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Tuesday, December 1, 2015

Do we have a right to health care or a free college education?



The following quote has often been attributed to Benjamin Franklin. I am not sure who said it, but it certainly fits with the aim of the founders relative to our rights:

The U.S. Constitution does not guarantee happiness, only the pursuit of it. You have to catch up with it yourself." --

Lately this word has been thrown around quite a lot. Politicians under pressure to shout about a right to a “free college education” or a right to healthcare. What do we mean by the word “rights?” Who has them? Who is obligated to see that the right is fulfilled and not infringed upon? Many of us first heard the word “right” as it was used in the Declaration of Independence; we have the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.  Let us consider this word “right” as we use it in four ways:

Claim right:  A claim right is a right which entails responsibilities, duties, or obligations on other parties regarding the right-holder. If I hold the “mineral rights” to my property, then I must be paid by someone who expects to extract these minerals.

A liberty right or privilege, in contrast, is simply a freedom or permission for the right-holder to do something, such as freedom of speech, press or assembly. There are no obligations on other parties to do or not do anything. I can show up at “Speaker’s Corner” in London and talk about anything from the demise of the earth according to the Mayan Calendar to monetary policy in the US.

Natural rights: Natural rights are rights not contingent upon the laws, customs, or beliefs of any particular culture or government, and therefore universal and inalienable; are rights which are "natural" in the sense of "not artificial, not man-made.”[i] They're sometimes called moral rights or inalienable rights.  John Locke (1632–1704) proposed that there are three natural rights[ii]:
  • Life: everyone is entitled to live once they are created.
  • Liberty: everyone is entitled to do anything they want to so long as it does not conflict with the first right.
  • Estate: everyone is entitled to own all they create or gain through gift or trade so long as it does not conflict with the first two rights.
Legal rights, in contrast, are based on a society's customs, laws, statutes or actions by legislatures. Legal rights are sometimes referred to as civil rights; the right to vote, serve on juries, etc.

Many people in politics and government routinely refer to healthcare as a right. If healthcare is a right, who is obligated to give you healthcare? How did you earn this right? What are you giving in return? In 2009, John D. Lewis, PhD, at Duke University wrote:[iii]

“…the very idea that health care -- or any good provided by others -- is a 'right' is a contradiction. The rights enshrined in the Declaration of Independence were to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Each of these is a right to act, not a right to things...”
Professor Lewis elaborates further:

These two concepts of rights -- rights as the right to liberty, versus rights as the rights to things -- cannot coexist in the same respect at the same time...To reform our health care industry we should challenge the premises that invited government intervention in the first place. The moral premise is that medical care is a right. It is not. There was no 'right' to such care before doctors, hospitals, and pharmaceutical companies produced it. There is no 'right' to anything that others must produce, because no one may claim a 'right' to force others to provide it. Health care is a service, and we all depend upon thinking professionals for it. To place doctors under hamstringing bureaucratic control is to invite poor results."

While the political rhetoric sounds good when the politician declares that we have a “right to health care” or a “right to a free college education,” we should be on guard. Who is obligated to pay for this positive right in our society, a society based on the protection of liberty for the individual?

Government cannot give you anything unless they take it away from you or someone else first. Shouting for free stuff is treading on the liberty of your fellow citizens.



[iii] Aug. 12, 2009 Huffington Post article "Health Care, Why Call It a 'Right'?" by John David Lewis

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