Last week, I posted an essay making a case that rights do not arise from nature, but depend on socially constructed understandings developed through human interaction and discourse. Briefly stated, I argued that social concepts like rights do not distinguish various natural kinds from one another, and cannot be studied without regard to social relations among humans, among other points. Since they depend on social relations for definition, rights must be a social construct. To support this view, I pointed out that our concept of rights do not remain static, and vary across societies. In this post I’d like to discuss how this applies to gun rights.
The social construction of rights depends on prevailing understandings about appropriate behavior in human interaction, as well as shared understandings about right and wrong, the value of human life, social ordering of political and economic behavior, competing concepts of justice, and an almost infinite variety of other components of social relations. All of these things combine to make up prevailing norms and inter-subjective understandings that make up social reality, and if these understandings include a specific “right,” challenges to such a right would by definition come from marginal actors, and probably have little effect. For example, few challenge rights to speech or religion in the US today, but most shrug off claims of a right to food or health care as illegitimate.
All of this matters to gun rights advocates because given that prevailing norms change, and they rightly worry that a shift in normative paradigms about the social order (e.g, about the appropriateness of violence in society, or killing to protect property) could threaten the existence of a “right to keep and bear arms” as a shared understanding. The claim that society abridges a rights claim–that is, creates an injustice–by disarming those who wish to own and carry weapons has little meaning in a social framework where the right is not broadly recognized. Some citizens might nevertheless claim such a right, and use violence to oppose its infringement, but since this in turn infringes on the strongly held beliefs of prevailing society, it would organize against the rights claim and quash the effort, as it would a person or group that went around kidnapping people today, claiming a right to own slaves. This is true even if I am wrong, and rights are natural kinds.
Therefore, the justice of rights claims matters only to the extent that it empowers a minority to resist a majority without violence. It has no bearing on the ability or power to resist disarmament, and actually only protects the “right” if society shares the moral principle. This is one of the senses in which I claim that rights don’t exist unless humans manufacture them, and it means that puffing out the chest and rhetorically defending a right to gun ownership helps only to the extent that it perpetuates the social norms that support such a right.
Advocates, that is, might claim a moral principle, but this only has value as a rhetorical device in support of perpetuating the norm–discourse privileging some moral claims as “rights” over others helps to constitute the normative structure in a way that elicits support from large segments of society, even some who disagree with the behavior. Firearm (speech, religion) rights survive, not because nature endows them, but because infringing them is something you just don’t do. Others (e.g., right to food, shelter) have less normative power as justice claims because fewer people share the understanding of them as “rights,” whether or not they accrue naturally to humans.
This suggests that gun rights advocates who wish to preserve this norm should concentrate on rights discourse, and limit discussion intended to make fellow citizens afraid, such as quoting crime statistics, listing home invasion incidents, and carrying on the pretense that an armed citizenry can preserve liberty with a constant threat of rebellion. Over time, changes in society which made these reasons obsolete could make firearms less useful, ownership less widespread (firearm ownership already trends down), and this argument less valuable. And as technology advances and makes representative government much more inclusive (if only by growing a more educated population), the perceived need for the ability to rebel against it could wane.
Advocates of protecting Second Amendment rights won’t protect these rights with guns. Discourse might work if used to frame gun ownership as a moral and civic good. Focus on crime only increases incentives to solve the problem, and threatening rebellion only marginalizes advocates. Thinking of gun rights in terms of social relations rather than as a natural individual right is the best hope of preserving gun rights for posterity.
#1 by mike w. at January 20th, 2010
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“Firearms ownership already trends down”
WOW! You’ve really got to deny reality to make a claim like that.
What state do you live in? There are perhaps a few localities where your statement is true (localities with no respect for 2A rights) but it is demonstratably false when applied to the U.S. as a whole.
