A
Right to Health Care? Wrong!
By
Richard Amerling
Years of debating liberal friends and colleagues
has brought me to an understanding: This question is at the core of
the debate. The absurd notion of a “right” to health care underlies
the movement towards socialized medicine. If this right does exist,
it becomes a moral imperative to guarantee it for all, i.e.
“universal coverage.”
There is no question that President Obama
believes in a right to health care; he stated during the second
presidential debate in 2008, “I think it should be a right for every
American.” He has also been captured in a radio interview
describing the Constitution and Bill of Rights as a “charter of
negative rights” and that the Warren Court didn’t go far enough
towards defining “what the government must do on your behalf.” We
are now witnessing this philosophy in action as the Obama
administration fulfills its campaign promise to “fundamentally
transform America.”
No right to health care has yet been unearthed in
the Constitution, the Declaration of Independence, or in any Supreme
Court decision. The Declaration speaks of “unalienable rights”
including the “pursuit
of happiness.” There is no right to happiness itself, nor can there
ever be.
Look at the Bill of Rights. There is nothing
even remotely related to health care. Where specific rights are
defined, the document is silent on how these rights are to be
guaranteed. The second amendment guarantees the right of citizens
to bear arms, but has never been interpreted as a mandate to
provide arms to
citizens. The sixth amendment defines due process in criminal
trials and includes the right to have “the Assistance of Counsel for
his defense.” This did lead to court-appointed attorneys, but not
calls for universal access to legal services. The first amendment
includes freedom of speech, but doesn’t include free access to media
(this was mandated
by the “Fairness Doctrine,” thrown out during the Reagan
administration).
The fundamental difference between a right to
bear arms and a right
to arms is that the former is free, while the latter
requires labor to produce. There can be no right of individuals to
the fruits of labor of another individual. Such an affirmative
“right” ultimately treads on the liberty of the producer. One
person’s “rights” lead to the trampling of another’s true rights to
the pursuit of happiness. The end result is tyranny.
Whenever arguments devolve to this basic
question, I ask, “Should there be a right to food, or shelter? Both
are even more essential to survival than health care.” Suddenly
backed into a corner, they answer “Yes.” Well, of course this
concept led directly to governmental programs such as food stamps
and farm subsidies, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the entire
Department of Housing and Urban Development, all taxpayer-funded
wealth transfers that diminish the liberty and property of many to
help a few.
The notion of a “right” to health care inspired
governmental meddling that has all but destroyed the greatest health
care system in the world. Beginning with the tax subsidy for
employer-sponsored health insurance, on through Medicare, Medicaid,
SCHIP, enormous unaccountable bureaucracies, direct third party
payment with price controls and hyper-regulation, we are now on
precipice of a complete government takeover.
Medicare, Medicaid, and many private insurance
companies impose price controls on physicians and limit private
contracting with patients. Price controls steal the true value of
physician time, thus depriving doctors of liberty. These plus
onerous regulations increasingly limit treatment options (see
ObamaCare: The Assault on Physician Autonomy).
The endgame of the “right” to health care is the
complete enslavement of the medical profession. With this comes
enormous risk to the individual, who must now petition bureaucrats
in order to receive care. We already know how this turns out by
looking to the United Kingdom and Canada. Close examination of both
countries explodes the myth that universal
coverage leads to
universal access to
health care.
Health care is a complex combination of goods and
services, involving the time, energy and labor of millions of
individuals. It can never be a right. The government cannot
provide health care; it can only compel others to provide it, with
great loss of individual liberty, not to mention financial
calamity. The best way to improve
access to health care
is through free-market capitalism.
Read other articles and learn more about
Richard Amerling.
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