S
sedonaman
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Why would it take a king’s order to make you do it?… If a king said I would have to give something for the common good I would. …
Why would it take a king’s order to make you do it?… If a king said I would have to give something for the common good I would. …
Has anyone considered mutual benefit societies? They were popular in the early 20th century before government took over just about everything.Humble Pie, the solution to our Medical Reform/AHA is one where people of good will can disagree on. The USCCB has been criticized, regarding this subject, with their inability to reconcile the current law with our Subsidiarity teaching - keep things as local and small as possible to ensure freedom, etc. …
You seem to equate the two criticisms. While the popes have criticized capitalism, they have condemned socialism.… As far as I know popes have written just as much about the evil of free markets as they have written about the evils of socialism. …
…We speak of that sect of men who, under various and almost barbarous names, are called socialists, communists, or nihilists, and who, spread over all the world, and bound together by the closest ties in a wicked confederacy, no longer seek the shelter of secret meetings, but, openly and boldly marching forth in the light of day, strive to bring to a head what they have long been planning – the overthrow of all civil society whatsoever.
Surely these are they who, as the sacred Scriptures testify, “Defile the flesh, despise dominion, and blaspheme majesty.”[2] They leave nothing untouched or whole which by both human and divine laws has been wisely decreed for the health and beauty of life. They refuse obedience to the higher powers, to whom, according to the admonition of the Apostle, every soul ought to be subject, and who derive the right of governing from God; and they proclaim the absolute equality of all men in rights and duties. They debase the natural union of man and woman, which is held sacred even among barbarous peoples; and its bond, by which the family is chiefly held together, they weaken, or even deliver up to lust. Lured, in fine, by the greed of present goods, which is “the root of all evils, which some coveting have erred from the faith,”[3] they assail the right of property sanctioned by natural law; and by a scheme of horrible wickedness, while they seem desirous of caring for the needs and satisfying the desires of all men, they strive to seize and hold in common whatever has been acquired either by title of lawful inheritance, or by labor of brain and hands, or by thrift in one’s mode of life. These are the startling theories they utter in their meetings, set forth in their pamphlets, and scatter abroad in a cloud of journals and tracts. Wherefore, the revered majesty and power of kings has won such fierce hatred from their seditious people that disloyal traitors, impatient of all restraint, have more than once within a short period raised their arms in impious attempt against the lives of their own sovereigns.
If you have an equally blistering condemnation from a pope on free markets, I’d like to see it.ENCYCLICAL OF POPE LEO XIII ON SOCIALISM, 28 December, 1878.
I don’t believe in the ideas of the enlightenment and I believe God will appoint a king after the chastisement.Why would it take a king’s order to make you do it?
One point: you will likely NOT hear conservatives criticizing the Vatican. You will likely also NOT hear conservatives criticize USCCB positions that have received a recognito by the Vatican. You are familiar with Apostolos Suos, right? If not, you might wish to familiarize yourself with it. It is a Motu Proprio issued by John Paul II in 1998 that defined when a bishops’ conference could propagate their authentic magesterium for their subjects. It issued the following complementary norms that are to be used with the Code of Canon Law:You know what I find interesting? This subject is a great example of how people allow their politics to influence their religious beliefs, instead of the other way around.
Liberals love to cite the USCCB’s declarations about universal health care; conservatives conveniently ignore it. Liberals quote Jesus’s statements about caring for the sick and poor (Matt 25, etc), and conservatives continue to bob and weave.
Similarly, conservatives point out the Church’s consistent teachings on socialism, and liberals conveniently ignore it. They also point out Paul’s statements in 2 Corinthians 9 and elsewhere about giving under compulsion, and liberals excuse it away.
It’s all very confusing, and frankly I don’t know what I believe anymore.
I will say however, I’d love to hear peoples alternative suggestions, instead of just criticizing the current system.
The main problems with leftism is the lack of ethics and atheism it seems, from your quote.You seem to equate the two criticisms. While the popes have criticized capitalism, they have condemned socialism.
If you have an equally blistering condemnation from a pope on free markets, I’d like to see it.
Have had a loved one told by an insurance company that they won’t authorize a heart transplant and then have the heart doctor say he will find a heart if we have enough money?Who are you to decide what sin is? God?
Another bad assumption. People with pre-existing conditions have continuing health issues. If they have insurance it is not likely they would cancel it, unless it is priced out of affordability. The more you keep espousing this scenario, the more your ignorance of this problem displays itself.I shouldn’t blame human nature?
Not a liberal, another one of your bad assumptions. Just a victim of the current health system. I wonder what religion you are? The Holy Spirit continually forms a Christian as we ask or even as we just go before Him seeking a better life. I would submit that most insurance companies don’t ask the Holy Spirit about denying coverage or dropping people out of coverage.One of the troubles with liberals like yourself is that they think human nature is infinitely malleable. It is not.
It is by faith not wishing.It’s OK to say don’t blame human nature, but wishing it out of existence doesn’t make it go away. Another problem with liberals: you never consider the unintended consequences of a government act. You just feel good about yourself for having stuck it to the “evil” insurance companies.
