Near the end of his Wednesday speech announcing a slate of new gun regulations, President Barack Obama waxed philosophical about the need for gun control.
“Along with our freedom to live our lives as we will comes an obligation to allow others to do the same,” he said. “We don’t live in isolation. We live in a society, a government for and by the people. We are responsible for each other.”
“That most fundamental set of rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, fundamental rights that were denied to college students at Virginia Tech and high school students at Columbine and elementary school students in Newtown,” he went on. “And kids on street corners in Chicago on too frequent a basis to tolerate; and all the families who never imagined they’d lose a loved one to a bullet, those rights are at stake. We’re responsible.”
The president was defending his decision to further restrict what, in political philosophy lingo, is called a negative liberty. Negative liberties are freedom from interference: They define your liberty by what other people are not allowed to do to you. So for example, if you believe that the right to bear arms is a basic negative right, you believe that nobody is allowed to prevent you from possessing firearms.
The libertarian right believes that the only liberties are negative liberties. They would argue that positive liberties—for example, the right to housing or to health care—do not exist, and the state as a whole is under no obligation to do anything but protect its citizens’ negative liberties. If you are sick, poor, hungry, or otherwise at risk, the state is not responsible for improving your situation. In fact, by trying to do so, the state might inadvertently infringe on the negative liberties of others, such as by raising their taxes and violating their negative right to their own hard-earned money.
When the president said “we are responsible for each other,” he was explicitly rejecting this view. Freedom, he was arguing, is not solely negative, and does not concern only individuals. Society means mutual obligation, which means that we must act to alleviate the suffering of others—even when doing so impinges on so-called negative liberties.
Katrina Trinko, a writer for the conservative National Review, replied to Obama’s speech on Twitter:
In Obama’s understanding of rights, cancer, heart attacks, etc. violate our rights
— Katrina Trinko (@KatrinaTrinko) January 16, 2013
Trinko obviously disagrees with this view, but she’s not wrong that it follows from Obama’s stated philosophy. If we are responsible for alleviating one another’s suffering, then that means preventing or mitigating disease and natural disaster in addition to person-on-person violence. And while it may sound odd to say that a heart attack is a violation of one’s rights, that position has a philosophical pedigree, specifically in the tradition of (small-r) republicanism.









