STAR PARKER
SCRIPPS HOWARD Copyright © 2012 Scripps Media Inc. 08/27/2012
Somehow we’ve come to accept, regarding government policy, that there are separate “economic” issues and “social” issues, the former being issues having to do with our pocketbook and the latter being issues touching religious values and behavior. But this is a mistake. The economy also is a social “values” issue.
It’s about the extent to which we respect private property and it’s protected from politicians.
Respect for private property is disdained in socialist countries. Respecting the sanctity of private property reflects our values as much as does our respect for the sanctity of life and marriage. The Fifth Amendment to the Constitution guarantees protection from being “deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.”
The Ten Commandments demand respect for marriage (honor your parents) and for life and property (don’t kill, don’t steal). Consider the Obamacare mandate, which went into effect Aug. 1, requiring employers to provide “free” contraceptives, sterilization and abortion-inducing drugs to employees as part of their health care plan.
The uproar about this has been about its violation of religious liberty — forcing employers to provide these services regardless of their religious convictions. But this wouldn’t be possible without politicians seizing private resources of citizens to pay for this mandate.
Sandra Fluke, the Georgetown University activist who gained notoriety when she was verbally assaulted by Rush Limbaugh aftershetestifiedinfavorof the contraceptive mandate, still promotes the cause.
In a recent Huffington Post column, she touts Obamacare as a victory for women’s “health care rights” and the fact that contraceptives are available “at no cost.”
At no cost? Will contraceptives drop from heaven like manna?
In this case, women’s “health care rights” is a claimed right for women to have taxpayers foot the bill for their birth control — to get others to pay for their contraceptives and abortion-inducing pills.
The “right” to transfer to others the costs of personal decisions regarding sex trumps taxpayers right to keep government out of their private property.
When blacks fought for civil rights in the 1960s, the rights they fought for were equal treatment under the law. Protection of their life, liberty and property.
It had nothing to do with claiming any so-called right to violate the private property of some and force them to pay for another’s lifestyle choices.
The costs of Obama-care, including paying for Sandra Fluke’s contraceptives, come out of our hide in the higher prices we’ll pay for products, as companies pass on their higher health care costs to consumers. And as wages stagnate, as employers take bigger chunks of paychecks to cover health insurance costs.
How can we possibly have a functioning economy when politicians can randomly steal from citizens? When, basically, we have legalized theft. At the root of our floundering economy is a loss of respect for the sanctity of private property that goes hand in hand with the loss of respect for the sanctity of life and marriage.
It’s about the extent to which we respect private property and it’s protected from politicians.
Respect for private property is disdained in socialist countries. Respecting the sanctity of private property reflects our values as much as does our respect for the sanctity of life and marriage. The Fifth Amendment to the Constitution guarantees protection from being “deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.”
The Ten Commandments demand respect for marriage (honor your parents) and for life and property (don’t kill, don’t steal). Consider the Obamacare mandate, which went into effect Aug. 1, requiring employers to provide “free” contraceptives, sterilization and abortion-inducing drugs to employees as part of their health care plan.
The uproar about this has been about its violation of religious liberty — forcing employers to provide these services regardless of their religious convictions. But this wouldn’t be possible without politicians seizing private resources of citizens to pay for this mandate.
Sandra Fluke, the Georgetown University activist who gained notoriety when she was verbally assaulted by Rush Limbaugh aftershetestifiedinfavorof the contraceptive mandate, still promotes the cause.
In a recent Huffington Post column, she touts Obamacare as a victory for women’s “health care rights” and the fact that contraceptives are available “at no cost.”
At no cost? Will contraceptives drop from heaven like manna?
In this case, women’s “health care rights” is a claimed right for women to have taxpayers foot the bill for their birth control — to get others to pay for their contraceptives and abortion-inducing pills.
The “right” to transfer to others the costs of personal decisions regarding sex trumps taxpayers right to keep government out of their private property.
When blacks fought for civil rights in the 1960s, the rights they fought for were equal treatment under the law. Protection of their life, liberty and property.
It had nothing to do with claiming any so-called right to violate the private property of some and force them to pay for another’s lifestyle choices.
The costs of Obama-care, including paying for Sandra Fluke’s contraceptives, come out of our hide in the higher prices we’ll pay for products, as companies pass on their higher health care costs to consumers. And as wages stagnate, as employers take bigger chunks of paychecks to cover health insurance costs.
How can we possibly have a functioning economy when politicians can randomly steal from citizens? When, basically, we have legalized theft. At the root of our floundering economy is a loss of respect for the sanctity of private property that goes hand in hand with the loss of respect for the sanctity of life and marriage.
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