Mirror of Justice

A blog dedicated to the development of Catholic legal theory.
Affiliated with the Program on Church, State & Society at Notre Dame Law School.

Friday, January 27, 2012

"Social Justice, Institutions, and Communities"

I really enjoyed this essay, by Adam MacLeod, at Public Discourse, on "Social Justice, Institutions, and Communities."  A bit:

If free institutions protect only the rights of the individual to pursue his own material comfort, then they are difficult to reconcile with the demands of justice. But viewed as communal institutions that serve truly common goods—ends that are both good for all and known to all, though realized in plural and incommensurable varieties—free institutions can act as vehicles of both opportunity and justice. Indeed, they might render obsolete the trench warfare between the individual and the state that pervades much contemporary public discourse about questions of justice. . . .

. . . A successful account of social justice must affirm the primacy of communities, and institutions directed by communities, over both the individual and the state in promoting human flourishing. The job of the individual in promoting social justice is to act in concert with others in his or her community to serve real needs, both within the community and in other communities. The job of the state is to support and enable free institutions—the church, the family, property ownership, charitable organizations, for-profit businesses, trade groups—to do their good work. This perhaps is not all that social justice requires, but it is a good place to start.

 

Richard Stith on the Pope's meeting with U.S. Bishops

MOJ-friend Richard Stith reports, at the University Faculty for Life blog, on the Pope's recent meeting with U.S. Bishops, and on his call that they, and all the faithful, mobilize in support of religious freedom.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Eric Bugyis responds to Rick Garnett on conscience and the mandate

Here is Eric Bugyis's response to my earlier post, "Confusion about Conscience":

Rick, Thanks for your reply. It’s always fun to go back and forth with you on this (and I am being sincere!). In the long avalanche of commentary on the various posts that went up at Commonweal (including Grant Gallicho’s reiteration of Commonweal’s editorial position, which is different from my own, David Gibson’s, which seems similar to Grant’s, and Lusa Fullam’s commentary on David DeCosse’s NCR piece, both of which, I think, support my own view), some of us came to some slight agreement on the situation. 

Grant boiled down the issue to this: “The nature of the dispute is the problem raised by the government’s decision to force religious institutions to act in a way that violates their moral teaching.” We agreed that in the case of, say, Jehovah’s Witnesses denying life-saving blood transfusions to non-JW patients or coverage to non-JW employees, the government would have a supervening interest to protect the life/health of its citizens by mandating that JWs either provide these services or get out of a business in which they would be expected to provide them or, perhaps, be fined so that the government could provide them. So, the question seems to be: When does the interest of the State to protect the rights of its citizens supervene on the freedom of religion of those who would conscientiously object to providing the services to which their patrons or employees are entitled? 

This determination has absolutely nothing to do with the conscientious objection itself or the specific religious reasons for it. In the case of JWs, it is not within the competence of the government to consider JW theology in deciding that a non-JW individual’s access to blood transfusions is important enough to supervene on the religious views of a JW doctor or employer. Mutatis mutandis, the Catholic Church’s moral teaching on contraception and the consciences of Catholic employers have nothing to do with determining the minimum healthcare provisions that will be included in an employee’s right to coverage.

The only consideration is whether contraception (or, indeed, any medical service) meets the criteria for inclusion, which includes some combination of weighing health risks versus benefits, the financial burden and relief involved, the impact on long-term health and quality of life, etc. 

You argue that “we make efforts to specially accommodate religion-based objections,” but I’m not sure that this is or should be an expectation placed on a government that explicitly claims to refrain from adjudicating which religion-based objections can and cannot be accommodated, which would involve concluding that some religious-reasons are better or worse, at least in the eyes of the State. In the case under consideration, this would mean that although blood transfusions and contraception have both been deemed “medically necessary” as part of the basic right to healthcare, the government would be deciding that Catholics have better religious reasons than JWs to claim exemption. Now, you can argue that contraception is not “medically necessary” and blood transfusions are, but this is a properly “public” argument that does not require any recourse to religious premises. 

So, the Bishops are clouding the issue when they claim a right to exemption based on conscience, which in a pluralist democracy is a question of an individual’s ability not to be directly and unduly coerced to personally engage in activities that challenge his or her moral convictions, or religious freedom, which protects the direct exercise of religious belief and practice by groups of like-minded individuals. The Obama Administration has already made the necessary provisions by allowing that any group of explicitly confessing like-minded individuals engaged in religiously-informed work with and for co-religionists can choose to have an insurance plan that does not cover the services to which they ALL object, and, of course, any individual can deny any medical service to which he or she personally objects. However, if one is going to serve and employ non-co-religionists, it is in the direct interest of a representative democratic government, which has determined that access to minimum “medically necessary” care is a right, to make sure that all of its citizens have the opportunity to exercise that right, via the mechanisms put in place to enable it. You can object to the right itself, the criteria governing “medical necessity,” or the method by which healthcare is being distributed, but none of these objections have anything to do with religion, and they certainly have nothing to do with the Bishops.

