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 For life and liberty, the individual has rights no matter what.  You can't give it up.  You can only change who is enforcing it.

For property, you have to put in work, to make it your's.  If it's for example uninhabited land. 
 Oh yeah?
where do those rights you have "no matter what" come from?

"Life" probably has pretty general agreement. Most people agree they should be allowed to exist.

"Liberty"? (whatever *that is)
Not so much. 
 Morality is objective, as there would be no purpose in it if it was subjective.  You could kill and say "to me it felt right"

Morality is a survival mechanism, as we can't survive without basic rules.

Morality dictates you can't kill or enslave others (which is how I'm defining liberty here)

Therefore,
An individual's unconditional objective rights are derived morality, which is an emotional experience in the human mind, that should be governed by objective rules, derived from reason.

This could be also be phrased,
Rights come from mankind's ability to reason. 
 This implies the survival of humanity is some form of objective goal.  
 it is

and if you disagree with that, then die

to debate it, you have to be alive 
 That's fallacious argumentation. It doesn't prove it's objective. That said, there are some who might wish to exterminate 90%. What of those? The rule fails against them. 
 please don't debate seriously with someone who wants to get pedophilia unironically legalized ( ・ั﹏・ั) 
 Dude? What about the ones who wish to end 95% of humanity? 
 fuck off pedo scum 
 Kill yourself, ultra homo vermin. 
 Yea
at least

thats the only way that "natural rights" make any sense.

But its also extremely vague on details
which is fine.

Agreeing exactly what the morals are,
and how to derive rights from them,
is very murky and fraught with disagreement.
Large parts of the world do not derive "freedom of speech" from "you cant kill or enslave others" for example.

Which I why I've been arguing for pragmatic rights,
those you can actually assert
and are generally agreed upon socially.

Although I agree morality is a survival mechanism and tends to be pretty consistent across time and cultures. 
 explain the pragmatic rights being asserted? 
 Essentially, that rights are what you can exercise in a social context.

Any rando can imagine a right or privilege. But if you can't actually exercise it, so what?

Likewise society can decide a existent right is no longer is valid. (not the state, social consensus at whatever level)

In either situation the individual's option is to go somewhere they can *exercise the rights they hold.

Individuals generally will not continuously assert rights in contexts that result in social exclusion. 99% of the time they either conform or move to a different social context that agrees with them.

So rights aren't static, except in a dogmatic sense. They result from individuals asserting them en masse. 
 here
homeboy took your argument through to the end

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