The people of Afghanistan don't have rights because they don't fight for them, and demand their legal system abide by these rights.Okay...lets look at this another way:
"Inalienable Rights~
Not subject to sale or transfer; inseparable.
That which is inalienable cannot be bought, sold, or transferred from one individual to another. The personal rights to life and liberty guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States are inalienable. Similarly, various types of property are inalienable, such as rivers, streams, and highways."
Considering the definition above, does a woman have the same rights as a man?
If so, why does she not have them in Afghanistan but does have them here?
Why did she have far fewer inalienable rights 100 yrs ago in the United States?
Did African Americans spontaniously develop these rights due to a genetic alteration?
~Or~
Did we create laws to change our society and enforce them through the courts?
women in the United states gained legally protected rights by civil disobedience, the government complied because it was forced to. through people adamant in the notion of inalienable rights. the court did its job by making law to protect newly claimed rights, it had no choice.
Black people gained rights through civil disobediance the simply refused to allow their rights to be ignored anylonger, again the courts were forced to do their job, making laws that protect rights.
these three things have something in common, they started in an individual, there were martyrs, but people beat the court, or more along the line of truth the rulers orderd and the servants obeyed. the servants being the courts and the rulers being the people.
in the case of the black civil rights momement a preacher vigileante started to ignite the desire to have equal rights. the courts didn't just decide to give them to them, the people took them, ordered there servants to protect them. the court couldn't produce any constitutionality for with holding rights from their masters based on skin color.
but these rights came from the people not the courts our champions our martyrs are Susan b. Anthony, martin Luther king jr, Rosa parks countless others that stood behind the person that just had the courage to fight city hall and win. these are the remembered people, the supreme court justices, not sure who they are. frankly they are bastards in this all for not seeing the oversight in the first place.
the change in society was the law not allowing the infringement of the rights, so that everybody doesnt have to battle like the martyrs did. it is ugly but once a law is made to protect the rights of people the court finely did it's job, only under threat of the loss of peace.
people are power not the gavel.
I fight this personally, I am battling for rights not just for me but for my ward, and others that have a right. not yet protected by the courts. I don't praise the for after 273 years finally doing their job. I will succeed my fellow homosexual brethren will succeed not because the court allowed it but because others will fight with us.
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