask for price bids for
scarce places at the podium and then award the places to the highest bidders.
The radio producer could do the same with discussants on his program. This is
what producers do when they sell time to individual sponsors and what
newspapers and magazines do when they sell adspace. There would then be no
shortages, and no feelings of resentment at a promise ("equal access"
of the public to the column, podium, or microphone) reneged.
Beyond the question of prices, there is
a deeper matter involved, for whether by prices or by some other criterion, the
resource must, in all cases, be allocated by its owner. The owner of the radio
station or the program (or his agent) rents, or donates, radio time in a way
that he decides; the owner of the newspaper, or his editor-agent, allocates
space for letters in any way that he chooses; the "owner" of the
assembly, and his designated agent the chairperson, allocates the space at the
podium in any way he decides.
The fact that ownership is the ultimate
allocator gives us the clue to the property solution of de Jouvenel's
"chairperson's problem." For the fellow who writes a letter to a
newspaper is not the owner of the paper; he therefore has no right to, but only
a request for, newspaper space, a request which it is the absolute right of the
owner to grant or to deny. The person who asks to speak at an assembly has no
right to speak, but only a request that the owner or his representative, the
chairperson, must decide upon. The solution is to recast the meaning of the
"right to freedom of speech" or "assembly"; instead of
using the vague, and, as de Jouvenel demonstrates, unworkable concept of some
sort of equal right to space or time, we should focus on the right of private
property. Only when the "right to free speech" is treated simply as a
subdivision of property right does it become valid, workable, and absolute.
This can be seen in de Jouvenel's
proposed "right to buttonhole." De Jouvenel says that there is a
"sense in which the right of speech can be exercised by each and everyone;
it is the right to buttonhole," to talk and to try to convince the people
one meets, and then to collect these people in a hall, and thus to "constitute
a congregation" of one's own. Here de Jouvenel approaches the proper
solution without firmly attaining it. For what he is really saying is that
"the right to free speech" is only valid and workable when used in
the sense of the right to talk to people, to try to convince them, to hire a
hall to address people who wish to attend, etc. But this sense of the right to
free speech is, in fact, part of a person' s general right to his property.
(Provided, of course, we remember the right of another person not to be buttonholed
if he doesn't want to, i.e., his right not to listen.) For property right
includes the right to one's property and to make mutually agreed-upon contracts
and exchanges with the owners of other properties. De Jouvenel's
"buttonholer," who hires a hall and addresses his congregation, is
exercising not a vague "right of free speech," but a part of his
general right of property.
De Jouvenel almost recognizes this when
he considers the case of two men, "Primus" and "Secundus":
Primus … collected through toil and trouble a
congregation of his own doing. An outsider, Secundus, comes in and claims the
right to address this congregation on grounds of the right of free speech. Is
Primus bound to give him the floor? I doubt it. He can reply to Secundus: "I
have made up this congregation. Go thou and do likewise."
Primus owns the meeting; he has hired
the hall, has called the meeting, and has laid down its conditions; and those
who don't like these conditions are free not to attend or to leave. Primus has
a property right in the meeting that permits him to speak at will; Secundus has
no property right whatever, and therefore no right to speak at the meeting.
In general, those problems where rights
seem to require weakening are ones where the locus of ownership is not
precisely defined; where property rights are muddled. Many problems of
"freedom of speech," for example, occur in the government-owned
streets: e.g., should a government permit a political meeting which it claims
will disrupt traffic, or litter streets with handbills? All of such problems
which seemingly require "freedom of speech" to be less than absolute,
are actually problems due to the failure to define property rights. The public
streets are owned by government; the government in these cases is "the
chairperson." And then government, like any other property owner, is faced
with the task of how to allocate its finite resources. A political meeting on
the streets will, let us say, block traffic; therefore, the decision of
government involves not so much a right to freedom of speech as it involves the
allocation of street space by its owner.
The whole problem would not arise, it
should be noted, if the streets were owned by private individuals and firms —
as they all would be in a libertarian society; for then the streets, like all
other private property, could be rented by or donated to other private
individuals or groups for the purpose of assembly. One would, in a fully
libertarian society, have no more "right" to use someone else's
street than he would have the "right" to pre-empt someone else's
assembly hall; in both cases, the only right would be the property right to use
one's money to rent the resource, if the landlord is willing. Of course, so
long as the streets continue to be government-owned, the problem and the
conflict remain insoluble; for government ownership of the streets means that
all of one's other property rights, including speech, assembly distribution of
leaflets, etc., will be hampered and restricted by the ever-present necessity
to traverse and use government-owned streets, which government may decide to
block or restrict in any way. If the government allows the street meeting, it
will restrict traffic; if it blocks the meeting in behalf of the flow of
traffic, it will block the freedom of access to the government streets. In
either case, and whichever way it chooses, the "rights" of some
taxpayers will have to be curtailed.
