"It cannot be said that men put all their rights into the hands of the
government, in order to have them protected; because there can be no
such thing as a man’s being protected in his rights, any longer than he
is allowed to retain them in his own possession. The only possible way,
in which any man can be protected in his rights, is to protect him in
his own actual possession and exercise of them. And yet our government
is absurd enough to assume that a man can be protected in his rights,
after he has surrendered them altogether into other hands than his own.
It cannot be said that men put all their rights into the hands of the
government, in order to have them protected; because there can be no
such thing as a man’s being protected in his rights, any longer than he is allowed to retain them in his own possession. The only possible way, in which any man can be protected in his rights, is to protect him in his own actual possession and exercise of them.
And yet our government is absurd enough to assume that a man can be
protected in his rights, after he has surrendered them altogether into
other hands than his own. This is just as absurd as it would be to
assume that a man had given himself away as a slave, in order to be
protected in the enjoyment of his liberty. A man wants his rights protected, solely that
he himself may possess and use them, and have the full benefit of them.
But if he is compelled to give them up to somebody else,—to a
government, so-called, or to any body else,—he ceases to have any rights
of his own to be protected."
~Lysander Spooner
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