Why do people keep calling health care a “right?” Let’s get that nonsense out of the discussion so that it can be more clear and precise.
If we are talking about intrinsic rights, it is not, and can never be. An intrinsic right must be a right for every human being in all times and all places, for one. Never before in human history was it even thinkable that people could have a “right” to healthcare. Still in many countries this is the case. Health care is, frankly, a luxury and therefore a privilege. Period.
Second, to assert that health care is a “right” is to assert that you have a positive “right” to make a demand on someone to provide you a service. You are claiming that we have a right, essentially, to the labor of people who know how to provide that service. Thus the forced underpayment of doctors in this system. To assert that you have a “right” to health care is insisting on a right, ultimately, to force someone to do something for you. By this reasoning, slavery is a valid right!
All true intrinsic rights (like this country recognizes in the Declaration of Independence) are God-given and are rights against someone doing something to you. Thus the God-given rights to Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness. Never and nowhere do you have a natural and intrinsic “right” to force someone to do anything for you. Man-given rights are all really just privileges granted and provided for by government.
Health care is therefore a privilege and not a right.
I will add my voice to those who have pointed out that health care is already available to everyone through emergency services. I think it’s both funny and sad that the “solution” to get 35 million uninsured people who weren’t buying insurance to get insurance was to force them to buy insurance. Boy, did it take a genius to figure that one out? How did people miss this? Is it some great wonder that you can get people insured if you force them to buy insurance?
The problems and immoralities lie with many things the bill does and funds. Yes, much of it is fundamentally in violation of the spirit of the Constitution of this country. It also doesn’t make economic sense. The morality of various aspects can be debated (is it better to further enable people who are addicts, obese, smokers, and alcoholics to continue their self-destructive habits by giving them cheap health care that the rest of us are paying for? Must we, to be morally upright, bankrupt ourselves and make helping more innocent victims of accidents and diseases difficult, more expensive, or impossible?).
As for forcing people to pay into it, I think it violates our right to liberty–our right to make choices about what services we want to purchase. Many parts of the content of the bill make this a more egregious violation (effective public funding of abortion, directly or indirectly; forcing people into a heavily-regulated system that will further restrict options by mandating certain coverages, place demands on medical personnel, etc.). Since our Constitution, that social and governmental contract that we agree to with our citizenship, makes no provision for forcing people to purchase a good, this is a violation of our social contract, as well. It is a tyrannical imposition that would only properly be placed by a constutional amendment, IMO.