[Oe List ...] What do we mean by a right? To Jim, Dave, et.al. re: Conservativism

Marsha Hahn mhahn013 at sbcglobal.net
Thu Sep 3 10:28:39 CDT 2009


Wonderfully stated, David.




________________________________
From: David Dunn <dmdunn1 at gmail.com>
To: OECommunity <oe at wedgeblade.net>
Sent: Wednesday, September 2, 2009 10:08:49 PM
Subject: Re: [Oe List ...] What do we mean by a right? To Jim, Dave, et.al. re: Conservativism


On Sep 2, 2009, at 6:22 PM, Susan wrote:

Ed, Something in what you said below triggered a memory of a recent exchange I had with a young cousin of mine.  He is more right wing than I am -- Yah, I know, most of you can't imagine what that would even look like.  He is very against abortion, but he said he didn't want it made illegal, because he wanted people to want not to get abortions rather than being prohibited by law from it. I guess thats the way I feel about a lot of things.  I want the human spirit to triumph -- somehow I thought that was what we were all about back in the day, not creating a stronger government to force people to do or not do things.  Some of it is necessary of course, just for physical safety and for things like infrastructure (roads and the like), but the things that have to do with caring about people should be connected to civil society.

Colleagues:

This is the sort of interchange that drives me a little crazy. I believe that I read the above to suggest that:

• the rule of law contravenes freedom of choice

• a society based on wanting people to hold important human values is an adequate substitute for public policies that institutionalize important human values

• the triumph of the human spirit and a strong government are antithetical

• what we (OE community?) were about in the past is not what we're about now

• strong government is synonymous with coercion (health care reform threatens coercion?)

• caring about people is the purview of civil society and not of the public sector


I freely admit that I may be totally misunderstanding your points, Susan. And I strenuously declare that I am no apologist for either political party, for the current administration, for liberalism or conservatism, or for this or that proposal for health care reform.

If we agree that our context and vision is the triumph of the human spirit, my question is what is the social strategy that assures that “all the goods, all the decisions and all the gifts belong to all” vis-a-vis health care?

All the earth belongs to all remains a powerful mantra that holds out a vision of effective participation, free expression, inclusive polity, equal access, and equal rights. Universal health care seems to be a logical expression of that kind of value. 

The means to this end is legitimately a matter of debate, but the debate ought to proceed on the basis of experience, facts, goals and objectives, and consensus problem solving rather than shouting, misinformation, and actions calculated to cause one's political or ideological opponents to fail.


I grant that your weren't engaging in any of the above, Susan, but the discussion that we need is a discussion that unpacks all of the assumptions, values, premises, etc. of both sides in the present public debate. I read George Will and David Brooks with every bit the attention and interest as I do David Ignatius and Maureen Dowd. There's truth within that broader constellation somewhere.


David

---
David Dunn
dmdunn1 at gmail.com
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