This type of fear mongering totally ignores the facts. None will be driven out of business. An industry so well entrenched in the economy cannot suddenly disappear. Our system does not work that way. However, they need to be reformed and the best reformation is a more efficient health care system.You are the one who is naïve if you think that the government can just mandate prices and markets. The way I see it, the question is not some having health insurance versus everyone having it, but some having it versus none having it, for no one will have it if the companies are driven out of business.
Another wrong assumption. More coverage does not necessarily mean rising costs. In a consumer-driven-health-care model more coverage actually reduces costs.…and we would like to have more coverage without the rising costs that come with it,
In the 1970’s the auto industry offered products priced on their way of doing business much of it with built in inefficiencies and their idea of what we wanted; that is, until the oil embargo happened. Today, the model for a profitable auto factory has changed and better cars are sold for lower prices. The government provided the impetus and entrepreneurs did the rest.Insurance companies can’t absorb the extra costs because what they charge now is based on their current cost of doing business without the added coverage.
It is the core, the foundation to the questions here. It is more than relevant. When so large a group of fellow citizens are denied basic human rights it is most relevant.A very passionate statement but also one that is completely irrelevant to any of the questions involved here.
I disagree. Most who are covered and healthy seem happy to ignore it. It is when you have been affected by an unjust system that you become passionate.Everyone would like to see our health care system improved; the choice is not between fixing it and ignoring it.
With a problem so huge there has to be a starting point. We have a Christian duty to be involved in the process and to educate ourselves on the problems and solutions that have been offered. Once something is done about it we should be ready to throw out the bad parts and keep the good.The debates are about whether Obamacare will make it better or worse and whether we have a Christian duty to support it. Given there is every reason to believe it will make life worse instead of better we surely have no moral obligation to accept it.
In fact everything about health care requires a moral position. Health care practices and treatments to our bodies requires a moral position. Whether a families life can be thrown into poverty and homelessness due to medical decisions demands a moral position. Whether abortion or end of life decisions demand a moral position.There is in fact no moral position on health care. There are moral and immoral reasons for choosing one proposal over another but (reasonable) proposals themselves have no moral content. One is not morally preferable to another.
Ender
This is propaganda for the status quo and fear mongering. There are many solutions that have been offered that do not result in anyone failing but the whole system improving.If you don’t look at the problem from all sides, INCLUDING THE SIDE OF THE INSURANCE COMPANIES, you will never be able to create a workable solution. Everyone likes to paint the insurance companies as demons but they are businessmen. If you create a system where the insurance companies are hit with an overwhelmingly disproportionate amount of risk and expense, you will have a failed system.
If there is no bread, let them eat cake. Your head in the sand outlook displays a callousness to the potential plight of some 40+ million fellow citizens.I don’t think there is anyone who believes that the current system is perfect. But it works and works well for most people who participate. The goal should be to expand that working model to include more, if not all, Americans. The current plan provides good to excellent care for the vast majority of Americans. The proposed plan would provide mediocre care to almost all Americans while the uber rich would be the only ones with access to excellent care. How is that an improvement?
You seem to equate the two criticisms. While the popes have criticized capitalism, they have condemned socialism.
If you have an equally blistering condemnation from a pope on free markets, I’d like to see it.
I don’t think I have engaged in fearmongering. In fact, I presented some possible changes to improve the system. But I come from a business background. When ever you want to make a change to an organization or a system, you need to consider the needs and (name removed by moderator)ut from all the stakeholders. The insurance companies and those who pay premiums to the insurance companies are major stakeholders in healthcare.This is propaganda for the status quo and fear mongering. There are many solutions that have been offered that do not result in anyone failing but the whole system improving.
And yours displays complete disregard for the needs of the other 273 million.If there is no bread, let them eat cake. Your head in the sand outlook displays a callousness to the potential plight of some 40+ million fellow citizens.
The model proposed under Obamacare would result in the lowering of care for everyone who currently has comprehensive insurance coverage unless they are wealthy enough to pay out of pocket for a “cadilac” policy.Your goal cannot be reached under the current model. Changing the model does not mean the result will be mediocre. But it will take work just like raising the horrors of abortion has taken and continues to take work.
Yes, those were bad times for human rights and completely irrelevant to this discussion. We are not taking about advantage to an elite few. We are talking about not disadvantaging the vast majority of Americans.There was a time in this country when slavery was a working model for many Americans. The advantage to the rich landowner did not outweigh basic human rights.
The same happened to factory workers in terrible conditions early in our history.
So, it’s moral to disadvantage the huge majority in order to provide an additional benefit to a much smaller group - a benefit that many of them have rejected already? (a not insignificant amount of the 40 million you quote are without insurance on purpose).While it was a small number of people disadvantaged when compared to the total population; it was nevertheless, immoral. It is immoral what is happening to many families who have been enslaved to the costs of going it on their own
Would that be bases on volunteering/non profit? I am notHas anyone considered mutual benefit societies? They were popular in the early 20th century before government took over just about everything.
I don’t think I have engaged in fearmongering. In fact, I presented some possible changes to improve the system. But I come from a business background. When ever you want to make a change to an organization or a system, you need to consider the needs and (name removed by moderator)ut from all the stakeholders. The insurance companies and those who pay premiums to the insurance companies are major stakeholders in healthcare.
