Wednesday, December 28, 2005

An opinion on Socialized Medicine

This article was written several years ago by Ayn Rand's intellectual and legal heir, Leonard Peikoff. It is not only opposed to the Clinton Health plan but to *all* socialized medicine. With our current healthcare situation, it is important to re-address the topic. Socialized medicine is not the answer to the problem.

Notice: The following article is Copyright 1993 by Leonard Peikoff and is being distributed by permission. This article may be distributed electronically provided that it not be altered in any manner whatsoever. All notices including this notice must remain affixed to this article.

HEALTH CARE IS NOT A RIGHT by Leonard Peikoff, Ph.D.

Delivered at a Town Hall Meeting on the Clinton Health Plan Red Lion Hotel, Costa Mesa CA December 11, 1993

Good morning, ladies and gentlemen:

Most people who oppose socialized medicine do so on the grounds that it is moral and well-intentioned, but impractical; i.e., it is a noble idea -- which just somehow does not work. I do not agree that socialized medicine is moral and well-intentioned, but impractical. Of course, it *is* impractical -- it does *not* work -- but I hold that it is impractical *because* it is immoral. This is not a case of noble in theory but a failure in practice; it is a case of vicious in theory and *therefore* a disaster in practice. So I'm going to leave it to other speakers to concentrate on the practical flaws in the Clinton health plan. I want to focus on the moral issue at stake. So long as people believe that socialized medicine is a noble plan, there is no way to fight it. You cannot stop a noble plan -- not if it really is noble. The only way you can defeat it is to unmask it -- to show that it is the very opposite of noble. Then at least you have a fighting chance.

What is morality in this context? The American concept of it is officially stated in the Declaration of Independence. It upholds man's unalienable, individual *rights.* The term "rights," note, is a moral (not just a political) term; it tells us that a certain course of behavior is right, sanctioned, proper, a prerogative to be respected by others, not interfered with -- and that anyone who violates a man's rights is: wrong, morally wrong, unsanctioned, evil.

Now our only rights, the American viewpoint continues, are the rights to life, liberty, property, and the pursuit of happiness. That's all. According to the Founding Fathers, we are not born with a right to a trip to Disneyland, or a meal at Mcdonald's, or a kidney dialysis (nor with the 18th-century equivalent of these things). We have certain specific rights -- and only these.

Why *only* these? Observe that all legitimate rights have one thing in common: they are rights to action, not to rewards from other people. The American rights impose no obligations on other people, merely the negative obligation to leave you alone. The system guarantees you the chance to work for what you want -- not to be given it without effort by somebody else.

The right to life, e.g., does not mean that your neighbors have to feed and clothe you; it means you have the right to earn your food and clothes yourself, if necessary by a hard struggle, and that no one can forcibly stop your struggle for these things or steal them from you if and when you have achieved them. In other words: you have the right to act, and to keep the results of your actions, the products you make, to keep them or to trade them with others, if you wish. But you have no right to the actions or products of others, except on terms to which they voluntarily agree.

To take one more example: the right to the pursuit of happiness is precisely that: the right to the *pursuit* -- to a certain type of action on your part and its result -- not to any guarantee that other people will make you happy or even try to do so. Otherwise, there would be no liberty in the country: if your mere desire for something, anything, imposes a duty on other people to satisfy you, then they have no choice in their lives, no say in what they do, they have no liberty, they cannot pursue *their* happiness. Your "right" to happiness at their expense means that they become rightless serfs, i.e., your slaves. Your right to *anything* at others' expense means that they become rightless.

That is why the U.S. system defines rights as it does, strictly as the rights to action. This was the approach that made the U.S. the first truly free country in all world history -- and, soon afterwards, as a result, the greatest country in history, the richest and the most powerful. It became the most powerful because its view of rights made it the most moral. It was the country of individualism and personal independence.

Today, however, we are seeing the rise of principled *immorality* in this country. We are seeing a total abandonment by the intellectuals and the politicians of the moral principles on which the U.S. was founded. We are seeing the complete destruction of the concept of rights. The original American idea has been virtually wiped out, ignored as if it had never existed. The rule now is for politicians to ignore and violate men's actual rights, while arguing about a whole list of rights never dreamed of in this country's founding documents -- rights which require no earning, no effort, no action at all on the part of the recipient.

