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| [Reprinted from Land
& Liberty, March-April 1982] |
There is still some magic in the words, the Rights of Man;
it is as if they a waken a deep instinct as well as provoke discussion.
It is strange to us in the atmosphere of today, to imagine that a
statement of government policy could arouse such feelings. But the
American Declaration of Independence. 1776, and the French Declaration
of the Rights of Man and of Citizens, 1789, were not election addresses.
Despite imperfections, such as "all men are created equal,"
these documents were the culmination of a century of active thought,
known to historians as "the Age of Common Sense." or "the
Age of Reason."
After the English Glorious Revolution, 1689, "the eternal spirit
of the chainless mind" had been awakened. The ideas of John Locke,
that government itself has no rights, only the duty of protecting
individual rights, began to spread like slow fire at the roots of
paternalism. Carried to America and back again to Europe on two great
occasions it had brought into public affairs not professional
politicians but amateurs of courage and conviction, not yet corrupted by
power. The ringing phrases of these two manifestos breathe the spirit
that resists government pretensions, that scorns patronage, that begs
nothing from public funds; a spirit based on the conviction that "the
sole causes of public misfortunes and corruptions of government"
are not defects in the planned economy or welfare regulations but "ignorance,
neglect, or contempt of human rights." They were uncompromising
appeals from man to man, not from organisations to the timid who seek
the shelter of organisations. Said Benjamin Franklin: "They that
can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety
deserve neither liberty nor safety."
It is a cold douche to turn from these declarations to the text of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights -- later referred to as the
Charter -- originally approved by the United Nations Assembly at Paris,
10th December, 1948.
The Charter does not begin with a clear definition of universal human
rights, i.e., inherent to every person any time and in any place. This
might have saved the sponsors from confounding rights and duties in so
many of the Articles. This not only confuses the reader; it blurs
perception of both rights and duties. We all acknowledge moral
obligations, duties to society; but these would have been much clearer
if tabulated separately. Moreover, in such a statement it is necessary
to use words only in their essential, unmistakeable meaning. In the
preamble the Charter refers to "freedom from fear and want"
and to "fundamental freedoms." But freedom, the state of being
exempt from outward restrictions or compulsions, has no direct reference
to human emotions. Open the prison door and the man is free, but he is
still subject to natural fear and the need to supply his requirements by
his own efforts. Misuse of the word freedom, in this context, deflects
enquiry from possible restrictions or compulsions leading to unnatural
fear and unnatural privation. Freedom is a universal principle with
infinite application; to pluralise such an abstraction is absurd and
misleading.
"The natural liberty of man." says John Locke, "is to
have only the law of nature as his rule." All are born equally free
to use their natural powers, mental and physical, as seems best to
themselves within the limits that nature imposes. This equal freedom of
natural opportunity is the basis of all human rights, and one which any
intelligent person can understand. If the sponsors of the Charter had
made this clear at the outset the document might have been more
convincing and have attracted more attention, A right is a negative
conception, If an alleged right conflicts with another, one or both must
be spurious. If an alleged right requires someone to do something, it is
spurious. No right can be created by government; human rights are
anterior to all government.
The first sentence of Article 1 of the Charter: "All human beings
are born free and equal in dignity and rights," clearly accords
with this definition, and so with a number of subsequent passages,
e.g.,: "Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of
person." "No one shall be subjected to arbitrary interference
with his privacy, family, home or correspondence." "Everyone
has the right to own property." "No one shall be arbitrarily
deprived of his property." "No one may be compelled to belong
to an association." "Everyone has the right to work."
Assuming that property is understood in its universal sense, all the
foregoing accord with the negative conception of rights and with the
definition, in every reputable dictionary, of freedom as "the state
or condition of being free."
In other parts of the Charter, however, we find so many passages in
conflict with the above that an inattentive reader might forget these
quoted statements as mere verbal formalities. We are told, for example:
"Everyone has the right to social security." "Everyone
has the right to favourable conditions of work and to protection against
unemployment." "Everyone has the right to equal pay for equal
work" and to "just and favourable remuneration ...
supplemented, if necessary, by other means of social protection." "Everyone
has the right to rest and leisure, including reasonable limitation of
working hours and periodic holidays with pay." "Everyone has
the right to a standard of living adequate for the well-being of himself
and his family, including food, clothing, housing." etc. "Everyone
has the right to education." "Education shall be compulsory"
and directed to purposes the Charter prescribes. "In the exercise
of his rights and freedoms everyone shall be subject only to such
limitations as are determined for the purpose of securing the general
welfare in a democratic society."
As we are also told that "education shall be free" and that "parents
have a prior claim to decide their children's education," the
clauses on education are contradictory; but one can see, on examination,
that none of the above statements conforms to a universal human right.
They are all statements of claims for things which everybody has the
alleged right to compel everybody to provide. If A has the right to
well-paid employment with paid holidays, B must necessarily provide it;
but if B has the same right, then A must also provide B with the same.
This is not a statement of universal human rights in the enjoyment of
which all might freely provide for themselves; it is a code of
regulations for a dependent world. Such statements might have been drawn
up by a committee of well-meaning persons, who, taking slavery for
granted, were concerned to ensure that the slaves were well treated;
allowing the inspector, however, wide discretion in interpreting what
shall be "reasonable," "adequate," conducive to the "general
welfare," etc. All is based on the acceptance of compulsion as a
necessary and permanent element in human rights.
