The University of Calgary Gauntlet®
  2009-04-02
(NOTE: Archived content:
Current issue here)

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Previous Issues

News
BSD finally has a home
Grad students lose vote to bylaws
Paying back student loans harder thanks to fewer jobs
Alberta's smallest Dino not a very good b-baller
Dining Centre switches to more sustainable fish
Stigmas harm problem gambling recovery
UN commissioner calls for freedom from want
News for the unnewsed
Online Only - Russian towns defy scholarly projections
Moustache March

Opinions
Politics after the purge?
Letter - Wrong about rights
Of mallards and millionaires
Alberta minister amends human rights
Decreasing dementia, one furious child at a time
The wrath of Kenney
Sex questions with Lesley-ann Barrett
Letter - Voltaire and Campus Pro Life

Sports
Report Cards
Women's volleyball
Men's hockey
Women's hockey
Men's basketball
Men's volleyball
Track and Field
Women's basketball
Swimming
Wrestling
Henry Bekkering takes his final bow
Night of the Dino

Entertainment
100 shows fill That Empty Space
The Polyjesters bring music around the world
Festival helps student artists take flight
Constant Season gears up for summer
April brings aural delights to Calgary
Digging up Marianas Trench

Features
4 Nights 4 the Homeless



  Letters
Letter - Wrong about rights





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ADVERTISMENT
Letters
OPINIONSLetter - Voltaire and Campus Pro Life
OPINIONSLetter: Beer, brats and Bach, study in Hamburg!
OPINIONSLetter: Prohibition bites
OPINIONSLetter: Unfunny jokes are hurtful
OPINIONSOnline Only - Letter: CPL VP responds

Editor, the Gauntlet, In your article ["Thirsting After Sanity," Cam Cotton-O'Brien, March 26, 2009] you argue that by extension the right to life implies that humans have a right to water. This is a gross misunderstanding of what it means for an individual to have a right. The concept, properly understood, does not refer to entitlement, but to freedom from force. Having the right to liberty, for example, does not mean that you are entitled to own a personal jet. It simply means that no one has the right to restrict your liberty. Having the right to free speech does not entitle you to a bullhorn and an auditorium. It simply means that no one may prevent you from gaining lawful access to the means of expressing yourself. Similarly, the right to life does not guarantee you the means of your survival, but rather, ensures that no one has the authority to prevent you from promoting your life by your own efforts. The significance of a right being a freedom and not an entitlement is that the former allows for the pursuit of one's happiness and the latter demands it of others.



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