You are entitled to something, the politicians say, simply because it exists and you want or need it -- period. You are entitled to be given it by the government. Where does the government get it from? What does the government have to do to private citizens -- to their individual rights -- to their *real* rights -- in order to carry out the promise of showering free services on the people?

The answers are obvious. The newfangled rights wipe out real rights -- and turn the people who actually create the goods and services involved into servants of the state. The Russians tried this exact system for many decades. Unfortunately, we have not learned from their experience. Yet the meaning of socialism (this is the right name for Clinton's medical plan) is clearly evident in any field at all -- you don't need to think of health care as a special case; it is just as apparent if the government were to proclaim a universal right to food, or to a vacation, or to a haircut. I mean: a right in the new sense: not that you are free to earn these things by your own effort and trade, but that you have a moral claim to be given these things free of charge, with no action on your part, simply as handouts from a benevolent government.

How would these alleged new rights be fulfilled? Take the simplest case: you are born with a moral right to hair care, let us say, provided by a loving government free of charge to all who want or need it. What would happen under such a moral theory?

Haircuts are free, like the air we breathe, so some people show up every day for an expensive new styling, the government pays out more and more, barbers revel in their huge new incomes, and the profession starts to grow ravenously, bald men start to come in droves for free hair implantations, a school of fancy, specialized eyebrow pluckers develops -- it's all free, the government pays. The dishonest barbers are having a field day, of course -- but so are the honest ones; they are working and spending like mad, trying to give every customer his heart's desire, which is a millionaire's worth of special hair care and services -- the government starts to scream, the budget is out of control. Suddenly directives erupt: we must limit the number of barbers, we must limit the time spent on haircuts, we must limit the permissible type of hair styles; bureaucrats begin to split hairs about how many hairs a barber should be allowed to split. A new computerized office of records filled with inspectors and red tape shoots up; some barbers, it seems, are still getting too rich, they must be getting more than their fair share of the national hair, so barbers have to start applying for Certificates of Need in order to buy razors, while peer review boards are established to assess every stylist's work, both the dishonest and the overly honest alike, to make sure that no one is too bad or too good or too busy or too unbusy. Etc. In the end, there are lines of wretched customers waiting for their chance to be routinely scalped by bored, hog-tied haircutters some of whom remember dreamily the old days when somehow everything was so much better.

Do you think the situation would be improved by having hair-care cooperatives organized by the government? -- having them engage in managed competition, managed by the government, in order to buy haircut insurance from companies controlled by the government?

If this is what would happen under government-managed hair care, what else can possibly happen -- it is already starting to happen -- under the idea of *health* care as a right? Health care in the modern world is a complex, scientific, technological service. How can anybody be born with a right to such a thing?

Under the American system you have a right to health care if you can pay for it, i.e., if you can earn it by your own action and effort. But nobody has the right to the services of any professional individual or group simply because he wants them and desperately needs them. The very fact that he needs these services so desperately is the proof that he had better respect the freedom, the integrity, and the rights of the people who provide them.

You have a right to work, not to rob others of the fruits of their work, not to turn others into sacrificial, rightless animals laboring to fulfill your needs.

Some of you may ask here: But can people afford health care on their own? Even leaving aside the present government-inflated medical prices, the answer is: Certainly people can afford it. Where do you think the money is coming from *right now* to pay for it all -- where does the government get its fabled unlimited money? Government is not a productive organization; it has no source of wealth other than confiscation of the citizens' wealth, through taxation, deficit financing or the like.

But, you may say, isn't it the "rich" who are really paying the costs of medical care now -- the rich, not the broad bulk of the people? As has been proved time and again, there are not enough rich anywhere to make a dent in the government's costs; it is the vast middle class in the U.S. that is the only source of the kind of money that national programs like government health care require. A simple example of this is the fact that the Clinton Administration's new program rests squarely on the backs not of Big Business, but of small businessmen who are struggling in today's economy merely to stay alive and in existence. Under any socialized program, it is the "little people" who do most of the paying for it -- under the senseless pretext that "the people" can't afford such and such, so the government must take over. If the people of a country *truly* couldn't afford a certain service -- as e.g. in Somalia -- neither, for that very reason, could any government in that country afford it, either.

