Tuesday, August 18, 2009

The Tablet: "U.S. Bishops MUST back Obama!"

If you are not familiar with "The Tablet" it is a Catholic international weekly review published in London, with a circulation of 22,313 and an estimated readership of 65,000 in Britain and around the world. It is also absurdly liberal!

Editorial
U.S. bishops must back Obama

President Barack Obama’s health-care reforms are in deep trouble. [This is why they are writing the editorial] All over the United States rival lobby groups have argued and sometimes clashed as opponents of the reforms sense they may be on the verge of victory. [Get that, it is rival lobby groups not concerned citizens who are the cause of the deep trouble!] There may be sufficient votes in Congress from an awkward alliance of Republicans and conservative Democrats to ensure that whatever legislation emerges from the hullabaloo is a pale shadow of what Mr Obama intended, and indeed promised, during his election campaign. It is unfortunate that the one body that could turn out to be a decisive strategic force in his favour, the US Catholic bishops, have so far concentrated on a specifically Catholic issuemaking sure state-funded health care does not include abortionrather than the more general principle of the common good. Through the national network of Catholic hospitals, delivering nearly 20 per cent of all hospital care, and through the influence they wield as leaders of America’s largest Christian denomination, they could play a central role in salvaging Mr Obama’s health-care programme.This is indeed a Catholic matter. Few government proposals have had “preferential option for the poor” stamped over them more clearly. Nearly 50 million Americans do not have health-care coverage, [for a variety of reasons, they are unemployed (some temporarily), they are illegally in the US, they choose not to have insurance or they are poor, all are included in this number] which means they cannot afford to go to their doctor when they have symptoms that ought to be investigated, nor can they buy simple and effective remedies such as antibiotics. The Church’s teaching is clear: health care is a basic right, derived from the right to life itself. [Huh?] Of course abortion is important, but the Catholic bishops have not put anything like equal stress on these other social justice dimensions of the health-care debate. Though some grass-roots Catholic lobby groups have mobilised to support the Obama reforms, without episcopal support they will remain marginal to the debate. The opponents of change are largely funded by the operators of the health insurance industry, which, as in the early 1990s, sense a threat to their profits. They are the robber barons of their age. All the dark arts of media misrepresentation have been deployed to turn public opinion against Mr Obama’s policy. [Wow, if that isn't the pot calling the kettle black, literally!] through their greed and inefficiency, America spends something like double per head on health care compared with a country such as France, whose state-run health system is acknowledged as one of the world’s best. Even at the level of spin and sound bites, the bishops could make a difference. They could refute the constant slur of “socialised medicine” that opponents throw mindlessly around, simply by saying that health care for all is in fact “Catholic medicine" [apparently, even if it includes taxpayer funded abortion]. Once they began to introduce reason and truth into the debate, they could also point out that what Mr Obama is proposing is in principle no different from extending Medicare – which brings affordable medical treatment to America’s elderly – to everyone [except it also includes taxpayer funded abortion].

When Britain’s National Health Service was set up in 1948, the Catholic hierarchy led by Cardinal Griffin was also preoccupied with its own Catholic agenda, not abortion but winning an opt-out for Catholic hospitals. So the birth of the National Health Service, one of the great forward strides for social justice, had no Catholic blessing. The bishops failed to put the promotion of social justice above their churchly priorities. [How can this person be allowed to misrepresent the truthThe protection of innocent human life is simply a "churchly priority"!? Like, "communion in the hand" or "female altar servers..." I bet The Tablet has an opinion on those subjects, too! ?] It is a mistake the American bishops may be about to repeat.


So, I think two things immediately jump out at me... First, Abortion is just a "Catholic issue" as if no one could ever possibly make a moral argument against the murder of innocent children from, say, natural law. Abortion is just a matter of Catholic religious belief like the Immaculate Conception, Transubstantiation or the Hypostatic Union. For the Tablet editors, the Catholic Bishops should keep their "religious" beliefs out of the public arena.

Secondly, abortion is separate from the "common good" as described by the editors of "The Tablet." The common good does not include the most helpless and innocent among us, rather they are an impediment to universal health care. That is how they can counsel the USCCB to ignore the murder of one out of four Americans (25%) in order to provide "health care" 5 to 16% of Americans (depending on who and how you count).

I predict that the National Catholic Reporter will soon run a story on how The Tablet's critics have been unfair and uncivil in response to "the suggestion" that the USCCB CAVE on keeping taxpayer funded abortion out of any health care reform.

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