Phalynx wrote:So the law gives you your rights?
To most intents and purposes, yes. What I can and can not do without fear of punishment is defined by the laws of, in my case, the UK.
Unfortunately, many rights that I would have considered fairly fundamental, such as freedom of expression and peaceful gathering, have been severly reduced by recent 'anti-terrorist' and 'anti-anti-social behaviour' regulations.
You are also entirely right about money. In many cases, money can over-ride what rights are supposedly enshrined in law, allowing you to inringe upon the rights of others if you have the money. Also, the actual enjoyment of freedoms and rights, are, unfortunately, often reliant on money.
Rights and freedoms of choice are also restricted by those around you. Someone may have the right to live free of discrimination on mental, ethnic, physical or other grounds, but the reality is different. In this, law is supposed to defend those rights by punishing those who infringe upon those freedoms, unfortuantely, this doesn't always happen.
I am not naive enough to suggest that the law is the be-all and end-all, but in considering what a person is free to do, and not to do, that's a fairly substantial starting-point.
You could argue that, for some people, their religious or other moral/ethical beliefs have a stronger bearing on what they consider their rights, than any law.
Whoever you vote for.
The government wins.