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As the financial sector continues its tailspin despite efforts to bail out
Wall Street, among the few gainers in recent stock trading have been those
companies looking for a new "shot in the arm" with government funding from
the next administration.
With its strident rhetoric toward reestablishing the so called "pro-choice" agenda,
the incoming administration has threatened a whole host of policies that would
not only reduce restrictions on abortion, but would actually force people who
wish to avoid participating in the procedure to support it.
As a physician who has delivered over 4,000 babies I am very disturbed by
the continued efforts of those on the left to establish absolute rights to
abortion. However, even more distressing is the notion that taxpayers should
be forced to subsidize life-ending procedures such as abortion and embryonic
stem cell research.
In addition to the news that those who will benefit from federally-funded
stem cell research have seen an uptick in their financial position as a result
of the election, comes news from the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
that many health care facilities under the auspices of the Roman Catholic Church
may be shut down as a result of the so-called "Freedom of Choice Act" for refusal
to perform abortions.
Not only does this Act seem to have growing support in Congress, the President-elect
and his Administration have indicated support for this legislation. Since many
people cast their votes in a way that they believed would help to improve and
increase availability of health care, this is an ironic twist.
Of course, the government takeover of health care began a long time ago, but
we should be wary of how far that takeover will go if more private providers
are forced out of the marketplace. If enacted, The Freedom of Choice Act and
the potential for increased federal funding of embryonic stem cell research
will go to show that the incoming Congress and Administration are far more
dedicated to a government takeover than they are to affordable and available
health care. Moreover, these approaches show no real concern at all for the
free choices of taxpayers and health care providers who wish to be free from
giving assistance to immoral activities.
These facts should also serve to remind social conservatives that they are
better to leave the legislative remedies for important social issues at the
level where they constitutionally belong, namely at the discretion of state
and local officials. The centralization of power that seemed so attractive
to many conservatives just a few years ago no longer seems pleasant at all
in light of a more liberal-minded majority in both Houses of Congress and the
White House.
This should be a good lesson for future conservative majorities, namely that
the centralization of power never results in anything more than the most temporary
of "gains" for those who are committed to traditional moral principles, and
the power one administration consolidates for itself must inevitably be handed
over to the next administration, which will use that increased power for its
own agenda.
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