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MSNBC's Touré Neblett Reacts to Ryan's Speech: For Women and Minorities, 'Our Rights Do Not Come From God or Nature'

Near the end of his Wednesday night speech at the Republican National Convention, vice-presidential nominee Paul Ryan told his audience and the nation that "sometimes, even presidents need reminding, that our rights come from nature and God, not from government."

John Hayward at Human Events noted that MSNBC's Touré Neblett did not handle Ryan's self-evident assertion very well. In fact, Thursday morning, Toure went into a bit of a tirade:

“He loves this line of ‘our rights come from God and nature’, which is so offensive to so much of America,” pontificated the MSNBC personality. “Because for black people, Hispanic people, and women, our rights do not come from God or nature. They were not recognized by the natural order of America. They come from the government and from legislation that happens in relatively recent history in America. So that line just bothers me to my core.”

One cannot prove it, but it actually seems possible that MSNBC is employing a commentator who may not have know that the source of our rights ("endowed by our Creator") was identified by our Founding Fathers in the Declaration of Independence. At a minimum, Neblett is in essence claiming that the recognition of the source of our rights in the Declaration was an irrelevant piety that did nothing for anyone except I suppose the now-dead white men who wrote them.

As Hayward somewhat impatiently explained on Thursday, Neblett could not be more wrong (italics are in original; bolds are mine):

TRUE RIGHTS COME FROM GOD AND NATURE; ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTES It bothers me to my core that a news network would employ someone who needs a grade school course in remedial civics, but I’m a giving soul, so I’ll provide one. I’ll keep it light and simple. The Declaration of Independence says: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”

This is a very important concept. The signatories of the Declaration were saying that certain rights are built directly into each human being. You don’t actually have to believe in God to understand the concept. You enter this world with unalienable rights that are not granted by the government… and cannot be withdrawn at the pleasure of government. No one can pass legislation to take these rights away. Even if every single one of your fellow citizens votes to strip one of your unalienable rights from you, the government cannot do so, without sacrificing its legitimacy.

From this concept we draw one of humanity’s greatest moral and intellectual achievements: laws that restrain the government. That’s where the Constitution comes in, particularly the Bill of Rights. In essence, it’s a list of things the government cannot do, even with the overwhelming democratic support of its citizens. The Constitution itself can be amended, but that’s very difficult to do, and no such amendment would be legitimate if it were an offense against the very narrow set of rights endowed by our Creator. This is a key component in the transition from away from raw “democracy” and mob rule, toward the vastly superior governance of a lawful republic.

... To address Toure’s specific complaint, the essential truth of our rights descending from God and nature was not altered by any specific government’s failure to recognize them. The “legislation that happened in relatively recent history in America” that he refers to did not create those rights – it acknowledged them. The rights were there all along.

To say otherwise is to do more than just bicker with Paul Ryan’s, or the Founding Fathers’, choice of words. It is the surrender of a crucial concept that illuminates the American understanding of liberty and order – two powerful forces which are not easily balanced. The notion of unalienable rights is a priceless treasure that has implications far beyond any instance of racial strife.

... It should be necessary to explain all this to any adult American. But, sadly, it is, because there are ongoing efforts to play off racial division and bitterness, to bully many of our citizens into abandoning their Constitutional birthright.

It especially shouldn't be necessary to explain this to someone like Neblett who has his perch because he supposedly has something worthwhile to say about current national and political events. The man clearly doesn't.



Read more: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/tom-blumer/2012/08/31/msnbcs-tour-reacts-ryans-speech-women-and-minorities-our-rights-do-not-c#ixzz25C7mIqhu


Added: Sep-1-2012 Occurred On: Sep-1-2012
By: marc1921
In:
Politics
Tags: liberals, dont, understand, unalienable, rights
Location: New York, New York, United States (load item map)
Marked as: approved
Views: 2537 | Comments: 53 | Votes: 0 | Favorites: 0 | Shared: 0 | Updates: 0 | Times used in channels: 2
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  • MSNBC: Showing the world how to circle the drain one stupid fuckup at a time.

    Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

    (5)

  • He's a dick, he always has been.

    Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

    (4)

  • Touré Neblett is a fool who will find racism in anything that goes against his political puppet. What a waste of oxygen to have this piece of shit running his ignorant mouth on national television. I listened to NPR today just to get a sense of what the left side is up to and they talked about the origins of bread for 1 hour. White and wheat bread to be exact, by people who seemed more interested in hearing their own voice rather than the real topics in politics. These people are an embarrassme More..

    Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

    (4)

  • Toure is the biggest jackass on TV

    Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

    (4)

  • He's trying to "niggerize" the Bill of Rights!

    Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

    (4)

  • The Declaration of Independence says that unalienable rights come from the Creator of all men, not come from men or governments.