You’ve got to be living under a rock the past 2 years or so to say “firearms ownership is trending down”
#2 by R. Stanton Scott at January 21st, 2010
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See Richard L. Legault, Trends in American Gun Ownership, LFB Scholarly Publishing, 2008.
This survey work shows that handgun ownership is trending down. I should have made that clear in the post.
#3 by Laci the Dog at January 21st, 2010
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Stan, another excellent post. I wish I had your patience!
For example, few challenge rights to speech or religion in the US today, but most shrug off claims of a right to food or health care as illegitimate.
Good point.
Funny, but I was going to make a post about slaveholders’ rights.
The problem is that the gun rights supporters need to use the fear to promote their agenda. It’s one of the propaganda techniques, using black and white choices to install fear. “IF we ban guns, then the only criminal will have them. You will be powerless.”
That is why the issue if framed as “pro-” and “anti-” gun. If you choose gun control, you are against guns.
As for gun ownership, there is no registry to show where the firearms end up. Gun sales could go up, but those guns could be bought by a small percentage of the population. Most gun owners have more than one.
Unless there is an accurate census of gun owners in the US, one cannot make any accurate statement about gun ownership. The likelihood of an accurate gun census is minimal.
Until gun registration is placed into effect.
#4 by mike w. at January 21st, 2010
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You think “gun registration” would allow for an accurate census of gun owners? That’s laughable.
On what rational basis do you make that assertion? I will not register my firearms. Ever. Neither will millions of my fellow gun owners. Those who currently own firearms illegally are also certainly NOT going to register.
The level of “head-in-the-sand” thinking required to state that firearms ownership (or handgun ownership) is trending DOWN is unbelievable. Then again, I suspect I shouldn’t expect anti-gunners to come to rational conclusions based on evidence or attempt to live in reality. Your ideal is for firearms ownership to be trending down. You want that to be true, therefore you believe it is, no matter what.
CCW permitting has also gone up drastically all over the U.S. Guess what those people are carrying? hint – not long guns.
http://www.gunpundit.com/4100.php
http://www.ammoland.com/2009/01/07/gun-sales-continue-to-increase/
And really, you don’t have to be a genius to know that gun sales have been through the roof the past 2 years.
#5 by Bob S. at January 21st, 2010
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Stan,
I find your examples used to be very interesting.
For example, few challenge rights to speech or religion in the US today, but most shrug off claims of a right to food or health care as illegitimate.
Can you show me an example where someone has claimed that a person doesn’t have a right to food?
Or do you mean that people have a right to have food provided to them if they don’t work for it?
Health care is the same thing…no one I know denies that a person has a right to health care. What people are saying is that you can not make another person provide a service at no cost to the person receiving.
The difference between free speech and free food is what someone else has to do.
Not a single person has to act to provide me with the right to free speech. Not one. What they have to do is act to stop my free speech while that is the complete opposite of ‘free food’.
I would be interested if you know of a single society, currently or through out history, where people did not have the idea of free speech.
The people may have been punished for speech the rulers didn’t like (the king is a fink, for example) but is there one society in history were people had to get permission for the expression of ideas?
If there is no such society, wouldn’t that indicate that the idea — the right of free speech– occurs naturally to every individual.
#6 by mike w. at January 21st, 2010
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The difference between free speech and free food is what someone else has to do.
Yup. Free speech is a negative right (the BOR is a charter of negative rights) Positive rights are not actually rights, as they impose a burden upon one citizen to provide said “right” for someone else. Such “rights” are nothing more than legally sanctioned plunder.
I do no have the right to health care If I can’t afford it, because that means someone else is being forced to pay for a tangible good/service which I cannot. That is a violation of their property rights. No one has a “right” to anything which someone else has been forced to pay for.
In short, anything which must be produced by a non-consenting party cannot be claimed by another party as a “right
The right to free speech doesn’t mean you have the right to demand use of MY microphone.
Likewise I have the right to keep & bear arms. That doesn’t mean I have a right to have a firearm and holster purchased for me by you.
