|
ObamaCare in Light of Benedict
Posted by Tom Hoopes
Saturday, August 01, 2009 5:39 AM
President Obama at the Children's National Medical Center in Washington, July 20. Reuters/Jason Reed
Benedict on Health Care
National Catholic Register Editorial
August 9-22, 2009 Issue
The
health-care debate is a perfect example of why Pope Benedict XVI’s encyclical
on the economy is called Caritas in Veritate —
Charity and Truth.
Think of it this way: Psychologists
who have attempted to care for people’s mental health without regard to the
reality of sin end up leaving people at the mercy of the worst psychological
disasters. A medical community that rejects the sacredness of human life ends up killing more people — embryos and the
elderly — than they save.
And economists who reduce people to economic entities — ignoring human love and the truth about the human person — find that they just make
problems worse.
Health care is a perfect example.
Charity and truth are why we have health care in the first place. The modern
health-care system started with Christ’s command to “heal the sick.” Dedicated
religious invented hospitals. Catholic nuns and brothers staffed them and
allowed them to proliferate. Health care was affordable to all who needed it
because, at its heart, it was a service of charity that responded to the dignity of the human person.
At the beginning of the 20th
century, Catholic organizations provided education and health care that were
practically free. At the beginning of the 21st century, the atheistic movements
that worked so hard to unshackle society from the chains of the Church are
faced with a society searching for, and not finding, lifelines to replace the
ones the Church once provided.
Of course, there are plenty of other
factors in the health-care situation America faces.
In order to head off labor unions,
employers in the early 20th century started to add benefits, among them medical
plans. Today, it is an expectation that employers will provide health-care
benefits. That, in turn, means that health-care costs have been hidden from
consumers for years: The money for the insurance comes out of their paycheck
(and their employer’s account) before they see it.
The litigation explosion in the past
50 years in America has also caused a new dynamic in health care: Providers
have to pay huge malpractice insurance rates, a cost they pass on to the
medical insurers, who pass it on to you and me and our employers — or to
prospective employers if we lose our job.
Yet health care remains a right.
“The political community has a duty to honor the family, to assist it, and to
ensure especially,” says
the Catechism (No. 2211), “in keeping with the country’s institutions, the
right to medical care, assistance for the aged, and family benefits.”
That doesn’t mean that all health
care must be government-provided. After all, the Catechism is careful to use
that phrase “in keeping with the country’s institutions” and also stresses the
right to private ownership, housing and emigration — none of which are expected
to be provided at government expense.
What, then, does it mean? How can we ensure the right to
medical care in the face of our gargantuan, overpriced mess of a health-care system?
Pope Benedict’s encyclical gives his
fundamental answer. “Love — caritas — is an
extraordinary force which leads people to opt for courageous and generous
engagement in the field of justice and peace.
… Development, social well-being, the search for a satisfactory solution
to the grave socioeconomic problems besetting humanity, all need this truth.”
In particular, Catholic social
thought has translated this love and truth into the principles of solidarity
and subsidiarity.
The principle of solidarity means we
ought to love our neighbor, feed the poor, clothe the naked, and care for the
sick.
On the one hand, the market alone
will not achieve solidarity. “In fact, if the market is governed solely by the
principle of the equivalence in value of exchanged goods, it cannot produce the
social cohesion that it requires in order to function well,” writes the Holy
Father (No. 38). He emphasizes: “Without internal forms of
solidarity and mutual trust, the market cannot completely fulfill its proper
economic function.”
On the other hand, “Solidarity is
first and foremost a sense of responsibility on the part of everyone with
regard to everyone,” he writes, “and it cannot therefore be merely delegated to
the State.”
The principle of subsidiarity, on
the other hand, is the Catholic belief that the person closest to a need has
the strongest ability — and clearest duty — to provide care.
These two principles are at the
heart of the health-care question: We are meant to help each other, and the
person closest to the problem is responsible for assistance.
Pope Benedict XVI is careful not to
place this responsibility solely on the shoulders of the marketplace or the
state.
He nicely distinguishes between an
over-reaching state on the one hand, and a laissez-faire approach
on the other, when he writes (No. 58), “The principle of subsidiarity
must remain closely linked to the principle of solidarity and vice versa,
since the former without the latter gives way to social privatism, while the
latter without the former gives way to paternalist social assistance that is
demeaning to those in need.”
These two principles are helpful
when assessing the health-care legislation being proposed in Washington.
Questions to ask: Does the proposal
help us expand health care? In other words, does it allow us to cut the true
factors that drive health-care costs — or does it kowtow to those who are
responsible for those costs, for instance trial lawyers and pharmaceutical
companies?
Also: Does the proposal put
decisions about assistance in the hands of those closest to the need? Or does
it move those decisions to Washington?
Of course, all of those questions
are moot if a health-care proposal fails to protect the right to life. Health
care that pays for abortion or pressures older patients to forgo necessary treatment isn’t a health-care
system at all, but a death machine.
No matter how it is structured or
how many benefits it provides to people, Catholics must oppose any legislator
who proposes or supports a death machine.
Love and truth demand that.
Filed under benedict, health care, obama, weekend commentary
|