*Some* people can't afford medical care in the U.S. But they are necessarily a small minority in a free or even semi-free country. If they were the majority, the country would be an utter bankrupt and could not even think of a national medical program. As to this small minority, in a free country they have to rely solely on private, voluntary charity. Yes, charity, the kindness of the doctors or of the better off -- charity, not right, i.e. not their right to the lives or work of others. And such charity, I may say, was always forthcoming in the past in America. The advocates of Medicaid and Medicare under LBJ did not claim that the poor or old in the '60's got bad care; they claimed that it was an affront for anyone to have to depend on charity.

But the fact is: You don't abolish charity by calling it something else. If a person is getting health care for *nothing*, simply because he is breathing, he is still getting charity, whether or not President Clinton calls it a "right." To call it a Right when the recipient did not earn it is merely to compound the evil. It is charity still -- though now extorted by criminal tactics of force, while hiding under a dishonest name.

As with any good or service that is provided by some specific group of men, if you try to make its possession by all a right, you thereby enslave the providers of the service, wreck the service, and end up depriving the very consumers you are supposed to be helping. To call "medical care" a right will merely enslave the doctors and thus destroy the quality of medical care in this country, as socialized medicine has done around the world, wherever it has been tried, including Canada (I was born in Canada and I know a bit about that system first hand).

I would like to clarify the point about socialized medicine enslaving the doctors. Let me quote here from an article I wrote a few years ago: "Medicine: The Death of a Profession." [*The Voice of Reason: Essays in Objectivist Thought,* NAL Books, c 1988 by the Estate of Ayn Rand and Leonard Peikoff.]

"In medicine, above all, the mind must be left free. Medical treatment involves countless variables and options that must be taken into account, weighed, and summed up by the doctor's mind and subconscious. Your life depends on the private, inner essence of the doctor's function: it depends on the input that enters his brain, and on the processing such input receives from him. What is being thrust now into the equation? It is not only objective medical facts any longer. Today, in one form or another, the following also has to enter that brain: 'The DRG administrator [in effect, the hospital or HMO man trying to control costs] will raise hell if I operate, but the malpractice attorney will have a field day if I don't -- and my rival down the street, who heads the local PRO [Peer Review Organization], favors a CAT scan in these cases, I can't afford to antagonize him, but the CON boys disagree and they won't authorize a CAT scanner for our hospital -- and besides the FDA prohibits the drug I should be prescribing, even though it is widely used in Europe, and the IRS might not allow the patient a tax deduction for it, anyhow, and I can't get a specialist's advice because the latest Medicare rules prohibit a consultation with this diagnosis, and maybe I shouldn't even take this patient, he's so sick -- after all, some doctors are manipulating their slate of patients, they accept only the healthiest ones, so their average costs are coming in lower than mine, and it looks bad for my staff privileges.' Would you like your case to be treated this way -- by a doctor who takes into account your objective medical needs *and* the contradictory, unintelligible demands of some ninety different state and Federal government agencies? If you were a doctor could you comply with all of it? Could you plan or work around or deal with the unknowable? But how could you not? Those agencies are real and they are rapidly gaining total power over you and your mind and your patients. In this kind of nightmare world, if and when it takes hold fully, thought is helpless; no one can decide by rational means what to do. A doctor either obeys the loudest authority -- *or* he tries to sneak by unnoticed, bootlegging some good health care occasionally *or,* as so many are doing now, he simply gives up and quits the field."

The Clinton plan will finish off quality medicine in this country -- because it will finish off the medical profession. It will deliver doctors bound hands and feet to the mercies of the bureaucracy.

The only hope -- for the doctors, for their patients, for all of us -- is for the doctors to assert a *moral* principle. I mean: to assert their own personal individual rights -- their real rights in this issue -- their right to their lives, their liberty, their property, *their* pursuit of happiness. The Declaration of Independence applies to the medical profession too. We must reject the idea that doctors are slaves destined to serve others at the behest of the state.

