During Soc. class this week
Professor told us our blog for the week should be about understanding our opponent’s
viewpoint and we should write about the supporting details and facts of their
viewpoint, not ours. Well isn’t that
tricky. It’s easy to have our own opinions and come up with reasons that
support our opinion but when I sit down and think about reasons that support my
opposing viewpoint I come up with nothing. Not one darn thing. I mean I understand
that in order for my argument to be more valid and effective I need to understand
and appreciate the opposing argument but the problem is every time I sit down
and think about it I feel like my mind is having a debate with itself. I’m sure
if my mouth actually articulated what my mind was thinking people would think I
am crazy. Even with this debate running through my head, I think I have been
able to come up with some points that could prove to be appealing to some
people.
I see health care as a privilege.
If you work hard, learn a lot, and meet the right people in the end you will be
successful and rewarded. In this instance you will be rewarded with healthcare.
That’s the way I see it. No freebies no donations, simply in the end hard work
pays off. However, possibly this theory isn’t always true. Sometimes fate gives
you a bad hand. What if you work hard your whole life, study hard in school,
and don’t meet the right people? What if you study hard in school and work hard
then can’t afford to get a college education? What if you’re a hard worker but no
jobs are available and you’re left working at a diner or grocery store? Should those
people not have health insurance? Of course not. People like that who are
honest and hardworking should be rewarded and not punished just because they
weren’t dealt the best fate cards. I suppose then for people who have a life similar
to the examples I listed, healthcare being a right would be the obvious and
right choice for their opinion. Possibly this is the situation for the majority
of people, that they just have been dealt a bad set of cards, and only a small minority
would abuse the system of free healthcare. If this is true I would fully
support healthcare as a right.
The Pastoral Constitution of the
Church states that “(God) has willed that all men should constitute one family
and treat one another in a spirit of brotherhood.” Basically in modern language
this quote is saying that men, women, children no matter the race, ethnicity,
age, etc. are all related and a member of the same family tree and in a family
everyone helps each other. If someone has fallen you help them up; if someone
is dealt a bad fate you help them and give them some of your fortune. In the
instance of healthcare, if someone has lost their job or simply can’t afford
the cost it is your job, as a member of the family, to support them and make
sure they have the care and coverage they need. This could mean that possibly
you pay a little more in taxes and you may not receive the same benefit you
were receiving before but at least now everyone, your extended family members,
have care.
Moving away from the idea of
healthcare being a right or privilege I want to just briefly discuss another
blog prompt we received. This prompt dealt with the Cleveland Clinic and the people
of Cuyahoga County. The Cleveland Clinic is known worldwide and is rated has
one of the best hospitals yet the people living in the surrounding houses of
the hospital are not all healthy. I just think this is silly. Of course all the
people living in Cuyahoga County are not healthy. The hospital is a nonliving
object. It does not give off good health. People always say that you are who
you surround yourself with. You surround yourself with certain people and
sooner or later you will start acting and behaving like them, guaranteed. This
is because you’re feeding off another person, they are giving you actions and
cues and you’re basing yourself off that. That’s where it ends though. You can’t
feed off something that doesn’t produce actions, emotions, cues, it’s
impossible. To say you live next to a hospital and you aren’t healthy is like
saying you live next to a fast food restaurant and you are obese. It just doesn’t
make sense. Just because you live next to McDonalds doesn’t mean you are
automatically obese; just because you live next to the Cleveland Clinic doesn’t
mean you are automatically healthy.
Ciao Gabby
ReplyDeleteLoved your blog. You have captured the essence of the opposing viewpoint. Well done.
Gabby,
ReplyDeleteI agree 100 percent when you talk about living next to the Cleveland Clinic does not mean you will be healthy. That is something that is hard to believe, just because you are close to a hospital does not mean you receive regular care from there!
Gabby, I loved all the points you made in your last paragraph and I couldn't agree more. Just because a person lives by a hospital doesn't mean they are necessarily healthy.
ReplyDeleteGabby I had mentioned that in class and you made that argument much better then I could have. Your last passage was super good and I loved it.
ReplyDeleteSorry you think my question is silly.
ReplyDelete