VMI77 wrote:Keith B wrote:BigGuy wrote:IANAL. But it has always been my understanding that what the DL allows you to do is operate a vehicle on the public roadways. Living in the country we often drove grain and fertilizer trucks (As well a various types of farm equipment) around the farm well before we got a DL. As long as we stayed on private property and off the roads, it is my understanding that we were breaking no law.
If that understanding is correct then the agreement, a DL represents, between you and the State is about the use of public facilities, built, owned, and maintained by the State. That would be a privilege, not a right.
Use of public roadways is not a right, it is a privilege. The state and feds can prohibit you from walking on a public roadway (think Interstate where is is illegal to walk).
True in that sense. But then the State doesn't allow competition from private roadways. They've essentially transformed a right --the right to travel-- into a privilege by using State power to make a non-governmental alternative infeasible. Also, I pay taxes for those roadways and they are "public" roadways, and I should therefore have the right to travel upon them as long as I follow the rules of usage. If they were private property I'd have no such right.
We are off track here, but let's look at the definition of Privilege and Right.
priv·i·lege/ˈprɪvəlɪdʒ, ˈprɪvlɪdʒ/ Show Spelled [priv-uh-lij, priv-lij] Show IPA noun, verb, priv·i·leged, priv·i·leg·ing.
noun
1. a right, immunity, or benefit enjoyed only by a person beyond the advantages of most: the privileges of the very rich.
2. a special right, immunity, or exemption granted to persons in authority or office to free them from certain obligations or liabilities: the privilege of a senator to speak in Congress without danger of a libel suit.
3. a grant to an individual, corporation, etc., of a special right or immunity, under certain conditions.
4. the principle or condition of enjoying special rights or immunities.
5. any of the rights common to all citizens under a modern constitutional government: We enjoy the privileges of a free people.
Right
right/raɪt/ Show Spelled [rahyt] Show IPA adjective, right·er, right·est, noun, adverb, verb
adjective
.......
noun
18. a just claim or title, whether legal, prescriptive, or moral: You have a right to say what you please.
19. Sometimes, rights. that which is due to anyone by just claim, legal guarantees, moral principles, etc.: women's rights; Freedom of speech is a right of all Americans.
20. adherence or obedience to moral and legal principles and authority.
21. that which is morally, legally, or ethically proper: to know right from wrong.
22. a moral, ethical, or legal principle considered as an underlying cause of truth, justice, morality, or ethics.
So, if you take the two definitions above, a privilege is no more than an enhanced right. So, in the case of driving, you have the right to travel, but the privilege of a Drivers License allows you to do it in a motor vehicle on public thoroughfares.
In the case of the right to bear arms, I see concealed carry as a privilege or an enhancement of our right to bear them in the first place.