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Howard: Religious rhetoric has no place in health care

President George W. Bush and his Republican Party consistently used religious faith to justify their policy initiatives during the Bush administration’s eight years in office. Stridently opposed by the Left, Bush injected religion into every issue — from the war in Iraq to stem cell research — and used faith as a crutch to support weakly reasoned policies.

But the American Left that assailed Bush’s religious initiatives as a violation of the Constitution’s Establishment Clause has been remarkably silent now that President Obama is enlisting religious leaders in his health care reform assault. A clear sign of desperation, Obama and his Democratic allies have attempted to use faith to sell health care reform since June, when Democrats organized an Interfaith Week of Prayer on Health Care .

Of course, Obama’s use of religion in support of public policy has grown more brazen as the debate has grown more difficult. In an Aug. 19 speech before a group of religious leaders, Obama called his health care reform plan a “core moral and ethical obligation” and identified his opponents in the health care debate as “bearing false witness.”

Obama’s language is that of the most dangerous thief who would take money from the American worker and redistribute it to the unproductive in the name of morality. He has revealed his core ethical obligation to be a massive expansion of entitlement spending, contributing trillions of dollars to this nation’s deficit, and he justified the entire program through the language of religion rather than reason.

What’s worse is that Obama has enlisted religious leaders to sell this thinly veiled theft in a blatant violation of the intent of our Constitution. The Founders understood that collusion between religious institutions and the state was not in the interest of the citizenry’s liberty.

For this reason, the Founders included the Establishment Clause in the First Amendment, and presidents and politicians have respected this division between church and state for centuries. Indeed, the 13th president, Millard Fillmore, said, “I am tolerant of all creeds. Yet if any sect suffered itself to be used for political objects I would meet it by political opposition. In my view church and state should be separate, not only in form, but fact. Religion and politics should not be mingled.”

But Obama has ignored this strong secular sentiment evident in our nation’s history and done exactly what Fillmore and the Founders warned future leaders not to do: mingle faith and politics.

Now Obama is spreading his bastardized brand of politics and religion across the country in a desperate attempt to recapture public support for health care reform. Just last Wednesday, Organizing for America sponsored a health care rally on Flagstaff Hill where both a priest and a congressman enjoined the crowd to

support Obama’s health care goals.

Just as the public use of religion to justify national policy demonstrated the intellectual poverty of the Republican Party during the last decade, Obama’s attempt to sell Americans on health care reform through faith rather than reason should be understood as a sign of weakness.

Indeed, it is a weak politician who cannot support his policy positions with facts and reasoned arguments but instead resorts to statements of belief and morality. This is just what the Democratic Left is doing today by relying on the language of religion and morality in the health care debate.

Toward this end, the Democratic Left has introduced the notion that health care is an inalienable human right that the government has a moral duty to provide to all Americans. This is a great lie designed to separate hard-working Americans from the fruits of their production and redistribute it to the unproductive.

It is a dangerous argument that suggests that the American people have a right to the services of doctors and hospital administrators that trumps the right of these medical professionals to work for their own profit. It is, plain and simple, an assault on individual liberty.

And it is in this assault on individual liberty that the Obama administration has found allies in the nation’s religious leaders. Religion tells man to love his neighbor as himself and to subordinate his interests to an almighty god, just as Obama’s statist ideology demands that citizens assume their neighbor’s burden as their own and submit their liberty to the almighty state.

Both ideologies are incompatible with the republican foundation of this country that’s Founders recognized religion and government as defining threats to individual liberty. When government and religion unite, they are certain to have only one goal: the subjugation of the individual American citizen.

Continue the conversation at Gile’s blog, publiusawakened.blogspot.com, or e-mail Giles at gbh4@pitt.edu.

Pitt News Staff

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