Then please list the basic human rights. You have never done so and I am getting the impression that you don’t feel there are any even though you talk about them so much.
You don’t see to understand what is meant by the concept of rights in Catholic Social Teaching, the most important aspect of which is that **rights cannot be separated from responsibilities. **
That is, all,
yes ALL, of those rights which are proper to our dignity as human persons depend upon our responsibilities as human beings-to one another, to our families, and to the larger society.
So, here is a basic primer on the relationship of rights and responsibilities in regard to human dignity and charity according to Catholic Social Teaching.
There are two aspects to charity in Catholic Social Teaching. These are not opposing types, but are distinct responses to very different circumstances-that is, you can’t decide you like one approach over the other, because it would actually be a violation of human rights to apply one approach in a situation that calls for the other approach.
TYPE 1:
For example, food and shelter may be proper to my dignity as a human person, but if I make no effort to secure these things in a manner consistent with my human dignity, then I have essentially forsaken my right to food and shelter. Yes, I can ask for help from others to secure these things, but this is an appeal to charity, which can only be free given. The genuine work of charity from others in this case is not simply to give me what I need, because to do so does not respect my free choice to forsake my own rights. Instead, the truly charitable act is to help me appreciate my potential to live as a dignified human being such that I willingly choose to pursue that which is proper to a human being. This would be the “teach a man to fish…” idea.
[In this case, and I can’t stress this enough, it is actually a VIOLATION of an individual’s human rights to provide for them what they have willfully chosen not to secure for themselves.
TYPE 2:
On the other hand, if I do everything within my power to secure food and shelter for myself and my family, but am simply unable to do so as a result of overwhelming social or environmental factors, I have not forsaken my right to these things, and so have greater cause to appeal to the good will of others who are thus compelled by Christian Charity to help me secure that which is proper to my already present choice to live in accordance with that which is proper to my dignity as a human person. This is the situation referred to in Populorum Progressio #23:
‘If people are rich and do give help to those who stand in need, they
only give the poor what was already theirs. The earth was made for
all, not just for the rich.’ So wrote St Ambrose.
Populorum Progressio #23*
I hope this helps to clarify why I believe that it would actually be morally unacceptable to simply create blanket charity for everyone, regardless of if they need it, want it, or have attempted to secure it for themselves.
Yes, Healthcare could be considered a human right because basic healthcare is proper to our dignity as human persons. However, we have the responsibility to secure this right by engaging in other aspects of human dignity, such as working and living responsibly, making responsible choices with our financial gifts-such as choosing to pay for healthcare if we can afford it, even if that means we have to go without other things which are not proper to our dignity as human persons.
Those people who have the ability but not the desire to secure their own healthcare have effectively forsaken their right to healthcare.
However, we are compelled by Christian Charity to reach out to those people who have the desire but not the ability to secure their own healthcare, because healthcare is their right and they have met their responsibility to live in accordance with their dignity as human persons.
The problem with involving the government in this process is that it violates EVERYONE’s human dignity because it ignores the real meaning of rights and responsibilities which are so essential to what it is to be human persons in community with others, and instead replaces these with a system of entitlements which do not require any kind of individual effort or exchange, and ultimately degrade the value of what it means to be a human persons.