I'd like to conclude with a sentence from Ayn Rand. Doctors, she wrote, are not servants of their patients. They are "traders, like everyone else in a free society, and they should bear that title proudly, considering the crucial importance of the services they offer."

The battle against the Clinton plan, in my opinion, depends on the doctors speaking out against the plan -- but not only on practical grounds -- rather, first of all, on *moral* grounds. The doctors must defend themselves and their own interests as a matter of solemn justice, upholding a moral principle, the first moral principle: self- preservation. If they can do it, all of us will still have a chance. I hope it is not already too late. Thank you.


Leonard Peikoff received his PhD from New York University in 1964. As Ayn Rand's legal and intellectual heir and her long-time associate, Peikoff is the leading Objectivist philosopher. He is the author of *The Ominous Parallels* and *Objectivism: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand*. He has served as chairman of the board of the Ayn Rand Institute and is on the faculty of the newly formed Objectivist Graduate Center. He is the editor of *The Early Ayn Rand*, the Objectivist anthology *The Voice of Reason* and the second edition of *Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology*. He has taught philosophy at New York University, Hunter College and the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn.

12 Comments:

Blogger The New Albanian said...

Would this be the same Ayn Rand whose female character in "Atlas Shrugged" gets an erotic charge from a piece of metal doubling as a bracelet?

Kinky ain't the word for it.

Really, REALLY enjoying Sam Harris's book, HB.

12/28/2005 08:19:00 AM  
Blogger Iamhoosier said...

Trying to consume this will take me a while considering that I am trying to earn my "wants" at the same time.

My first thought. I cannot believe that you have posted an article by someone using LLH as a cornerstone. I do believe that I was taken to task over using the same to base some of my decisions. Perhaps after fully digesting the article I will see things differently.

Later.

12/28/2005 09:32:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

iamhoosier,

I understand your comment, but the difference is that I was taking you to task when you used LLH as the answer to a moral foundation as the standard for making decisions on right vs. wrong, good vs. evil.

Here it is being used in reference to what our constitutional rights are as americans, not necessarily whether these are right, wrong, good or evil.

I agree with the constitution, but one persons right for his pursuit of happiness may not be morally just in my viewpoint, therefore I would disagree from a moral standing. LLH is not my moral foundation.

12/28/2005 11:28:00 AM  
Blogger Iamhoosier said...

Mr. Peikoff in is the one who is equating LLH (rights) with morality. He pretty much starts off the article that way and is very plain in the last paragraph.

I am not trying to start something.
It was just my first thought when reading quickly through the article.

By the way, I never stated that LLH was my moral foundation. If you remember, LLH was used by me to make a civic decision. I then went on to describe how I hoped would act if my civic decision conflicted with my moral base.

12/28/2005 12:11:00 PM  
Blogger Iamhoosier said...

Last sentence a little more garbled than usual.

"I then went on to describe how I hoped TO act if my civic decision conflicted with my moral base."

sorry

12/28/2005 12:18:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I agree with you that he is relating the two, but he did preface the comment at the beginning stating "in this context".

My previous discussions have been to try and get people to state where their morality base originates from. But that is another topic.

His article has some very good points about our concept of socialized medicine and the inherant flaws therein.

12/28/2005 01:40:00 PM  
Blogger Iamhoosier said...

While I have still not pondered this article deeply, I do agree that with some of the points he his making. The phrase "in this context" is great for for future hedging. I use it a lot!!(smile)

Out of "context" I guess but could you take this article and change the words "doctor" and "medicine", subsitute "prostitute" and "prostitution" and still the make the same argument?

I am not sure that socialized medicine is the way either but depending on the kindess of strangers scares me even worse.

12/28/2005 02:04:00 PM  
Blogger Iamhoosier said...

HB,

You wrote:

"I agree with the constitution, but one persons right for his pursuit of happiness may not be morally just in my viewpoint, therefore I would disagree from a moral standing. LLH is not my moral foundation."

How would you resolve your disagreement? Let's say you are a Supreme Court Justice. I am not really sure that I understand you yet.

12/29/2005 12:04:00 PM  
Blogger Kirk Singh said...

