of words" apparently, so this may help you.
https://www.alabamapolicy.org/wp-content/uploads/GTI-Brief-Positive-Negative-Rights-1.pdf
The unalienable rights in the Declaration and many found
among the first amendments to the Constitution are
considered “negative rights.” A “negative right” restrains
other persons or governments by limiting their actions
toward or against the right holder. In other words, it
enables the right holder to be left alone in certain areas.
For example, the right to be secure in one’s home requires
that others refrain from trespassing or entering without
permission.
On the other hand, many claims of rights emerging since
America’s founding, such as rights to healthcare, housing,
or standards of living, are considered “positive rights.”
These positive rights essentially provide the right holder
with a claim against another person or the state for some
good, service, or treatment. Thus, a right to housing
obligates someone – presumably the state – to provide the
right holder with housing, typically via resources obtained
from others.
viii
The words “negative” and “positive” reflect the nature of
the rights rather than a judgment on the quality of the
rights themselves.