Nobody could possibly be opposed to “human rights.” The idea sounds so pure and noble. So why does the phrase make me cringe?
When I speak of rights, I tend to speak of individual rights. That’s what the classical liberal thinkers had in mind a couple of hundred of years ago when they started recognizing rights. They realized that individuals had certain rights — to be left alone to live, speak, worship and trade as they wished. Politicians attempting to implement some of those ideas — such as the founders of this country after the split from Great Britain — did imperfect jobs of implementing the ideas, even though they were really good at quoting the rhetoric of individual rights. (If they had really understood their rhetoric, slavery wouldn’t have been made part of the Constitution, for instance.)
But since the beginning of the Progressive Era, people have talked about something entirely different. Influenced by Marxist ideas of rigid class structure, they slowly evolved the idea that groups have rights. To them, rights weren’t natural things which apply equally to every human. Instead, “workers” had certain “rights” just because they were part of a social or economic group. The idea was extended to other identifiable groups — women and racial minorities to start — and then kept expanding.

Angry behavior on social media is killing you and hurting your cause
Hiding anger was a survival skill, so you might not know I’m angry
The ‘man in the mirror’ always turns out to be our worst enemy
At life’s end, who we’ve loved will matter more than what we’ve owned
Kids’ willingness to blindly obey shows in Quebec teacher’s joke
We’re becoming so selfish that our old ‘social scripts’ are dying
You finally have to stop making excuses for people who hurt you
Doing the right thing frequently requires breaking immoral laws
Forces shaping America reward acting like angry sixth graders