If I am to be entirely honest, my political views range from minimal government(emphasis on constitutional, not democratic) to anarcho-capitalism.I am glad you realize there is no point in having a right if there's no power to enforce it on your behalf. How to organize that power has to be an integral part of any political ideology. Ideologies that focus heavily on curtailing state power tend to overlook the need, and the means to curtail private power, which is no less capable of making a mockery of the law.
The thing is, a "right", as we think of it, is not really a right, but in truth a privilege. If it truly were a "right" then it would be a guaranteed state of things through the world and easily attainable. In truth, what we consider to be "rights" are in fact privileges that are only attainable with a watchful and proactive population, which is at all times vigilant of the state and always curtailing its powers. Through out history, the main violators of what we consider to be our "modern rights" have always been the state.
The rights I speak of, such as the right to be left alone, the right to discriminate, the right to own property, the right of free speech, etc...these are the exception through out the history of mankind. But where these rights were applied and enforced through pressure by the populace, prosperity and rapid technological/economical growth happened.