The Conscience of the King

Most of the arguments against the Conscience Protection Rule are bogus – they make it sound as though the government is forbidding the firing of employees who refuse to provide care that violates their consciences, when all it’s doing is threatening to yank federal funding.

What do you mean, this picture has nothing to do with the story?  Velociraptors have to reproduce too, dont they?

What do you mean, this picture has nothing to do with the story? Velociraptors have to reproduce too, don't they?

The other night on Maddow’s show, her guest was criticising the Conscience Protection Rule on the grounds that it would prevent Wal-Mart from firing a store clerk who refused to sell contraceptives. Maddow didn’t bat an eye at this. What? Is Wal-Mart a federally-funded health care provider? I mean, I know I’ve argued that Wal-Mart benefits from various government privileges, but most of the direct subsidies are local and most of the federal ones are indirect.

It also makes me chuckle to see lefties who are ordinarily – rhetorically at least – on the side of workers suddenly demanding that employers be allowed to fire them. (Can we call the workers who’d replace the fired ones “scabs”? Or would that cause too much cognitive dissonance?)

Some libertarians, like Ronald Bailey, seem confused about this too. (Conical hat tip to Stephan Kinsella.)

But while most of the arguments against the rule are confused, the rule is no great thing either. When so much of the health care system has been unnaturally sucked into the federal embrace, such selective de-funding unfairly limits people’s choices in a way that they would not be limited in a free market. If I and my gang use the violence of the state to gain a near-monopoly of some good or service, our decision to refuse to provide that good or service to people we don’t like begins to look not so innocent.

So I can’t get excited about either the critique or the defense of this law. Indeed, it’s a great example of how the Rawlsian/Dworkinian [Ronald, not Andrea or poor Gerald] dream of a state apparatus that is neutral among its citizens’ competing conceptions of the good is ultimately incoherent. Federal funding for contraception and abortion violates the rights of taxpayers who oppose those practices on moral grounds; selectively de-funding those practices in the context of a heavily statised health care industry threatens people’s reproductive freedom. The only way to avoid injustice is to abolish the state’s entire mass of subsidies, mandates, and prohibitions.

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7 Responses to The Conscience of the King

  1. scineram December 20, 2008 at 3:13 pm #

    Kinsella should know better. The Reason crowd is not that fond of nonaggression as he is.

  2. Anna Morgenstern December 20, 2008 at 5:53 pm #

    Once again, you provide the voice of sanity among the “libertarian” spectrum.

  3. Gary Chartier December 20, 2008 at 10:20 pm #

    “Poor Gerald” because he’s always overshadowed by or confused with Ronnie and Andrea?

  4. Administrator December 21, 2008 at 1:50 pm #

    Yeah; imagine being Gerald Dworkin and whenever the name “Dworkin” comes up the question is always “Ronald or Andrea?”

    I also feel sorry for Alison McIntyre.

  5. Jesse Walker December 21, 2008 at 7:23 pm #

    As I understand the rule — correct me if I’m wrong — “receiving federal funds” extends all the way to “has patrons who get Medicare.”

  6. Tracy Saboe December 22, 2008 at 10:37 pm #

    Off Topic but just wanted to let Roderick know about an Anarky Sighting. Didn’t see any contact info on the blog.

    http://www.dccomics.com/dcu/comics/?cm=10698

    Haven’t had a chance to read it yet, to see if the author “gets him.”
    (Neo-Tech, individualist anarchist vs bomb throwing chaos monger with
    whiskers but it’s good to know DC hasn’t completely forgoten the
    character.

  7. Danny Shahar December 22, 2008 at 10:41 pm #

    Even more off topic, but I felt it necessary to point out that the Velociraptor is not king of the dinosaurs; the Tyrannosaurus Rex is.

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