Yes, ancient law required this and this is reflected in both the US Constitution and the US Sponsored UN Declaration of Human Rights.
They r talking away other ppl's human rights so why shud they deserve human rights? Y?
Ensuring equal rights for all individuals is a fundamental aspect of protecting human rights.
because if there were no human rights many countries could suffer from the police and anyone can do anything to anyone and the higher rate of crime could increase more becausf the is no rights to protect anyone.
All human beings deserve the same rights.
The Committee on Human Rights in the USSR was created in 1970 by a group of Soviet dissidents, including Andrei Sakharov and Yuri Orlov. The committee aimed to monitor and expose human rights abuses in the Soviet Union, particularly regarding freedom of speech and political repression.
They should not be granted human rights, but the right to freedom from use/enslavement/exploitation should be granted. For example, the right to vote is a tad stupid for an animal.
Human rights are those rights that should be afforded to all human beings in the World. These rights include access to drinkable water, edible food, and shelter.
Animals should not have Human Rights BEFORE or IF we ever invent a device that can help us communicate with them.
Because women's rights are human rights and humans are all entitled to the same rights.
In most cases it is.
No. Although chimps are closely related they are not human.
Many things are false regarding the evolution of human rights in history. Probably the biggest and most common falsehood is that people always had rights and that all religions provided rights. Rights are a modern concept that came out of the Enlightenment philosophy. Prior to this, people did not have rights, they had privileges. Gods articulated through their Prophets and Kings gave their subjects certain privileges which could be given or revoked at the Prophets' or Kings' disposition. A right, as opposed to a privilege is endowed on a person merely for being a human being, regardless of station or how the rulers viewed that person.