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First Principles
BY The Editors
October 18-24, 2009 Issue |
Posted 10/9/09 at 12:32 PM
Sometimes, when our minds get lost in the ins and
outs of a complicated debate, it’s good to stop and ask a basic question: Why?
Why
did we get into this argument in the first place?
That’s
what we need to do now, with a health-care reform bill coalescing in Congress.
What is wrong with the health-care delivery system in America, and what are the
basic principles that will help us fix it?
As
in many areas of life, Catholic wisdom has answers, and the bishops of the
United States have offered guidance. When a person is sick or in danger of
death, should he have to put forward a burdensome sum of money before a doctor
will look at him? Should a person without the means to pay for an expensive treatment
that will perhaps save his life be denied that treatment?
No,
says our faith, which teaches the principle of solidarity: looking out for the
common good and the welfare of our fellow man.
From
the day Jesus related the parable of the Good Samaritan, the Church has taught
that although each person is responsible for his own affairs, there are times
when we need to lend a hand.
One
of the more recent articulators of this principle was Cardinal Daniel DiNardo
of Galveston-Houston, Texas. This summer, he wrote a short but powerful letter
on his diocesan website in which he stated that the first principle to consider
in the reform of the health-care system is the dignity and respect owed to the
human person.
“For
that reason, we support universal health coverage which protects the life and
dignity of each person, a coverage that is thus truly universal, especially for
the poor and the vulnerable,” Cardinal DiNardo wrote.
To
be truly “universal,” he wrote, health-care coverage “must also be assured for
all from conception to natural death. For this same reason, we oppose any
efforts to expand abortion funding, mandate abortion coverage or endanger the
conscience rights of health-care providers and religious institutions.” He
pointed out that there are “long-standing current policies on these issues that
must be preserved — policies at the federal level that have received wide
support.”
An
example is the Hyde Amendment, which prohibits federal funding of abortions.
Certainly,
the Church’s voice has been heard in the debate. Many advocates and even some
members of Congress have referred to Church teaching in their support of this
or that aspect of health-care reform.
But
Cardinal DiNardo warned against using the Church’s position on health care to
advance partisan goals.
“Because
there are so many interests and points of view in this debate, it is imperative
for the Church to clearly state the principles,” he wrote. “We cannot be used
to support sides that have only their own agenda. Instead, we must make clear
and repeat the major principles that need to be safeguarded while the debate
and the various sides of the debate engage in the difficult legislative work of
providing what is genuine universal coverage.”
We
can tell when an interest uses the Church to support only its own agenda by
measuring its values against those of basic Catholic teaching. Thus, while some
Democrats point to the Church’s support for ensuring that everyone has access
to health care, regardless of ability to pay, it’s disingenuous for them to
then work to ensure that every health insurance option must cover abortions,
including any that is funded by our taxes.
For
example, John Kerry, D-Mass., sits on the Senate Finance Committee, which
produced one version of health-care legislation. Kerry’s website announces that
“health reform is … a matter of fundamental moral values.” Why, then, did he
vote against amendments from Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, that would have made the bill
conform to current federal law prohibiting direct abortion funding and offer
protection for medical workers who don’t want to participate in or refer for
abortions? Kerry is one of 13 Democrats on the finance committee, all of whom
voted against the amendments, leading to their defeat.
We
might also point out that those who embrace the Catholic principle of
solidarity to promote universal coverage must also accept the Catholic
principle of subsidiarity, which says that problems should first be addressed
by those closest to them. In health care, this principle would require personal
responsibility in ensuring good health — and when needed, good health care —
for oneself and one’s family. Creating a system in which the nanny state
provides for the needs of every individual — or at least purports to — removes
that sense of personal responsibility. Instead of calling for mandatory health
insurance, in which the government or some insurer will pay medical bills, why
not continue allowing (and promoting) medical savings accounts, in which
individuals save money — tax free — for their medical expenses? MSAs encourage
people to spend responsibly, simply because the money is coming directly out of
their own accounts.
But
subsidiarity applies to organizations, as well. Genuine health-care reform
would enable organizations such as Catholic hospitals and charitable
institutions, for example, to fulfill their proper role rather than co-opting
them, introducing burdens that make them unsustainable or forcing them to
choose between shutting down and abandoning their own principles — principles
that ought to be guaranteed by freedom of religion.
Pope
Benedict XVI, in Deus
Caritas Est (God Is Love),
states: “We do not need a state which regulates and controls everything, but a
state which, in accordance with the principle of subsidiarity, generously
acknowledges and supports initiatives arising from the different social forces
that combine spontaneity with closeness to those in need” (28).
As
always, the Pope’s words cut through all the chatter.
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