The most significant aspect of the Charter is its omissions. Almost all
controversy today is concerned with what are called economic matters:
questions of inflation and trade, taxation, and the prohibitive cost of
land for people to live on and work on. And it is conducted with so much
expertise, jargon and metaphor that it is a kind of closed circuit from
which the common sense of ordinary people is excluded, although they are
well aware that their interests are at stake, and when the promised
miracles do not emerge they feel sullen discontent. Here, if anywhere, a
clear lead on their rights is required. Yet on these subjects the
Charter has nothing to say, leaving the public to infer that no human
rights are involved. For all the Charter has to declare, any ruling
authority, by debasing the currency, might reduce everyone whose means
are only in the form of money to destitution; by putting a complete
embargo upon the exchange of goods and services it could reduce its
subjects to the lowest scale of human existence; by taxing all their
earnings it could confiscate all their property; by denying them the use
of the earth it could deprive them of life itself.
The Charter requires drastic revision if the original purpose is to be
realised. Many persons are capable of a surprising degree of
self-delusion when faced with awkward realities, but the patrons and
sponsors of this Charter occupy the highest positions in Church and
State. If they delude themselves they delude millions. Intellectual
integrity is a moral obligation; it could not be more so than in framing
such a declaration.
The Charter declares that recognition of human rights promotes the "inherent
dignity" of men and women and "freedom, justice and peace in
the world." If the earlier conception of rights is accepted, a
general view of history confirms this, and a specific example can be
quoted in relation to one human right which the Charter omits.
The right to trade freely is a natural right. It conflicts with no
other right and requires no compulsion. At all times and places the
natural impulse to exchange goods and services to mutual advantage has
tended to form a peaceful bond between individuals and nations, to
stimulate intelligence and to promote prosperity. Governments have
always denied this right, usually succeeding in persuading people to
believe that the infinite series of exchanges can be directed by
officialdom, using restrictions, penalties and taxes, national treaties
and alliances, better than by leaving trade to the individuals
concerned. But in Britain and in the 1840s popular agitation obliged the
government to allow this essential human right to trade. Restrictions
were progressively removed, and with opportunity increased and more open
to personal initiative, the material benefits were so impressive that
restrictions could not be re-imposed until 70 years afterwards, when the
example had been forgotten. But the moral effects were equally marked.
Poverty remained, but the victims had more spirit to fight it. People
discovered that by relying upon themselves instead of protection from
above, life had much more to offer. Respect for their own powers in
providing for their material needs enhanced their dignity as men and
citizens. Feeling that honest effort was rewarded more than political
intrigue, they respected the property of others and the laws that
protected it. At the beginning of Victoria's reign crime was rife and
pauperism widespread; by the close, the incidence of crime had declined
to a quarter of the earlier figures and pauperism perhaps even more.
If recognition of an important, though not all-comprehensive right, had
this effect, and if the Charter's view of human rights as claims on
society is correct, one would expect similar effects to have become
evident during the last twenty years, during which Western governments
have increasingly implemented the Charter's view, and indeed extended it
to industries. Yet who could say that the standards of self-respect and
public spirit have risen; that peoples, classes and individuals are more
at peace with each other; that life and property are more secure; that
confidence in freedom is firmer?
The record suggests that to systemise state relief for all as a human
right can never bring happiness. The general malaise threatens to erupt
in violence as blind and selfish as that which preceded the downfall of
previous civilisations. The riotous demand is not for recognition of
human rights. Students on public assistance demand more assistance and
fewer obligations to the society that supplies it. Closed shop trade
unionists do not strike to assert the right to work but to monopolise
it. Consumers are exploited by private and state monopolies; taxpayers
are subjected to arbitrary and crushing imposts; elderly savers are
robbed by debasing the reward of thrift; land users have to pay an
ever-increasing toll to land owners; but none of these victims think of
invoking the United Nations Charter of Human Rights. If they did they
would find no specific Article to protect them.
It is absurd to expect that this tide can be turned by ceremonious
professions of well-meaningness, by hoping that justice can be done
without injuring those who profit from injustice, or by merely ringing
the changes in prevailing ideas. It can be turned only by giving a
different direction 10 thought on social affairs. A beginning might be
made by a new and arresting re-statement of human rights, capable of
showing normally intelligent people that if essential rights previously
overlooked were now acknowledged they could live and prosper by their
own efforts, without having to interfere with others.
The inconsistencies and evasions of the Charter appear, on examination,
to have arisen from the perception that under what was called freedom
the mass of people found and still find themselves threatened by poverty
and unemployment, so that any new statement of human rights must somehow
help to allay this fear. The sponsors of the document had either to show
that these evils were caused by violation of essential rights, and to
denounce such violation, or to re-state human rights in such a way as to
accord with artificial measures of protection and relief, as if these
evils were natural and inevitable. They chose the latter alternative and
produced a document which the most selfish land owner or trade
monopolist could sign: but ii has done little or nothing to enhance the
value of human rights in the eyes of the people; the indifference is
general. Only after long disappointed hopes and aspirations have Western
peoples turned away from the ideal of self-reliance, but they still
cherish it instinctively in their hearts. If a re-statement could
satisfy both the logical understanding and the innate urge to be free,
people would not remain indifferent.
The weakness of earlier declarations has been the failure to emphasise
(he essential conditions of human life within which all the rights of
man must be exercised. Yet the key is to be found in common knowledge
and observation. It seems a truism to point out that man and every one
of his requirements, all drawn from animal, vegetable and mineral
resources, go back to the earth: but it is a truism almost always
ignored in relation to social questions. If the first of human rights,
that on which all others depend, is not the right to land, everybody's
conception of the world about them is mistaken. But if they are not
mistaken, and as there is nothing in the order of nature to show that
any individual has more right to land than another, then the first
consideration in a synthesis of human rights is to ensure that rights to
land arc free and equal. Insofar as this right is denied, other rights
cannot be freely enjoyed; they must appear in practice to be
insufficient, and however reluctantly, people will surrender their
rights in return for some form of charity, genuine or compulsory.
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