R
rtconstant
Guest
On the other hand someone who is pro-choice would say that you are in fact inforcing morality that others do not want and that can potentially cause harm. While I would disagree with that argument I do so because I believe the Christian position on abortion is morally right and universally true.You are just setting up a strawman, but I’ll answer anyway. Please read my whole post and I’ll explain why they’re not the same.
Laws against abortion would protect unborn children from an elective and unjust attack by an aggressor intent on killing them.
Such a law is designed to **prohibit ** a specific, direct behaviour intended to cause harm to another.
However, in our soceity many even possibly most people also believe that upholding a women’s choice in this is morally correct. Does this mean that we should stop trying to get abortion laws changed since we’re essentially impossing our view of right and wrong on others? Of course not. I would hope that all citizens vote and hope to turn our soceity into a just one. Don’t get me wrong I realize you want the same thing I just offering a different view point.
When we support pro-Life legislation we support laws that some see as attacks on their liberty and their physical bodies. We all still support the pro-life movement though because it is right. I’m curious though where and how you see UHC as an attack and enforcement of specific behavior?On the other side, laws mandating universal health care are not designed to protect individuals from elective and unjust attacks by other citizens. Instead, they are compulsory laws which require citizens to engage in specific behaviours which may or may not directly benefit them.
OK, I’m with you.Prohibitive laws are easy to defend on moral grounds because they generally prohibit one person from engaging in a behaviour which is directly and specifically harmful to another.
True, and that has to be judged on a case by case basis it doesn’t mean though that those criteria cannot be met. Is good affordable healthcare for all citizens morally good? Yes. Is the availability of good healthcare to all citizens a violation of their or anyone’s rights? I don’t really see how. Is it demonstrabily the best way to achieve the good objective sought? Well, there are other proposals that might in theory work, however, UHC is demonstrably the best way that we currently have real world observation of. However, I’m open to other ideas as long as it offers health care to everyone who needs it in a manner that is affordable to them.Compulsory laws are not as easy to defend on moral grounds because you have to prove that what you are compelling the individual to do is both morally acceptable in itself, is not violating the individual rights of the individual being compelled, and is demonstrably the best way to achieve the good objective sought.
Well, right now we do manage to more or less keep supplies up though we do often run dangerously low. If we were at a point where we were having a real crisis of lack of blood for almost half of our hospitalized patients even after all the volunteers have been tapped then we may actually have to resort to that.Let me give you an example.
We don’t have laws mandating people to donate blood. Why? Because that would be a compulsory law which, in the eyes of some, is a violation of indiviual rights, and because, as demonstrated by successful blood donation programs, mandating blood draws is not the best or only way to achieve the goal of maintaining an emergency blood supply.
With this argument though I’m curious. Do you think that it is wrong that we all have to pay for public schools, libraries, police and the fire department?
In theory that might be true however, it is the best real world system that we’ve actually seen in action.In the same way, mandating people to pay into a government health care system is not the best or only way to make health care affordable and accessible to all who need it.