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What
Is a Right?
by
Andrew P. Napolitano
by Andrew P. Napolitano
Recently by Andrew P. Napolitano: 'Let
There Be MONEY'
In the continually
harsh public discourse over the President’s proposals for federally-managed
healthcare, the Big Government progressives in both the Democratic
and the Republican parties have been trying to trick us. These folks,
who really want the government to care for us from cradle to grave,
have been promoting the idea that health care is a right. In promoting
that false premise, they have succeeded in moving the debate from
WHETHER the feds should micro-manage health care to HOW the feds
should micro-manage health care. This is a false premise, and we
should reject it. Health care is not a right; it is a good, like
food, like shelter, and like clothing.
What is a right?
A right is a gift from God that extends from our humanity. Thinkers
from St. Thomas Aquinas, to Thomas Jefferson, to the Rev. Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr., to Pope John Paul II have all argued that our
rights are a natural part of our humanity. We own our bodies, thus
we own the gifts that emanate from our bodies. So, our right to
life, our right to develop our personalities, our right to think
as we wish, to say what we think, to publish what we say, our right
to worship or not worship, our right to travel, to defend ourselves,
to use our own property as we see fit, our right to due process
– fairness – from the government, and our right to be left alone,
are all rights that stem from our humanity. These are natural rights
that we are born with. The government doesn’t give them to us and
the government doesn’t pay for them and the government can’t take
them away, unless a jury finds that we have violated someone else’s
rights.
What is a good?
A good is something we want or need. In a sense, it is the opposite
of a right. We have our rights from birth, but we need our parents
when we are children and we need ourselves as adults to purchase
the goods we require for existence. So, food is a good, shelter
is a good, clothing is a good, education is a good, a car is a good,
legal representation is a good, working out at a gym is a good,
and access to health care is a good. Does the government give us
goods? Well, sometimes it takes money from some of us and gives
that money to others. You can call that taxation or you can call
it theft; but you cannot call it a right.
A right stems
from our humanity. A good is something you buy or someone else buys
for you.
Now, when you
look at health care for what it is, when you look at the US Constitution,
when you look at the history of human freedom, when you accept the
American value of the primacy of the individual over the fleeting
wishes of the government, it becomes apparent that those who claim
that healthcare is a right simply want to extend a form of government
welfare.
When I make
this argument to my Big Government friends, they come back at me
with…well, if people don’t have health insurance, they will just
go to hospitals and we will end up paying for them anyway. Why should
that be? We don’t let people steal food from a supermarket or an
apartment from a landlord or clothing from a local shop. Why do
we let them take healthcare from a hospital without paying for it?
Well, my Big Government friends contend, that’s charity.
They are wrong
again. It is impossible to be charitable with someone else’s money.
Charity comes from your own heart, not from the government spending
your money. When we pay our taxes to the government and it gives
that money away, that’s not charity, that’s welfare. When the government
takes more from us than it needs to secure our freedoms, so it can
have money to give away, that’s not charity, that’s theft. And when
the government forces hospitals to provide free health care to those
who can’t or won’t care for themselves, that’s not charity, that’s
slavery. That’s why we now have constitutional chaos, because the
government steals and enslaves, and we outlawed that a long time
ago.
December 19, 2009
Andrew P. Napolitano
[send him mail],
a former judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey, is the senior
judicial analyst at the Fox News Channel. His next book is Lies
the Government Told You: Myth, Power, and Deception in American History,
(Nelson, 2010).
Copyright ©
2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in part
is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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