Good video, Robert. I've been meaning to argue in defense of individualism as well. The whole western tradition that the individual is endowed with inalienable rights is certainly worth defending.
I do believe these rights are real, endowed by God. Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, are all things protected by the 10 Commandments. Though shalt not murder (Life), though shalt not steal (Property & Pursuit of Happiness), and Liberty (The whole point of deliverance from Pharaoh, fulfilled in the New Testament)
How any Christian can deny these are REAL God-given rights and talk as though they're just made up fictions is beyond me.
There's PLENTY of people out there willing to say those rights have no basis in reality, there is no human nature, and therefore government can mold us all into any form they want to, and don't have to respect rights.
Apparently, there are plenty of people ready to part with those God-given rights, too, for a chance to take whatever crumbs Pharaoh is willing to give.
My criticism is only that in formulating these natural rights the moderns left out the other parts of natural rights ("duties") and this tends to lend itself to a kind of radical individualism and to "atomized" individuals which leads to people WANTING Pharaoh's crumbs.
The other parts of the Natural Rights are just as important, imo.
They want to acknowledge man's rights but not God's rights.
It's a whole package deal. We see the consequences of rejecting the other half.
P.S. Sorry for the glib language. A "covenant" is more than a "deal."