Tuesday, December 29, 2009

What I Think About It

Sometimes I find one that says just what I think.

Memo To Foes Of Health Reform: Repudiate The Morality Of Need

By Yaron Brooks and Don Watkins Posted 12/28/2009 06:47 PM ET


In the run-up to the Senate's passage of the health care bill, opponents of ObamaCare denounced it as an unprecedented expansion of government control over medicine.

They warned of the proven consequences of government medicine, pointing to the rationing that occurs in Canada and Europe.

They pointed to the low cancer survival rates in places like Britain. They cited statistic after statistic showing that ObamaCare will raise costs and lower health care quality in America.

They were right — yet it looks like Obama will get his bill. And even if the Republicans are able to pull off an upset, there is no question that over the coming years government control over health will continue to grow.

Why? Consider the history of government involvement in health care.

In the 1960s there was a perception that some elderly were not receiving adequate health care. To meet this need, Congress passed Medicare. The same concern was voiced about the poor. To meet their need, Congress passed Medicaid.

The same concern was voiced about those too destitute (or too irresponsible) to buy health insurance, and in the '80s Congress passed the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, forcing emergency rooms to treat anyone who needed medical attention, regardless of their ability to pay.

The same concern was voiced about parents who were too well off for Medicare, but who nevertheless couldn't meet their children's health care needs, and in the late '90s Congress passed the State Children's Health Insurance Program.

The message is clear: If you have a need, you are entitled to have it fulfilled at others' expense.

The reason we continue to move toward socialized medicine is that everyone — including the opponents of socialized medicine — grants its basic moral premise: that need generates an entitlement.

So long as that principle goes unchallenged, government intervention in medicine will continue growing, as each new pressure group asserts its need and lobbies for its entitlement, until finally the government takes responsibility for fulfilling everyone's medical needs by socializing the health care system outright.

Some believe you can stop this process midstream: The government will intervene only to help those in dire circumstances while otherwise leaving people responsible for their own health care. But that's an illusion. If need entitles one to the wealth and effort of others, then there is no logical reason why the government should restrict help to some small subset of the "needy," and refuse to help the rest.

The only way to effectively oppose socialized health care is to reject the morality of need in favor of a genuinely American alternative. According to the American ideal, — we are independent individuals with inalienable rights to support our own lives and happiness by our own efforts.

That means taking responsibility for your own medical needs, just as you take responsibility for your grocery shopping and car payments. It means no one can claim that his need entitles him to your time, effort, or wealth.

Where is the willingness to defend this ideal by saying, "Your health care is your responsibility — and if you truly cannot afford the care you need, then you must ask for private charity — not pick your neighbor's pocket to pay for it"?

Opponents of ObamaCare object that it is "too expensive," that the proposed bills are "too long," that Congress is moving "too fast" — conceding all the while that the goal of providing people with unearned health care is righteous.

But if forcing some Americans to provide unearned health care for others is noble, then is it any wonder that America keeps moving toward socialized medicine? Is it any wonder that, while Republicans loudly oppose Democratic attempts to expand government control over health care, they do not challenge the endless need-based interventions that already exist — and instead push for their own need-based programs (such as Bush's prescription drug entitlement)?

Those who truly want to fight against socialized medicine in America must realize that it's time to drop the morality of need and proudly say: I am not my brother's health care provider.


• Brook is the president of the Ayn Rand Center for Individual Rights, a division of the Ayn Rand Institute that promotes the philosophy of the author of "Atlas Shrugged" and "The Fountainhead."

• Watkins is an analyst at the center.

6 comments:

grannybabs said...

Hmm - I wonder if this guy has read King Benjamin's address?

Regardless of how anyone feels about health care reform, there is a moral imperative to be our brother's keeper.

The Savior said it pretty simply, "Feed my sheep."

If we object to having the government do it, perhaps we need to look at what we are not doing to help those less fortunate than us.

If there was no need, I don't think the government would be pressing for these programs.

But that's just how I feel.

D. Scott said...

I believe that the Savior called on us as individuals and as united groups such as our church or other charitable organizations to take care of our brothers.
I do not think that it is the role of the government that can mandate your treasure to unilaterally take from one and give to another.
All I ask from the government is equality of opportunity, not equality of results. I prefer to make my own and give of that result to the brother in need of my choice, or give it to the organization that I feel will best serve that need.
The government circumvented us taking care of our own as we had done for over a hundred and fifty years by trying to take over this responsibility by fiat during the great depression, and it has continued to take these "responsibilities" from us during the ensuing years.
I believe that there are many good people who would give of there own to take care of their brothers in need but they have relinquished that responsibility to the government because of what the government takes out of their paychecks. Thus taking another basic freedom to choose for ourselves, or at least putting a great stumbling block in the way.

grannybabs said...

I don't agree that the money the government takes out is the reason why people don't "give" on their own. I think most would spend more on themselves.

Far too many things have to be legislated - but if they are not legislated, they don't happen.

In my field, especially, I have seen government tying our hands literally and figuratively. But I have also seen far too many teachers and administrators who would not provide for the special needs of children - unless the government mandates it.

It's a conundrum, that's for sure, but I don't think there is a simple answer - except for the Savior's admonition to feed his sheep. Recently the church has added a fourth item to the "mission" of the church - to care for the poor and the needy. We need to evaluate carefully just how we can do this - and leave government issues out of the mix.

The Mom said...

Why don't people look at Australia, Canada, UK. Goverment run medical care does not work very well. You wait for years to have simple surgeries, that the US peoples do not have to wait for. If you can't afford private insurance you wait and wait, if you don't die first. Goverment run insurance is why people from Canada come to the US for operations they have done, not wait and wait for or don't qualify for. I don't want the Goverment desiding what I can have done or not done medicaly.

The Mom said...

I forgot to mention that the taxes here are very high. Only the ones who work are paying for all the "quote free medical insurance" it is not free but the taxes they pay are more then the free medical insurance, way more.
I could write a whole lot about pensions. tons and tons of people are on them. If you are 16 yrs.old and don't like it at home, just say so and they get a pension to go live on their own. There are many many more examples like that that go on here. Guess who pays for it all? The working people.

grannybabs said...

Well, that brings up the whole problem of the taxation system - which definitely needs overhauling. The middle class always pays - the rich have figured out how to avoid it.

Once again, what is missing is the spirit of helping one another. The Lord certainly knew what he was talking about when he said it was harder for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven.

Imagine how it would be if the rich paid their share - and didn't try to avoid taxes. (Maybe they wouldn't be rich then though!!)

Living the gospel of Jesus Christ is the answer.