Posted tagged ‘Jay Carney’

The Secular Morality of Population Control

February 16, 2012

Is there such a thing as a ‘secular morality?” Where does it come from? Is it something we vote on? Is it something we universally or nearly universally agree upon? Is this secular moral code something so important that someone could choose to die for it? Is secular morality something we can be compelled to act as if we agree with or do we just need to obey it? Is the highest and best secular moral value based in politics or the conscience? If it is politically based doesn’t secular morality amount simply to that which seems easiest or most appealing to the human animal? If these morals are politically arrived at can they be changed by a mere change in the political climate or by what party is in charge?

Assuming that secular morality is something we collectively agree upon politically, what should the government do to instill or enforce secular morality? This is an important question. Once secular morality is adopted, is it the proper role of government to see that these ‘morals’ are force-fed to our children thereby becoming self-reinforcing? In fact, a set of ‘secular morals’ are already being force fed to our children in government schools like the “moral” ideas about global climate change, virulent anti-capitalism, population control and Johnny having two dads. Similarly the government has already done for us what is apparently morally correct; things like levying a trade ban against South Africa to stop the clearly repugnant apartheid (I’m not saying that everything they do is bad), redistributing wealth from one set of U.S. citizens to others ‘who need it more’, the provision of abortion on demand and mandating that there be “health care” for all.

So, is population limitation a high tree or even the highest tree in the secular morality forest? This question is at the heart of the new administration policy requiring nearly all employers, including religiously related ones, to provide health insurance for their employees and in so doing provide “no cost” contraceptives, abortifacient drugs and sterilizations to their employees. In fairness to the government, in its most recent proposed regulation the government will only require ‘the insurers for religiously affiliated groups’ to provide these benefits for free and the insurers must do so without charging the religiously related institutional employers anything for it. This “compromise” supposedly takes advantage of the concept, expressed by the president’s new chief of staff, that the government will require(?) insurers to accept the profits generated by not having to pay for “accidental” pregnancies and that these profits/savings will more than offset the cost of the free “birth control.” If this concept, as explained by the chief of staff on last week’s Sunday public policy shows, is actuarially correct why would insurance companies, well known for finding profits anywhere they can, have failed to do this of their own accord already? Will this logic apply equally to all sorts of questionable “preventive care” for fertile women or are these other savings actually the money left from not having to pay for the medical care for 18 years after the birth of an unwanted child? What has this all to do with secular virtue and secular morality anyway? According to secular morality are children bad or good? Or is secular morality a situational morality based upon the perceived circumstances of the parents and/or the apparent desirability of the infant/fetus? Or is it choice itself which is the highest moral good in the secular moral universe? If so, why do we limit this choice to a time prior to birth? What about the choice to engage in sexual relations in the first place, isn’t this a choice? What is so ‘morally’ different about a newborn and a fetus which are both 32 weeks of age (from conception that is)? Morals are just such slippery things.

Next question: does the administration’s rule about free birth control to be provided by insurers impact the freedom of religion of Roman Catholics and other religiously motivated individuals? Whether they run religiously affiliated hospitals, social service agencies or educational institutions aren’t they moral actors? Under Catholic religious principles these people are required to refrain from participating in or providing abortions or contraceptives except in highly limited situations. Requiring participation in this sort of activity is an imposition upon the consciences of religiously motivated individuals who are responsible for these and any other health insurance-purchasing entities. And what of Roman Catholic insurers, the “compromise” unambiguously destroys these businesses altogether.

Next question: Is there any provision in the secular morality which provides for people’s religious rights? In response to press questions concerning this violation of the consciences of Catholics, Jay Carney clearly enunciated Obama administration policy, to wit: after “careful” consideration the administration decided that the secular morality of the “need” to increase the availability of preventative services to women outweighed the secular morality which protects religious consciences and that this is the right balance(?) to strike. How do you weigh the secular morality of allowing religious liberty versus the secular morality of actively providing free birth control to all who have any inclination to use it? Only one of these secular morals is embodied in the constitution. But the president clearly has decided that the one moral good is not as worthy as the other moral good. Doesn’t this kind of mean that the government is deciding between the ‘moral good,’ as defined through the political process, that of providing free birth control pills and abortifacients to women and the Catholic/Christian moral good of respecting the dignity of the life of every fetus/zygote.

Well that’s it I guess. “Private” conscience is one thing and will be “indulged” if there is no substantial impact on the achievement of important secular moral aims. In this context the secular moral objective is plainly to limit the procreation of American women (or it could be to increase the amount of sex which American men have available with a greatly reduced chance of unwanted parentage). Limitation of procreation is apparently a very high goal of this administration and its allies in Congress. On Wednesday a group of Democratic party senators made this public announcement.

Have we reached the point in this country where a secular code of morality has displaced religious morality? Is unfettered liberty rather than principled liberty the highest political and moral end?

Let me ask a couple more loaded question before I go. Is it not in your experience, as it is in mine, that it is men, not women, who are the more powerfully motivated in their desire for intercourse? If this is so, whose freedom are we really talking about, men’s or women’s? At this very moment in this country, women are able to exercise either their right “not to engage in intercourse” or alternatively to obtain free contraception from Planned Parenthood or elsewhere virtually any time. What is more free than that? And what of Sen. Boxer’s list of other conditions which contraceptives treat? Well, why should these drugs, even if they are contraceptives used to treat these conditions, be provided free of charge when the rest of us must pay at least the deductible for drugs which treat our illnesses and conditions? Methinks she doth protest too much!!!

