Given that there isn't going to be a response, let me counter this somewhat short-sighted statement: money is essentially a store of value for labor performed. So when someone exchanges money at a later time for goods, it may not be because of a "human right" but even so there is prior labor involved.
Now, if you want to argue against money equaling labor, one of the most dubious uses of money are the multiple levels of derived labor that are available and flourishing in the stock market. The "value" "created" can be disputed because of the very indirect nature of it.
Similarly, inflation dilutes the "store of value" to lessen its value.