timcfc,
So you don’t agree with the Catholic Church concerning socialism?
Jesus never indorsed the political movement of socialism.
Local problems should be taken care of by local people (we personally feed the hungry). When Blessed Teresa of Calcutta saw people dumped on the streets to die did she say, “Let’s get the government to take care of this.” When Christ comes in glory does he say, “When I was hungry you let the government feed me.” No. Are you familiar with the works of mercy? Every one of us is individually called to individually show mercy to those around us and in our communities. This is our stewardship of time, talent, and treasure that we freely give in our lives. Socialism takes away free will and lets an all encompassing welfare state take care of things instead of us personally doing it. The fault is not in our social-political systems but in us. This is our judgment for how we use our free will in our lives.
Well in that case should the communities not be looking after the people who cannot afford healthcare? The problem with your argument is that in the US only the people who can afford it can have healthcare,this is wrong.Everyone should be entitled to be looked after when they are sick,also is it not true that 60% of all bankruptcies in the US happen because normal working people cannot pay their health insurance. This is from CNN
One out of three Americans under 65 were without health insurance at some point during 2007 and 2008, according to a report released Wednesday.
With respect to health care reform, “the cost of doing nothing is too high,” says Families USA.
The study, commissioned by the consumer health advocacy group Families USA, found 86.7 million Americans were uninsured at one point during the past two years.
Among the report’s key findings:
• Nearly three out of four uninsured Americans were without health insurance for at least six months.
• Almost two-thirds were uninsured for nine months or more.
• Four out of five of the uninsured were in working families.
• People without health insurance are less likely to have a usual doctor and often go without screenings or preventative care.
As far as im aware,the Catholic church in the US supports a change in healthcare but it must be without abortion,i agree with this.
There is not a person in the U.S. that is turned away from healthcare when they must have it.
A friend of mine had a major heart attack. The surgery he had, the recovery and all of the medicine is currently paid for by the Government. He did not go without and did not have to pay back a dime.
I do agree as most do that there is the need of health care reform, just not government controlled and not government funded abortions.
Actually you are wrong.The number of uninsured Americans reached 47 million in 2006, and it continues to rise. For many of the uninsured, the lack of health insurance has dire consequences. The uninsured face medical debt, often go without necessary care, and even die prematurely.
In 2002, the Institute of Medicine released a groundbreaking report, Care without Coverage: Too Little, Too Late, which estimated that 18,000 adults nationwide died in 2000 because they did not have health insurance. Subsequently, The Urban Institute estimated that 22,000 adults died in 2006 because they did not have health insurance.
Again i cant understand on a Catholic forum people saying that healthcare coverage should not be for all. Of course i agree that abortion should never be part of it,but when your fellow man is dying because he/she cannot afford healthcare,why would you be against it?