    According to the Framers, the Constitution enumerates rights that are natural, i.e. pre-existing of and separate from the Constitution. According to the text, "the people" retain rights that are not listed in the Constitution; therefore the Constitution does not create or grant rights, it enumerates some of them while recognizing other rights exist that are More..

    Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

    (4)

  • Why anyone would employee this clown is beyond me

    Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

    (4)

  • He is just another race hustler like Sharpton, Jackson and Picklethepug.

    Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

    (3)

  • Sorry fella, but you're a fool. You were created by your mother and father during copulation.

    Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

    (3)

  • Toure is proving himself more and more an idiot. He better pray that his rights are naturally endowed. If not, which is to say, if Toure's rights are endowed by human-made law, then those same rights can be undone with the stroke of a pen. Humans may well have acted in the past to deny black people rights, but this did not remove those rights, and the struggles against slavery and for civil rights were about reclaiming the natural rights, not about establishing some new rights that can be giv More..

    Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

    (2)

    • @buzzardist I wonder how many rights he would have living in Africa? He is a dam fool!

      Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

      (3)

    • @buzzardist Well said!

      Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

      (1)

    • @buzzardist

      I still remember when the Trayvon Martin case went into frenzy. He was interview by Piers Morgan and got his ass handed to him. Morgan completely destroyed him and proved his bigotry and racist pandering, although PIers is also a liberal which I find annoying, he was spot on during that interview:

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M6Z0vBfu-Po

      Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

      (3)

  • Sorry. This is not a christian country.

    And I think he was referring to the fact that although that was written in the Constitution it took years for groups of minorities to actually gain their rights stated in the constitution and it was only through legislation did they finally gain their rights.

    Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

    (2)

    • @neutral_person

      It has nothing to do with being a Christian country.

      The Founders did you a favor by saying that our rights are untouchable and come from an entity larger than government.

      By saying that, they guarantee your rights, and your right to tear down a government that encroaches upon them.

      Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

      (4)

    • @cswartz Like Slavery? And Voter Suppression, Jim Crow? All of this sounds great but in reality the best form of rights is the Constitution. It is the only document which can guarantee your rights from the government that encroaches on them.

      Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @neutral_person
      always the same shits from the same rotten mind

      Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @ALah007 If you are going to block because I disagree with your bullshit then fine. But don't comment drive by or you will be the first person I ever block on LL.

      Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @neutral_person

      You don't make any sense!

      The rights you get from the Constitution exist because they are already born with you.

      The Constitution simply outlines the rights that you already have! The Constitution doesn't have to exist for you to have rights.

      And if all it takes to grant you rights is for some politicians to scribble on some paper, that means that we just have to have the 112th Congress and the President to scribble that you don't have rights anymore to take them away.

      P More..

      Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

      (2)

  • But the bible talks about slavery etc being ok, so how can you still say in 2012 it comes from God?

    Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

    (2)

  • This post is so wrong it's beyond laughable.

    FIRST, the Declaration of Independence has no force of law. None. That is reserved for the Constitution of the United States, it is sole founding legal document, and there are no others. Period. Even JUSTICE SCALIA has ruled the "Declaration of Independence, however, is not a legal prescription conferring powers upon the courts," Troxel v. Granville, No. 99—138 (June 5, 2000). So you are dead in the water right there. Beyond laughable the More..

    Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

    (2)

    • @Jackson
      Your "FIRST" screed is idiotic. The writer did not argue the Declaration carried the force of law. The writer noted the Declaration reconized where individual rights originated. Mistating a position to then argue against it is intellectually dishonest. If you want to learn more about this low level of "debate" and the fools who fall for it, watch Obama.
      Your "SECOND" screed is a simplistic regurgitation of a false narrative about the writing of the con More..

      Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

      (0)

    • @trialdog There is no god. Period. As for "nature," there is only one thing that is certain: survivial of the fittest. Kill or be killed. There are no "rights" that emanate from nature. Because if they did, there never would have been slavery.

      History confirms, all rights are alienable. Rights are alienated all the time, and have been throughout history. Nothing you say will change this immutable fact. Toure is correct, period.

      Finally, the 3/5 compromise absolutely was cod More..

      Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

      (0)

  • "It should be necessary to explain all this to any adult American"

    That's going to be a bit of a problem in Touré's case, since he's nothing but a sniveling little baby having a temper tantrum.

    Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

    (1)

  • “He loves this line of ‘our rights come from God and nature’, which is so offensive to so much of America,” This right here, is why leftists like him are dangerous. That line and thought is what brought this country forward towards the goals of Civil Rights, and is what this country was founded upon. Thus why leftists like him are destroying the Constitution.

    Posted Sep-1-2012 By 

    (1)