For an article that says the same things, but is more exhaustive, what you gave here is a good two-sentence summary of
Negative and Positive Rights. From wiki:
The "classic" positive right is the right to council (though I like the idea of police protection, i.e. you don't need to HIRE the cops for them to protect you). The government WILL PROVIDE it if you can't afford it. The "classic" negative right, as mentioned in the quote and already by others here is free speech. The
government is not obligated to provide you a platform, but is (or at least should be) forbidden from imprisoning you (or giving you other governmental consequences) of your speech. Note my bold there, that is government only, not everybody else on that particular one. The difference between government-mandated freedom of religion versus private is also another aspect I find fascinating about above.
As mentioned above, when somebody says "right to housing" or "food" or (especially) "health care" they are referring to something they believe should be
provided to them, almost-always free of charge.
In summary though
@figmentPez I would say that a governmental guarantee of the Right to Life encompasses only that the government will not kill you, and will not tolerate OTHERS killing you either. It does not encompass them
providing the necessities of life to you free of charge. Others here (you may be included in this, you may not) almost certainly disagree with this interpretation, but regardless of that, your example of banning all food would clearly IMO fall under the government attempting to kill you.