Townhall...
Free To Die?
by Walter E. Williams
Dec 07, 2011
CNO
Editor: This is put about as
simply as it can be put... what say you?
Nobel
Prize-winning economist Paul
Krugman, in his New York Times column titled “Free to Die” (9/15/2011),
pointed
out that back in 1980, his late fellow Nobel laureate Milton Friedman
lent his
voice to the nation’s shift to the political right in his famous
10-part TV
series, “Free To Choose.” Nowadays, Krugman says, “’free to choose’ has
become
‘free to die.’”
He
was referring to a GOP presidential
debate in which Rep. Ron Paul was asked what should be done if a
30-year-old
man who chose not to purchase health insurance found himself in need of
six
months of intensive care. Paul correctly, but politically incorrectly,
replied,
“That’s what freedom is all about -- taking your own risks.” CNN
moderator Wolf
Blitzer pressed his question further, asking whether “society should
just let
him die.” The crowd erupted with cheers and shouts of “Yeah!”, which
led
Krugman to conclude that “American politics is fundamentally about
different
moral visions.” Professor Krugman is absolutely right; our nation is
faced with
a conflict of moral visions. Let’s look at it.
If
a person without health insurance
finds himself in need of costly medical care, let’s investigate just
how might
that care be provided. There are not too many of us who’d suggest that
we get
the money from the tooth fairy or Santa Claus. That being the case, if
a
medically indigent person receives medical treatment, it must be
provided by
people. There are several possible methods to deliver the services. One
way is
for people to make voluntary contributions or for medical practitioners
to
simply treat medically indigent patients at no charge. I find both
methods
praiseworthy, laudable and, above all, moral.
Another
way to provide those services
is for Congress to use its power to forcibly use one person to serve
the
purposes of another. That is, under the pain of punishment, Congress
could
mandate that medical practitioners treat medically indigent patients at
no
charge. I’d personally find such a method of providing medical services
offensive and immoral, simply because I find the forcible use of one
person to
serve the purposes of another, what amounts to slavery, in violation of
all
that is decent.
I
am proud to say that I think most of
my fellow Americans would be repulsed at the suggestion of forcibly
using
medical practitioners to serve the purposes of people in need of
hospital care.
But I’m afraid that most Americans are not against the principle of the
forcible use of one person to serve the purposes of another under the
pain of
punishment. They just don’t have much stomach to witness it. You say,
“Williams, explain yourself.”
Say
that citizen John pays his share
of the constitutionally mandated functions of the federal government.
He
recognizes that nothing in our Constitution gives Congress the
authority to
forcibly use one person to serve the purposes of another or take the
earnings of
one American and give them to another American, whether it be for
medical
services, business bailouts, handouts to farmers or handouts in the
form of
foreign aid. Suppose John refuses to allow what he earns to be taken
and given
to another. My guess is that Krugman and, sadly, most other Americans
would
sanction government punishment, imprisonment or initiation of violence
against
John. They share Professor Krugman’s moral vision that one person has a
right
to live at the expense of another, but they just don’t have the gall to
call it
that.
I
share James Madison’s vision,
articulated when Congress appropriated $15,000 to assist some French
refugees
in 1794. Madison stood on the floor of the House to object, saying, “I
cannot
undertake to lay my finger on that article of the Constitution which
granted a
right to Congress of expending, on objects of benevolence, the money of
their
constituents,” adding later that “charity is no part of the legislative
duty of
the government.” This vision of morality, I’m afraid, is repulsive to
most
Americans.
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