HB,

First, a point of clarification and emphasis... We have no right to happiness, only to the pursuit of it. Therefore, “LLPoH” seems more appropriate than “LLH”. I continue to prefer the term natural rights.

I echo iamhoosier’s concerns. In light of your responses to my article, "What Is Right?" am at a loss how you can turn to Objectivist/Randite arguments to oppose socialized medicine. I would bet that limiting the Objectivist premise to "this context" is more important to you than to Peikoff. Objectivism is not a single-issue philosophy. Either natural rights (LLPoH) are intrinsic to our existence or they are not. Violating them is either criminal (wrong) or it is not.

Along these lines, my article is consistent with Peikoff’s Objectivist reasoning and with the various schools of thought that advocate “self-government” such as the libertarians, voluntaryists, classical liberals and others. The basic principles are largely the same, i.e., natural rights are the ethical and moral basis for human interaction and thus the measure of right and wrong. The differences among these philosophies are largely in application and execution, such as the degree to which they advocate political action. They all support individual, natural rights over the power of the collective.

Regarding my article, you said, “Unless we all agree on some foundational starting point, we have absolutely no guaranteed rights.” I think Peikoff and Objectivism says otherwise. As Peikoff makes quite clear, rights are intrinsic, not negotiated.

You asked, “Why do we have [the ability to morally reason], where did it come from, and what is the standard on which right-wrong, good-evil can be determined and are we obligated to act on this?” Here again, I think my answer and Peikoff’s answer to your questions are compatible, and not just “in this context.”

If you agree with Peikoff’s speech, it stands to reason you agree with my article, as the premises are the same.

So which is it?

:)-K

BTW -- Please note that I did not call Objectivists "libertarians" – Some Objectivists take exception to any such comparison, as the scope and application of Objectivism goes far beyond sociopolitical philosophy.

12/30/2005 09:19:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Kirk,

He starts out his commentary specifically qualifying and asking the question of "what is morality" and goes on in the next sentence to state what the American "concept" of it is.

Using his definition he goes on to explain thoroghly why socialized medicine is wrong.

I totally agree that socialized medicine is wrong, and I agree that in the USA we interchange rights and morality as he describes.

I disagree that morality and rights are interchangeable. Morality from our culture and our declaration is as he describes, but that is because we, as a country have adopted this codifed definition under our system of law.

Morality in the more general sense, comes innately from somehting supernatural (ie. God). And in this sense, there are no guaranteed rights.

We, because of our innate God-given morality, want to do good, help others etc, but this is in opposition to our natural evolutionary instincts and our fallen nature.

We as Christians also acknowledge the legal system and want to abide by it so long as it is in sync with our God-given morality and beliefs.

1/01/2006 08:49:00 AM  
Blogger Kirk Singh said...

Ah, now I think I understand. I gather that Peikoff's reference to the Declaration of Independence is the difference.

Because otherwise, the basis of Peikoff and my theses were virtually the same. The central point of both articles is that we have no rights to necessities like Health Care, and government must not supply wants and needs at the expense of REAL rights, i.e., LLPoH.

Your insistence that rights are not natural and only exist as part of a social contract, such as that implied by The Declaration, is completely inconsistent with Rand and Peikoff's Objectivist views.

From a deductive standpoint The Declaration is also a poor reference point, even to validate LLPoH in a limited context. Jefferson was not speaking of a social contract, nor was he writing one. The Declaration itself says that these rights are self-evident truths.

Your argument against my premise as I understand it, is that rights are not self-evident and arise only through the agreement of people. This is in direct conflict with Jefferson.

And I don't know how much you know about Objectivism, but I assure you, Peikoff only used the Declaration here as a convenient launching point. Peikoff would no more say that rights arise from social contracts than Jefferson did.

I hope that someday you discover that these truths are indeed self-evident. You believe in God. I wish you could make the connection and accept that He gave us these rights, not some committee or statesman who drafted a social contract. Natural rights are a gift from God, not a contrivance of people. They come with His guarantee.

Peace out,

:)-K

1/02/2006 02:15:00 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Great blog I hope we can work to build a better health care system as we are in a major crisis and health insurance is a major aspect to many.

1/20/2006 02:00:00 PM  

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