I have the right to practice whatever religion I believe in, but no right to have a church built for me. (forced labor is still theft…. or slavery)
If you were to actually claim that everyone had a “right” to free food that would mean that you were enslaving the producers of said food, since they would have no property claim to the product of their own labor. You would be violating the rights of the producers.
#7 by R. Stanton Scott at January 21st, 2010
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Laci correctly points out that statistics which appear to show increased gun sales say very little about whether gun ownership is expanding or contracting. People who already own guns probably account for these increases. And I don’t think Lacy meant that a gun “census” should be conducted, or that it would identify all weapons. Of course it wouldn’t. I believe she meant only to point out that no such census exists, so we have no way of knowing how many of the 1.4 million background checks which MIke alerted us to went to ownership expansion rather than growing collections of current owners.
In any event, Legault pretty clearly shows that the percentage of households with handguns is trending down (though not as much as other research shows). Of course, this will vary widely across regions.
Bob incorrectly asserts that “Not a single person has to act to provide me with the right to free speech. Not one.” In fact, a wide variety of people must act to actively protect your free speech or gun rights, starting with judges, law enforcement officers, and bureaucrats who process or judge conflicting claims (e.g, whether speech is libelous or whether a shooting is justified) in the course of adjudicating them, or just stop others from violating them. Without this action, a “right” goes only to the most powerful. Government must function for rights to exist.
This requires a transfer of taxpayer dollars from those who never exercise their rights to those who have conflicting claims because they have. This is no less a taking than taxing you to feed someone else who for some reason cannot care for himself.
The difference then, has nothing to do with positive or negative action. If we believed in a right to food, we would include some mechanism for providing state subsistence, just as we provide a mechanism for protecting your right to speak or carry.
(Which, by the way, begs the question: How can I have a right of survival without a right to food? Is my right to survive dependent on my ability to in some way? But that’s another post.)
Anyway, I appreciate the help making my point: that prevailing US social norms do not recognize justice claims to food or health care–or at least not a justice claim that trumps property or labor “rights.” Mike states this pretty clearly: “anything which must be produced by a non-consenting party cannot be claimed by another party as a ‘right.’”
While true in today’s US, this norm is far from universal. Many communal societies include rights to the produce of others.
Bob: The overwhelming majority of societies across human history included no norm or understanding of a right to free speech, political or otherwise. This is in fact quite a new idea, only first considered during the enlightenment. I don’t imagine the nations Genghis Khan ruled would have respected such a justice claim, at least not broadly, as indeed a variety of social groups today (e.g. fundamentalist Mormons) do not.
Humans have no intrinsic rights. And even Americans don’t think rights accrue naturally. If we did, we would apply the “inalienable” rights listed in our Constitution to foreigners. Even for Americans, rights have as much to do with conflicting needs and justice claims as they do to their intrinsic nature.
#8 by Bob S. at January 21st, 2010
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Stan,
You are being a little disingenuous to say the least
In fact, a wide variety of people must act to actively protect your free speech or gun rights,
Actively protect is not the same thing as providing me with that right. I expected better of you on that one.
Your right to food is accepted, your right to free food is not. You can gather all the food you can, that is your right….as long as that right does not interfere with another’s rights
Humans have no intrinsic rights
Really? Humans don’t have the right to breathe? The right to be heterosexual, to be homosexual? To reproduce?
Those are intrinsic rights. Now, I don’t have a right to reproduce AND require others to feed, clothe and raise my children…that is not their obligation. If they freely choose to do that it is different from from requiring them.
#9 by Laci the Dog at January 21st, 2010
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Gun registration would be the only way to have an accurate idea of the guns that were legally held.
BTW, you are aware that Heller did permit registration. and that Heller was denied a permit for one of his firearms. The upshot of incorporation may be a national firearm registration scheme.
http://lacithedog.blogspot.com/2010/01/gun-right-supporters-who-are-critical.html
Heller denied gun permit:
http://www.wusa9.com/news/local/story.aspx?storyid=74036&catid=158
Of course, I don’t expect you to have understood what was going on.