Your opinion here shows that you have just listened to sound bites and not really educated yourself on the many solutions out there. Consumer-Driven-Health-Care is just one example.
And yours displays complete disregard for the needs of the other 273 million.
The model proposed under Obamacare would result in the lowering of care for everyone who currently has comprehensive insurance coverage unless they are wealthy enough to pay out of pocket for a “cadilac” policy.
Bringing abortion into this discussion is kind of ironic, don’t you think since the proposed reform would increase the availability and funding of abortions?
Yes, those were bad times for human rights and completely irrelevant to this discussion. We are not taking about advantage to an elite few. We are talking about not disadvantaging the vast majority of Americans.
So, it’s moral to disadvantage the huge majority in order to provide an additional benefit to a much smaller group - a benefit that many of them have rejected already? (a not insignificant amount of the 40 million you quote are without insurance on purpose).
You keep avoiding my question about what would keep people from waiting until they needed health care to buy insurance and cancelling once they are well. I don’t see any reason to continue this exchange until you do.Have had a loved one told by an insurance company that they won’t authorize a heart transplant and then have the heart doctor say he will find a heart if we have enough money?
Have you been denied insurance after paying for it for over 30 years?
Many others have similar stories and worse.
Your question is thus a red herring, a diversion to the real problem. Besides, any Christian should be able to decide what sin is because we have the Holy Spirit.
Another bad assumption. People with pre-existing conditions have continuing health issues. If they have insurance it is not likely they would cancel it, unless it is priced out of affordability. The more you keep espousing this scenario, the more your ignorance of this problem displays itself.
Not a liberal, another one of your bad assumptions. Just a victim of the current health system. I wonder what religion you are? The Holy Spirit continually forms a Christian as we ask or even as we just go before Him seeking a better life. I would submit that most insurance companies don’t ask the Holy Spirit about denying coverage or dropping people out of coverage.
It is by faith not wishing.
Again not liberal but unintended consequences can be dealt with by correcting the original legislation.
It is not about sticking it to anyone; it is about equity and fairness. It is about life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness which is unfairly destroyed in many peoples lives by arbitrary decisions of the rich and powerful.
This type of fear mongering totally ignores the facts. None will be driven out of business. An industry so well entrenched in the economy cannot suddenly disappear. Our system does not work that way. However, they need to be reformed and the best reformation is a more efficient health care system.
If the US health care system follows the example of other industries that have adapted to better efficiences and operating procedures all will benefit. The patient will be healthier, the providers will have nice incomes, the insurance companies will still be in business.
Another wrong assumption. More coverage does not necessarily mean rising costs. In a consumer-driven-health-care model more coverage actually reduces costs.
In the 1970’s the auto industry offered products priced on their way of doing business much of it with built in inefficiencies and their idea of what we wanted; that is, until the oil embargo happened. Today, the model for a profitable auto factory has changed and better cars are sold for lower prices. The government provided the impetus and entrepreneurs did the rest.
Our health care system needs to do the same. The current costs are a result of built in inefficiencies. The government is providing the impetus and medical entrepreneurs
can once again do the rest.
You avoided a whole lot of gtrenewed’s questions, ones that highlight how the Affordable Care Act is moral in intent, like:You keep avoiding my question about what would keep people from waiting until they needed health care to buy insurance and cancelling once they are well. I don’t see any reason to continue this exchange until you do.
And your question is easily answered: In order to keep people from waiting until they needed health care to buy insurance and cancelling once they are well, there is the individual mandate. It’s the conservative, free market solution to the health care crisis that Obama chose. I would have preferred single-payer (medicare for all), but it wasn’t politically possible.Have had a loved one told by an insurance company that they won’t authorize a heart transplant and then have the heart doctor say he will find a heart if we have enough money?
Have you been denied insurance after paying for it for over 30 years?
The act can be moral in it’s intent - I would concede that. However, the means is not moral. When you claim that somethign is a Christian act, you have to focus on the means and not just the intent. One cannot pursue a good while using an immoral means to achieve it.You avoided a whole lot of gtrenewed’s questions, ones that highlight how the Affordable Care Act is moral in intent, like:
Thank you for your common sense responses!This is propaganda for the status quo and fear mongering. There are many solutions that have been offered that do not result in anyone failing but the whole system improving.
Your opinion here shows that you have just listened to sound bites and not really educated yourself on the many solutions out there. Consumer-Driven-Health-Care is just one example…
I am not a fan of insurance companies either. But for probably different reasons than you. I will explain later on.Someone please tell me what value the insurance companies provide?
First of all, I think you have a couple of misconceptions going on here:Since their duty is first to their stockholders, and second to patients, which leads them to deny care whenever possible, how is including them in our health plan useful for us?
No one is a little bit of a broad statement.No one seems to object to Medicare. Jerry states: " I would have preferred single-payer (medicare for all), but it wasn’t politically possible."
It’s possible now, since whatever the Supreme Court decides, the ACA will be a no starter, and doing nothing is not an option.
We need to push for an expansion of Medicare.