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  40
 | L. Neil Smith's
 THE LIBERTARIAN ENTERPRISE
 Number 40, July 9, 1998
 
 
 
Defending My Individual RightsFirst Place, Child Category
By Rylla Cathryn Smith (age 8) 
[email protected]
 
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
 
         I belong to myself. I was born with that right. I own myself. 
My life belongs to me.
Everybody has the same right -- the right not to be bothered by 
other people.
 Because I belong to myself, I can wear anything I want. If I own 
my own life, I could wear no clothes, even. It might be silly, it 
might be cold, but it's my own life.
 If I belong to myself, nobody should be able to decide for me what 
I want to do. You have actually given up some of your life by feeding 
old people or picking up cans from the highway. I should decide for 
myself. Or else why is it called "volunteerism"?
 Because I own myself, if I want to I can sign up for the military, 
but if I don't want to I shouldn't have to.
 If I own my own life then other people own their own lives. Some 
people don't even know it -- most people don't even know it. They 
should know that they have the right not to be interfered with -- that 
everybody has the right not to be interfered with.
 If other people learned to respect their own rights, then they 
might start respecting mine.
 
 
 
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