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Ender
Guest
This is partly true but the key point here is that it is the individual, not a government bureaucracy, which makes the decision about what is needed.**Individuals **make choices based on their income, or lack of income.
The government has certain responsibilities, and providing a military is one of them. It does not have the responsibility of providing health care … and it has not done a good job of it when it tries.I fail to see how healthcare will deteriorate if it is run by the government. Does this mean our military is ‘deteriorated’? It is run by the government.
Look, we disagree on whether the government can or cannot provide better health care than the private sector can provide, but that is an entirely prudential debate where one of us is correct and the other is incorrect. What it is not is a moral debate, which is why the Church takes no position on the issue, and that is what this thread is about: whether the Church supports universal (viz. government controlled) health care. And the answer to that question is, no, the Church does not call for the provision of universal (government) health care.
Ender