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The modern so-called
progressive welfare state, while not quite seeking to abolish private property,
is certainly redefining the meaning of ownership. It is doing so, among other
things, by casting afresh the meaning of rights. Instead of merely protecting
the rights of citizens to live free from aggression and coercion, government has
ventured into the business of conferring expansive and expensive conveyer belt
entitlements, the kind that range from the right to housing, to the right to
feel like a cherished member of society. With this mandate, the state must
expand and intensify its wealth appropriating strategies, and it must sprout
tendrils that reach into the backyards of its citizens. This is the Faustian
deal which citizens strike.
In a modern economy,
the goods exchanged are not necessarily material; hence government can be said
to meddle with private property when it regulates contracts. Indeed, government
sets minimum wages, and instructs landlords who to rent to and, occasionally, at
what price. It imposes racial and gender quotas in the hiring practices of
private enterprise, and in admission to private schools. Neither is it beyond
government ken to instruct banks to lend money to certain groups. This erodes
"the principle of private contractual freedom…and along with it the
institution of property," writes Richard Pipes in Property and Freedom.
The Canadian Human
Rights Commission (HRS) and its attendant machinery helps to enshrine, enforce
bogus rights as well as blur the boundaries of private property. Described by
Karen Selick in a paper for the Calgary-based Property Rights Research
Institute, the HRC imposes "a form of involuntary servitude on certain
members of society---the goods and service providers. It transforms
others---consumers who belong to one of the privileged minority group---into
overlords. The latter have the right to force the former to perform services for
them against their will." "There was a time," writes Selick,
"when this was called "slavery," but there are not many people
willing to call a slave a slave these days."
Recently indentured
is Scott Brockie, a Toronto printer who refused to provide a printing service to
a gay organization on the grounds of religious belief. The HRC, incidentally,
allows a particularly nasty subversion of due process. A respondent gets none of
the mandatory defenses afforded to a defendant under the Criminal Code. Indeed,
a Kafkaesque situation.
A priori, the
adjudicator sets about limiting the respondent's freedoms in accordance with
Section 1 of the Charter which subjects the freedom of religion, conscience,
thought, belief, opinion, and expression to "such reasonable limits
prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic
society." And then down the shoot she slides with the "slippery
slope" logical fallacy: Allow Brockie to refuse to serve gays, she asserts,
and before long there will be "fewer and fewer services available to
members of marginalized groups."
And so, having failed
to violate property or person himself, Scott Brockie shifts from peaceably
minding his own business and running a private enterprise, to being accused by a
quasi-jurist of tampering with the self worth (another bogus right) of a
protected group. It goes without saying that the "potential" harm to
dignity (being a 'right' as well) was found to outweigh Brockie's private
property rights, freedom of religion and association (for that is what's at
stake). One cannot fail but to be bowled over by the delicately calibrated
balancing of "competing rights" the adjudicator and the Code have
effected.
We come to the
darkest corner of the decision: "When he enters the public market place and
offers services to the public," goes the ruling, Brockie, who, by the way,
is not a public servant, can no longer expect to practice his religious beliefs
by denying services to gays and lesbians. Herewith lies the redefinition of
property and the enforcement of servitude. Open up shop and the right of free
association becomes subject to the arbitrary intrusion of your new stakeholders;
they will duly ensure that contracts you pursue or reject conform to community
standards and to their notion of the public good, or else, buddy.
It is easy to lose
sight of the issues here. All the same, the complainants in this case don't have
the right to access a printing service that belongs to Scott Brockie. They can
petition for it. If refused, they are free to organize boycotts, engage in
negative advertising, get petitions signed, or, most productive, take their
business to the competition. But in a free society, there can be no place for a
coerced, involuntary association between adults, contractual or other.
©2000 By Ilana
Mercer
The Calgary Herald
June 15
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