ether-ore said:
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In response to your concerns over private hospitals, I believe any business (public or private) has the right to define the parameters of the services they provide. If a hospital, for religious and 'moral' reasons decides that abortions are something they will not do, then it is not government's job to force them to do otherwise.
It really depends on how much of a public service commitment that hospital has made (or is duty-bound by law to make).
You speak of public service commitment and duty as required by law. We have an entirely different perspective on those two concepts. From my point of view, a public service commitment is entirely voluntary. When an religious individual or a group of them decide they desire to provide medical services, their duty is self imposed, based on a duty to God. Your concept of duty is not based on any thing other than you or a group of people have decided that that hospital owes somebody something for no other reason but that you think they ought to, and that you are prepared to use force to make sure they comply. Pray tell, what is the basis for your concept of duty other than what you have decided what it should be? If your basis turns out to be subjective, then it cannot be assumed that that basis is better than that of the religionist. The only way to proclaim your basis is better than mine is by the use of force.
Private hospitals that expect to have such arbitrary privileges should by necessity be considered disposable for purposes of tax exemptions, civic planning and the like. They are, by definition, unreliable and IMO not true hospitals at all.
It seems to me that the only concern government may have over any hospital or clinic is in the licensing of doctors to make sure they know what they are doing. Passed that, it is government hands off. The hospital or clinic finds a location, builds the building, hires the doctors and nurses and goes to work. Civic planning by government or taxing medical care should not be an issue. Of course you realize that any taxing of the hospital or clinic will be passed along to the patient as a business necessity. Are you in favor of raising medical costs?
We will no doubt disagree because while you seem to be in favor of forcing people to do things against their will; I am not.
You are wrong.
We disagree because you believe in protecting religious privilege, while I believe in the value of protecting the separation between church in state.
Church and state are separated if the government stays out of it. If freedom to work and operate a business in a republic is allowed; if the free market is allowed to do its thing, then the government need not be involved and there will be no conflict between church and state.
On the issue of there being conveniently placed hospitals, I know of no instances where all religiously operated hospitals refuse such services, but those that do are in cities where there are several other hospitals (either state run or other private ones) which do not have such scruples.
"Scruples" is not the correct word to use there. In any case, the point is not so much whether cities can make do without those so-called hospitals as on whether they should be allowed recognition as such when they refuse their duty. I suppose they might be religiously-oriented clinics, but IMO not hospitals.
If they want to be subject to some duties but not to others, than they just don't qualify.
"Scruples": definition: "a moral or ethical consideration or standard that acts as a restraining force or inhibits certain actions." In this case the moral or ethical restraining consideration are religious in nature. You think that it is not a correct word in this case because your basis for moral consideration is different from mine.
Maybe I am over-reacting and there is something about the USA conception of private hospitals (in every state? I just don't know) that does in fact allow private hospitals such an exalted level of arbitrary freedom, meaning basically that there is a need for true, public hospitals to cover for their lacks.
There are plenty of abortion clinics (and abortion is what we have been talking about)... Planned Parenthood Abortion Mills are all over the place. There is no dearth of access to an abortion if one wants one.
In any case, it is at the very least dangerous to allow such a misconception. "Hospital" is a word of some importance and its use should not be granted to institutions of such arbitrary nature.
In a free society and a free economy, there is no "arbitrary" nature involved; there is only the freedom to pursue one's dreams.
It seems to me that law suits over this issue is self defeating. Or maybe that is the plan... to cause these religious hospitals to shut down out of some misplaced sense of outrage, thereby reducing the medical care capacity for others.
The "plan", far as I can tell, is to embrace equality of treatment and fight unjustified religious privilege.
Who is deciding what this plan is? What you are describing is centralized decision making where no one can do anything without the approval of a self appointed elite. You are attempting to establish an equality of outcome rather than equality of opportunity. You call it religious privilege because you are speaking from the point of view that some elitist group wants control and they don't quite have it yet.
My brother in law is a roaming hospital administrator. He specialty is going around the country and closing down non profitable hospitals at the request of their owners. It takes many months to do it... to shut it down properly. Hospitals are a business and many of them are failing because of so much regulation. The owners are not allowed to run their businesses as they see fit and so they cannot afford to keep their doors open.
It seems quite unfair to me to require someone to provide all of the expense in operating a business while someone else gets to tell you how to run it. I would own a business because it would be something I would want to do... I would enjoy it. If someone else is telling me how to run it, there is no benefit to my involvement... no enjoyment. Would you now tell me what I should or should not enjoy? Just how far will this desire for dictatorship go?
Hospitals, by definition, are not about fairness, but rather about dealing with various sorts of unfair medical situations to the best of human ability.
Who's definition of 'fair' are we talking about? Unfair medical conditions? What you seem to be saying is that it is fair to force person A (who has some medical skills) to correct a problem that person B has created (wanting an abortion because of fornication) when person B can go to a Planned Parenthood Abortion Mill. It is not like there is a big rush. The woman has two trimesters (6 mos.) to think about it and get to an abortion mill. To force one individual to provide something of value to someone else against their will, is to make the first person a slave. I take it then that you are in favor of slavery?