The other place where the rights and
locus of ownership are ill-defined and hence where conflicts are insoluble is
the case of government assemblies (and their "chairmen"). Where one
person or group hires a hall, and appoints a chairperson, the locus of
ownership is clear and Primus has his way. Who owns governmental assemblies? No
one really knows, and therefore there is no satisfactory or non-arbitrary way
to resolve who shall speak and who shall not, what shall be decided and what
shall not. The government assembly forms itself under its own rules, but then
what if these rules are not agreeable to a large body of the citizenry? There
is no satisfactory way to resolve this question because there is no clear locus
of property right involved.
In the case of the newspaper or radio
program, it is clear that the letter writer or would-be discussant is the petitioner,
and the publisher or producer the owner who makes the decision. But in the case
of the governmental assembly, we do not know who the owner may be. The person
who demands to be heard at a town meeting claims to be a part owner, and yet he
has not established any sort of property right through purchase, inheritance,
or discovery, as have property owners in all other areas. This is only an issue
in a democracy, but not in most of the Imperium, where towns, counties,
provinces, states, countries, continents, planets and star systems are
privately owned.
Returning to the streets, there are
other vexed problems which would be quickly cleared up in a libertarian society
where all property is private and clearly owned. In the current society for
example, there is continuing conflict between the "right" of
taxpayers to have access to government-owned streets, as against the desire of
residents of a neighbourhood to be free of people whom they consider
"undesirable" gathering in the streets.
There are a hysterical pressures by
residents of various neighbourhoods to prevent a certain restaurant from
opening in their area, and in many cases they have been able to use the power
of local government to prevent the restaurants from moving in. These, of
course, are clear violations of the right of the owners of the restaurant to
the property which they have purchased. But the residents do have a point: the
litter, and the attraction of "undesirable" elements who would be
"attracted" to restaurant and gather in front of it — on the streets.
What the residents are really
complaining about is not so much the property right of the restaurant as what
they consider the "bad" use of the government streets. They are, in
brief, complaining about the "Personal Right" of certain people to
walk at will on the government streets. But as taxpayers and citizens, these
"undesirables" surely have the "right" to walk on the
streets, and of course they could gather on the spot, if they so desired,
without the attraction of the restaurant I question. In the libertarian
society, where the streets would all be privately owned, the entire conflict
could be resolved without violating anyone's property rights: for then the
owners of the streets would have the right to decide who shall have access to
those streets, and they could then keep out "undesirables" if they so
wished.
Those street-owners who decided to keep
out "undesirables" would have to pay the price — both the actual
costs of policing as well as the loss of business to the merchants on their
street and the diminished flow of visitors to their homes. Undoubtedly in the
free society there would result a diverse pattern of access, with some streets
(and therefore neighbourhoods) open to all, and others with varying degrees of
restricted access.
Similarly, the private ownership of all
streets would resolve the problem of the "Personal Right" to freedom
of immigration. There is no question about the fact that current immigration
barriers restrict not so much a "Personal Right" to immigrate, but
the right of property owners to rent or sell property to immigrants. There can
be no Personal Right to immigrate, for on whose property does someone else have
the right to trample? If "Primus" wishes to migrate now from some
other country to Trantor, we cannot say that he has the absolute right to
immigrate to this land area; for what of those property owners who don't want
him on their property? On the other hand, there may be, and undoubtedly are,
other property owners who would jump at the chance to rent or sell property to
Primus, and the current laws now invade their property rights by preventing
them from doing so.
The libertarian society would resolve
the entire "immigration question" within the matrix of absolute
property rights. For people only have the right to move to those properties and
lands where the owners desire to rent or sell to them. In the free society,
they would, in first instance, have the right to travel only on those streets
whose owners agree to have them there, and then to rent or buy housing from
willing owners. Again, just as in the case of daily movement on streets, a
diverse and varying pattern of access of migration would undoubtedly arise.
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