It’s an individual right after all! That’s all you need to hear and you are happy. Never mind that your “rights” could be curtailed:
Like the inhabitants of other formerly free societies, Americans are content to define “freedom” in terms of those liberties we are permitted to exercise. Yesterday’s Supreme Court ruling in District of Columbia v. Heller (.pdf) is perfectly in harmony with this self-defeating concept of “freedom.”
It is entirely appropriate that the decision was written by Antonin Scalia, the most reliably authoritarian and consistently liberty-aversive member of the Court. With an air of regal condescension, Scalia allows that the Second Amendment acknowledges and protects an individual right to armed self-defense. He then explicitly limits the extent to which that “right” can be exercised, thereby redefining it as a State-conferred privilege.
http://www.lewrockwell.com/grigg/grigg-w32.html
I am glad you like what Scalia wrote, too bad you didn’t understand it!
#10 by R. Stanton Scott at January 22nd, 2010
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No, Bob, you have no intrinsic “right” to breathe that exists independently of the shared understandings which make up the social framework constituted by social relations.
Your justice claim to life or reproduction depends on a social definition of your survival or having children as “right.” This seems intrinsic because it seems so obvious–of course humans have a right to breathe!–where a “right” to food does not.
Please at least give me a sign that you understand the concept, whether or not you agree with it. Simply restating the position that “rights” are intrinsic and then presenting examples of intrinsic “rights” is not a strong challenge to the idea.
#11 by Bob S. at January 22nd, 2010
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Stan,
Sorry but I can’t give you what you want. You seem to think that my rights only derive from a shared understanding of what everyone in society agrees them to be.
While some rights are of that nature — the right to vote in the polity, the right to have an attorney present, etc; many don’t.
I’ve tried to follow your argument and it sounds as if a bunch of sociologist are just trying to justify getting another paycheck.
The fact that you don’t the “intrinsic” value, worth and rights associated with an individual really worries me. As for as my understanding goes, that is the path trod by many of the worst dictators in the world.
#12 by mike w. at January 22nd, 2010
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Sorry Scott, but the very people who founded this country and wrote our Constitution fundamentally disagree with you on the concept of “rights”
Perhaps you would be happier in the UK?
#13 by mike w. at January 22nd, 2010
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You seem to think that my rights only derive from a shared understanding of what everyone in society agrees them to be.
To some extent this is true, however that does not change the nature of my rights. If I lived in a community with scott and laci and a bunch of their peers it would not matter if 90% of them wanted me disarmed.
The fact that their concept of what is and isn’t a right differed from mine would be of no conseqence. My rights are not theirs to strip from me, regardless of their “feelings” or any social utility arguments they trot up.
They would have no more authority to infringe upon my 2nd Amendment rights than a town in Mississippi would have the authority to pass a law re-instituting slavery or bringing back separate but equal.
I know it must bother them greatly that I have rights they don’t want me to exercise.
#14 by mike w. at January 22nd, 2010
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They would have no more authority to infringe upon my 2nd Amendment rights than a town in Mississippi would have the authority to pass a law re-instituting slavery or bringing back separate but equal.
And of course when Laci & Scott support the “right” of localities like DC to violate the constitution as they see fit they are doing EXACTLY what I’ve laid out above. They’re saying that a particular locality can ignore a constitutional provision as they see fit.
Somehow I think if DC did away with all 4th Amendment protections or free speech rights they would sing a different tune. They only support outright violation of rights they disapprove of.
#15 by mike w. at July 23rd, 2010
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Have any proof to your claim that “firearms ownership is trending down?”
Oh right, you’re just lying your ass off like you always do Stan. Yes. Lying. It’s what you do Stan, and it’s despicable.