Healthcare For All, Part Three
The Bill of Rights establishes rights that are not to be
restricted by government. Freedoms of
speech and assembly, the rights to bear arms and to due process, and
prohibitions on the government from occupying or seizing most private property
are all enumerated. Doctrines of human rights
also set out to guarantee liberties from government oppression. What these long-cherished freedoms have in
common is that they each limit government action.
A right to healthcare, on the other hand, when applied would
increase government action toward and on individuals. Instead of keeping government out of
individual choices, it would move the government to provide a service that
members of a sizeable minority, at present, are unable to secure. The objections rest in the hesitation to make
government larger and more intrusive, transfer income, and, in some proposals,
interrupt free enterprise in the name of a right. Not a liberty or a prohibition on meddling at
all, healthcare as a human right would place a burden on one segment of
the populace to take care of another.
And it would be expensive.
Granted, money is spent to guarantee certain rights. Courts and law enforcement are necessary to
provide due process and enforce contracts and protect private property holders,
and the costs of these services are borne by the taxpayers. But to fund these services does not insist on
one taxpayer surrendering funds directly to support another citizen.
Calling healthcare a human right is integral to those demanding
healthcare for all. To meet this goal
would require larger public/private partnerships, or the creation of a single
payer system and the limitation of the private insurance market. Public/private partnerships have been
successful in the space program, but results in healthcare since the
introduction of the ACA have been mixed at best. And it all costs more than expected as
healthcare costs grow far beyond the rate of inflation and many individuals
either choose not to participate in the program, or find participation too
expensive.
People have rights to make individual choices about their
lifestyle, but the establishment of healthcare as a human right would prompt
calls, arguably justifiable, to limit these choices. If one calls upon others to fund their
healthcare, don’t those who pay the bills have the right to insist that the
covered individual not squander the payers’ money by making the poor life
choices that come with an unhealthy lifestyle?
Why should part of the populace have to sacrifice for another if some of
those ill are sick as a result of their own unhealthy habits, freely chosen?
I think no one, not even those who deny healthcare is a
human right, wants to see people suffer when help is readily available to
others facing the same illnesses. And I
think no one wants to see others suffer from illnesses that basic care would
eliminate. Some provisions for those in
poverty are necessary and should be provided in the name of social
justice. But claims that something that
gives some a benefit while forcing others to pay for it without influence, thus
expanding rights for some while limiting the rights of others; claims that
something like this is a right is dubious and unprecedented.
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