Back in 1980, just as America was making its political
turn to the right, Milton Friedman lent his voice to the change with the famous
TV series “Free to Choose.” In episode after episode, the genial economist
identified laissez-faire economics with personal choice and empowerment, an
upbeat vision that would be echoed and amplified by Ronald Reagan.
But that was then. Today, “free to choose” has become “free
to die.”
I’m referring, as you might guess, to what happened during
Monday’s G.O.P. presidential debate. CNN’s Wolf Blitzer asked Representative
Ron Paul what we should do if a 30-year-old man who chose not to purchase
health insurance suddenly found himself in need of six months of intensive
care. Mr. Paul replied, “That’s what freedom is all about — taking your own
risks.” Mr. Blitzer pressed him again, asking whether “society should just let
him die.”
And the crowd erupted with cheers and shouts of “Yeah!”
The incident highlighted something that I don’t think most
political commentators have fully absorbed: at this point, American politics is
fundamentally about different moral visions.
Now, there are two things you should know about the
Blitzer-Paul exchange. The first is that after the crowd weighed in, Mr. Paul
basically tried to evade the question, asserting that warm-hearted doctors and
charitable individuals would always make sure that people received the care
they needed — or at least they would if they hadn’t been corrupted by the
welfare state. Sorry, but that’s a fantasy. People who can’t afford essential
medical care often fail to get it, and always have — and sometimes they die as
a result.
The second is that very few of those who die from lack of
medical care look like Mr. Blitzer’s hypothetical individual who could and
should have bought insurance. In reality, most uninsured Americans either have
low incomes and cannot afford insurance, or are rejected by insurers because
they have chronic conditions.
So would people on the right be willing to let those who are
uninsured through no fault of their own die from lack of care? The answer,
based on recent history, is a resounding “Yeah!”
Think, in particular, of the children.
The day after the debate, the Census Bureau released its
latest estimates on income, poverty and health insurance. The overall picture
was terrible: the weak economy continues to wreak havoc on American lives. One
relatively bright spot, however, was health care for children: the percentage
of children without health coverage was lower in 2010 than before the
recession, largely thanks to the 2009 expansion of the State Children’s Health
Insurance Program, or S-chip.
And the reason S-chip was expanded in 2009 but not earlier
was, of course, that former President George W. Bush blocked earlier attempts
to cover more children — to the cheers of many on the right. Did I mention that
one in six children in Texas
lacks health insurance, the second-highest rate in the nation?
So the freedom to die extends, in practice, to children and
the unlucky as well as the improvident. And the right’s embrace of that notion
signals an important shift in the nature of American politics.
In the past, conservatives accepted the need for a
government-provided safety net on humanitarian grounds. Don’t take it from me,
take it from Friedrich Hayek, the conservative intellectual hero, who
specifically declared in “The Road to Serfdom” his support for “a comprehensive
system of social insurance” to protect citizens against “the common hazards of
life,” and singled out health in particular.
Given the agreed-upon desirability of protecting citizens
against the worst, the question then became one of costs and benefits — and
health care was one of those areas where even conservatives used to be willing
to accept government intervention in the name of compassion, given the clear
evidence that covering the uninsured would not, in fact, cost very much money.
As many observers have pointed out, the Obama health care plan was largely
based on past Republican plans, and is virtually identical to Mitt Romney’s
health reform in Massachusetts .
Now, however, compassion is out of fashion — indeed, lack of
compassion has become a matter of principle, at least among the G.O.P.’s base.
And what this means is that modern conservatism is actually
a deeply radical movement, one that is hostile to the kind of society we’ve had
for the past three generations — that is, a society that, acting through the
government, tries to mitigate some of the “common hazards of life” through such
programs as Social Security, unemployment insurance, Medicare and Medicaid.
Are voters ready to embrace such a radical rejection of the
kind of America
we’ve all grown up in? I guess we’ll find out next year.
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