Depends on what you define as "human rights." As for why private property is "venerated," it's because it's private property, and comprises the fruits of the labor of the individual, to which he is entitled to the full use thereof.rEvolutionist wrote:Why is it that private property is so venerated in your version of libertarianism but a minimal set of human rights that would protect against bigotry is so anathema?Seth wrote: It works both ways, and the whole point of shunning someone, in the Libertarian sense of things, is to use the effect of an entire community refusing to associate with someone who is acting in anti-social ways to encourage the malefactor to behave in socially appropriate ways. A racist bigot who abuses blacks can and should be shunned by the community. They should not only refuse to associate with him, but they should refuse to TRADE with him, or permit him to use their private property. The bigot who cannot buy a sandwich or a tank of gas because his neighbors refuse to sell it to him, who is refused entry into private social events, who is an invisible non-person will suffer the consequences of his bigotry, and the community will not have to condone or support such bigoted behavior in any way.
You can't prevent a bigot from being a bigot. If you impose laws that cause bigots to conceal their bigotry, they will be concealed bigots, who are far more dangerous to liberty than "outed" bigots. I'd much rather have bigots announce themselves so I can shun them than enact laws to protect the tender sensibilities of the oppressed that serve only to drive bigotry underground, where it's much harder to detect and deal with. I prefer my enemies out in the open, thanks. Only when bigotry is revealed for what it is, to everyone, will society act to revile, repudiate and shun bigotry.
One of the reasons that bigotry and prejudice, not to mention open crimes against blacks persisted in the South after the Civil War was because it was kept quiet. It wasn't until the Civil Rights era, and through people like Dr. Martin Luther King standing up to bigotry and making a public display of the prejudice that things began to change. It was the photos and films on the nightly news of the abuses of the police in Birmingham and other places, and the publicity about the murders of civil rights activists, and the dogs and fire hoses and marches that were broken up with violence by the bigots in the South that caused the rest of the nation to finally wake up and recoil from what they had been ignoring for decades.
I'd much rather have the KKK march openly, so we can see what and WHO they are, than have them riding around in the night in hoods. I'd rather know who the homophobic bigots in Congress or my local legislature are than make laws that prevent them from expressing themselves.
Suppressing expressions of bigotry never stops the bigotry, it merely makes it covert. One cannot identify a neo-Nazi, and therefore shun him, without the swastika tattooed on his neck, so I'm happy to let them tattoo swastika's on their necks.
Public opprobrium can change behavior, but public opprobrium cannot be brought to bear against a crypto-bigot. Far better to allow them to "out" themselves.
In the context of a school, I think it's better for a school that supports homosexual bigotry to be openly identified as bigoted, because this allows both parents and students to make a choice about attending. Imagine the grievous harm that would occur if a homosexual child were enrolled in a private school that was filled with bigots and homophobes who were crypto-bigots whose prejudice and attacks on homosexuals at the school were tacitly approved or overlooked by the administration. It's far better for them to announce their policies so that homosexual students can avoid the place like the plague...and parents and community members can heap opprobrium upon them...than to subject some poor homosexual student to abuse unknowingly.