loinburger -
Trust me, it doesn't matter how he posts, he'll find a way to ignore embarassing questions.
chegitz -
Repetitive only to add emphasis and provide clarification if someone has trouble understanding "shared", even after giving both some people still don't understand what they mean.
As for dubious, I'm not saying there is some magical formula that makes: universal desires = rights. I'm saying that universal desires provide the best foundation for defining morality and that "rights" are expressions of these universal desires, i.e., moral claims deriving from the best foundation for a system of morality. The competing idea for the origin of rights offered in this thread is that "society" creates rights, but that means "society" can refuse to create rights, can deny they exist. Which means societies that engage in slavery and genocide can't be condemned on moral grounds since they took no rights from their victims.
Do you really believe there are people who "want" to be murdered or enslaved? So far, the attempts to refute it have failed badly. 
1) Universal desire = best system of morality
2) Rights = expressions of moral claims based on this system
3) Universal desires = rights
The fact a tyrant stole your labor doesn't mean you no longer have a moral claim to your labor, only that the tyrant behaved immorally by stealing it.
"Rights" qualifies "natural" since rights involve human interaction. We don't need to include animals in a statement about what is natural for humans.
Because these are rights that exist by virtue of creation, not government, and can only be recognised by more sentient beings.
But someone or something did create the universe. It's here...
That remains to be seen.
it's necessary to cut up the posts in order to make them legible, but this only makes it all the easier for "some people" to selectively ignore sections of the other person's posts.)
chegitz -
1) Shared and universal are repetitive and universal is a dubious claim.

This remains to be proven.

You jumble a lot of different points together here. If you're ttrying to make a proof, keep them seperate.
2) Rights = expressions of moral claims based on this system
3) Universal desires = rights
This does not necessarily follow. Peasants were not owned, but they were compelled to provide labor.
Then the qualifier natural has no meaning. Either a right exists in nature or it does not.
Then why use the term "natural?" If nature does not respect these rights, how can they be natural?
If nothing created the unverse, then nothing gave you your rights. Therefore, by your logic, we do not have them.
On a logical and factual basis, you have not even begun to establish your premise, let alone make an argument.
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