In sum, we know that in this administration’s opinion the secular morality of women’s health (sexual freedom) trumps the first amendment’s requirement that the federal government not burden the people’s free exercise of their religion. I would propose that what we really know is that constitutional rights just aren’t what they used to be. Secular morality must be provided for somewhere in the penumbra of the bill of rights and, stupid me, I just failed to see it there. Has this secular moral code now actually reached the status of a state religion? If not, it seems to me that we are getting closer and closer to that point. If it has, what do you think is the difference between a religious moral code and the secular moral code in terms of the Establishment Clause of the first amendment to the U.S. Constitution, to wit:

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion . . . .

HEAD’S UP IN THE UPCOMING DEBATE OVER FUNDING SOCIAL SECURITY

March 13, 2011

Remember when President Obama, last week, said in a press conference that in the middle of the decade his budget would have us to a point where we would no longer be adding to the deficit? Halleleujah!! Unfortunately, it is indisputable that the Obama budget never once comes close to matching income and outflow. The following is how the President’s new press secretary explained it, and did it without backing down an inch from what the President said:

This is an example of avoiding a plain mathematical truth through application of obfuscation and is just plain tomfoolery. It is true that:

In war, truth is the first casualty. Aeschylus Greek tragic dramatist (525 BC – 456 BC) .

But our politicians, for purposes other than war, have seemed to take this adage and placed it at the service of their intramural debates and elections. This is not a difference of worldviews, a topic often explored by this blog, with it’s attendant differences in context, language and emphasis created by differing worldviews. This is an example of a simple lack of candor. In no one’s world should this be okay. This is not an issue of context, of language or emphasis. It is just not true.

This also gives us a little taste of how we’ll be treated in the upcoming social security debates. An example of this was delivered by a group of Democrat Senators about 30 days ago. These Senators explained that the Republicans are in favor of ‘privatizing’ social security and that social security can pay every dollar of benefits for the next 27 years and that social security is actuarially sound among other important things.

I am unsure whether there have been any post-Bush Republican proposals for “privatizing” social security but I am certain that there is a big problem with calling social security “actuarially sound” and explaining that it has the resources to pay benefits for 27 years without any changes without further explanation. It is a bit like the President’s news conference when he suggested that in 2015 his budget will be balanced and his press secretary had to spin and spin the point until he was dry.

What is the truth? The truth is that in 2011 current social security benefits will exceed current social security taxes. How can it be that social security is “actuarially sound” or able to pay every penny of benefits for the next 27 years without any changes and yet social security has now started to pay out more in benefits than it receives in taxes? Are the Republicans ginning up lies? Are the Democrats now having to courageously put a stop it?

Well, the truth is that the social security system will need to call on non-social security tax revenues in order to pay the difference between current social security benefits and current social security taxes for the foreseeable future. It is a fact that this began in FY 2010. There is no end in sight. Since this is undeniably true, what do the Democrat Senators mean by saying that social security can pay every penny of benefits for the next 27 years? These Senators are only saying that the general tax revenues which are going to have pay the social security benefits will not be used to do so directly, they are saying that something else will happen between cup and lip. What will happen, however, is only on the books of the Social Security Administration. The government’s general revenues will, instead, be used to pay off some of the IOU’s which have been piling up in the SSA for 27 years. The general revenue funds which have redeemed the IOU’s will then be used to pay current social security benefits. In this way there will be two stops for these dollars, not one. The dollars will change status from general revenues to the proceeds from paying off the IOU’s. The net effect will be nothing, zero.

Do you remember the old pragmatic-sounding “pay as you go” Unified government budgets which began in 1983. Under the Unified budget social security taxes were used to pay-as-you-go for non-social security government programs. The surplus between social security outlays and expenditures in those years was used to make the federal budget deficit look smaller or the budget surplus look larger, including during the years of Mr. Clinton’s magic “budget surpluses” of FY 1998, 99 and 2000. See the chart below for a graphic example of what was going on.

For instance, as the chart shows, in FY 2000 approximately $200 billion was added to the trust fund as a result of this social security surplus. The accumulated surplus is what the Democratic Party’s Senators are actually talking about in terms of the “solvency” and “actuarial soundness” of the program. The existence of these IOU’s will not lessen the difficulty and the reality of coming up with the difference between the social security taxes and the social security benefits to pay retirees on an ongoing year to year basis.
This is a fact that everyone needs to know so that when politicians deny that social security amounts to a fiscal problem at the present time, you’ll know that they are trying to tell you something about accounting, not about reality. Because the general tax revenues will first be used to pay off the IOU’s which the SSA has been accumulating in it’s filing cabinets before being used to pay benefits doesn’t make a hill of beans to the painful reality that somebody will have to pay the bill.

Oh and by the way, as to the partisan politics of this. Control of Congress has been split almost evenly during the period since FY 1984 between Democrat and Republican. The presidency a bit more Republican at 16 years to 10. It should also be noted that during the legendary Clinton “budget surpluses” the Congress was Republican. In short, this not a partisan problem (notwithstanding the rather duplicitous grandstanding and fear-mongering by the Democratic Senators featured above) it’s a government problem. The only reason that the Social Security system didn’t collapse in the 1980’s, after nearly 40 years of Congressional control by the Democrats, the party whose Senators are now yoohooing about how the Republicans are all for putting granny out on the street, was because the government used it’s power to raise taxes not because it used it’s head to properly administer the taxes it had to fund the social security entitlement it had created!!!!!!