> There are no such rights. Each positive right is somebody else's obligation.
> Being forced to feed, clothe, and house somebody else is called slavery. So is
> providing Internet access, TV, or whatever else. Doesn't matter if this 
> slavery
> is part-time, the principle remains the same -- some people gang up on you
> and force you to work for their benefit.

This is antisocial nonsense.  Governed societies exist because the supporting 
output of the group is greater than that of the same number of individuals.  
That infrastructure of government - the social building blocks that obligate us 
to each other - are not slavery, they are freedom from the anarchists, the 
equal opportunists (those that hold that we all have, inherently, have the same 
opportunity to succeed), and the Darwinists.

By your logic, librarians are slaves, as are all civil servants.  Radio is 
another of the greatest examples of a means of speech that is universally 
accessible, and yet we would not call broadcasters slaves either.  Absolute 
nonsense.

Nathan

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