Hmmm you guys make some good points. But I still think many of that is still learned. You have to have comprehension. I personally believe if you are braindead you are dead. The mentally ill have less rights. (Can't own guns). Etc
So do you believe that a drivers license is against your rights? Having insurance? What about degrees? Permits?
Where do we as a society draw the line?
You started out stating "Language. Without learning language one can't speak. "
Now you're lumping in everything the human mind can do under the label "learning," and trying to expand your belief beyond just language -- now that you realize generalizing the way you did was incorrect. That's a classic case of goal post moving.
Given your new logic, shooting someone is protected expression because you had to learn to use the gun.
As for your obvious attempt to muddy the water, there are rights, there are privileges and there are restrictions on both.
You're certainly free to yell "fire!" in a crowded theater. There may actually be smoke, and you are raising an alarm. Or, it was a prank, and the attendees may evacuate calmly and without injury. Therefore, no unfortunate consequences to your false alarm, and no laws broken. You may be trespassed from that theater and all their other properties. Rights allow you to act without government repercussion, so as a private theater company, they can certainly punish you for your behavior. Nobody prevented you from yelling "fire!" is the point. You chose to yell, and that speech is protected from government action as long as nothing bad resulted from it -- injury, death, property damage, etc. Charges would be based on those outcomes, not the speech alone.
Operating a motor vehicle on public streets is not a right. Unless you identify as a Sovereign Citizen, which would explain a lot.

i don't know what you mean by "What about degrees?". Maybe i never learned how to interpret an incomplete interrogative sentence fragment without proper context.