In my view, Eric's closing statement that the objections have "nothing to do with religion" is wrong.  One of the key reasons why, say, the Bishops, or Fr. Jenkins, or Sr. Carol, object to the mandate is because they believe compliance with the mandate would compromise the integral Catholic character of (at least some) Catholic institutions.  So, the mandate burdens their religious freedom, because religious freedom at least presumptively includes the freedom to construct and operate such institutions.  The question is whether the burden is justified -- is it necessary to secure public order, for example? -- or whether, given our traditions, the better course is to accommodate them.  Accommodations of religion always involve compromising, to some extent, the policy choices made by the majority in a diverse, pluralistic, etc., society.  The point is, a society that is constitutionally committed to religious liberty is willing to pay some "costs" for accommodating religious objections, because religious liberty is valued (it's worth "paying for").  And here, the cost, all things considered, is low; it would not be (that) hard to accommodate the objections while still achieving the state's public-policy goal.  Because it would not be (that) hard, the refusal to accommodate -- when so many accommodations are being granted to those who object to other burdensome provisions of the mandate -- is revealed, I think, as what it is:  A cynical imposition that transfers the cost of the government's policy goal (one that Congress did not vote on) to (primarily) Catholic institutions, in a way that will please the President's political base (and others who enjoy, for various reasons, seeing the Bishops lose).   

Eric says the question is "[w]hen does the interest of the State to protect the rights of its citizens supervene on the freedom of religion of those who would conscientiously object to providing the services to which their patrons or employees are entitled?"  True, this is often the question, and it's often a difficult one, and I agree that not all -- not even most, probably -- religious objections to legislative decisions can accommodated.  It's not possible, or desirable.

But, it's not the question here.  The merits matter.  Children do have a right -- one that is not the product of a (controversial, passed-by-narrow-margin) statute and an expansive administrative interpretation of that statute -- to be protected from violence and neglect.  Employees do not have a right -- again, except in an unhelpful "they do, because the statute, as remade by the agency, says they do" -- to have the government make their employers pay for their contraceptives. 

Good job, Europe!

Seriously:

Yesterday, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) adopted a non-binding resolution stating: “Euthanasia, in the sense of the intentional killing by act or omission of a dependent human being for his or her alleged benefit, must always be prohibited.”

Confusion about "conscience"

Eric Bugyis and I share a respect for Stanley Hauerwas.  HIs reaction to the HHS contraception-mandate decision, though, is very different from mine.  "Obama defends conscience," he writes, by which it appears he means that the President, unlike the Catholic Church, respects the consciences of those who believe that it is not immoral to use contraceptives, including early-abortion-causing drugs.  He writes:

This is, of course, a victory for all those who care about the religious liberty of individuals and the freedom of individual conscience, which by definition is meant to be protected from the unwelcome coercion by institutions to do things (or not do things) that are not relevant to the performance of one’s explicit duties to them, including one’s employer. The Obama administration did offer one gratuitous concession to those religious institutions.

It is, "of course," not a victory for those who care about the religious liberty of individuals, and it is, in my view, Bugyis's thinking, and not the Bishops', whose thinking on this matter is regrettably "muddled."  (I am afraid that his suggestion that Archbishop Dolan would do well to take the year which the Administration has given him to prepare for the mandate's imposition to "reflect on what the concept of 'conscience' actually means" goes beyond mistake-making into unattractive and unworthy snark.)  The notion that the refusal of a religious institution to subsidize an another's activity to which the institution objects on moral grounds is meaningfully analogous to a legal, punishment-backed requirement that such an institution subsidize such activity is, again, confused.  The "coercion" involved in the mandate saga is the coercion by the government of religious objectors; the employers who do not want to pay for (even indirectly) their employees' contraception are not "coercing" those employees to do anything.  Bugyis thinks the Church fails to respect the consciences of those who reject the the Church's teaching on contraception but the Church is not fining such people for their unbelief.  (The claim of some that, because the government has declared that contraception-coverage is now -- because the government has declared it so -- a baseline entitlement, and so a refusal to subsidize is equivalent to a fine is cute, but unpersuasive.)   

Yes, a meaningful exemption could mean that employees of Catholic institutions who want to purchase and use contraception have to pay more, but policies which raise slightly the cost of an activity are not helpfully or even plausibly regarded as forbidding that activity or as coercing people to forbear from engaging in it.  (Never mind the fact that the government, if it wanted to, could easily subsidize the activity itself; but why bother when you can make religious employers do it?)  Yes, in a democracy, in a political community in which people disagree, it will sometimes be the case that some people and institutions will be required to comply with legal directives to which they object.  That's life.  But in a political community that cares about religious freedom (as ours does), we make efforts to specially accommodate religion-based objections, especially in cases where (as here) it is easy to do so.

Bugyis writes, "[a]s it stands, the bishops and other religious leaders seem intent on protecting their prerogative to coerce rather than counsel, and this is a slap in the faces of the faithful, who have already endured and forgiven so much loss of moral credibility among their clergy."  Again, the bishops are not "coercing" anyone, and the question whether the Church's teaching on contraception has been persuasive (to most people, obviously, it has not), should be entirely irrelevant to the question (I understand that it is relevant to the Administration's political calculations) whether a government that is constitutionally and culturally committed to religious freedom should make Catholic institutions subsidize employees' contraception.  At the end of the day, it seems to me that Bugyis welcomes the mandate out of something like spite, as a kind of justified punishment, or come-uppance, of the Church for its failure to confess error and reform in the direction he would like.  Very disappointing.

The HHS mandate and religious freedom

I'm not sure I have much to add to what I wrote here about the HHS mandate and religious freedom.  The mandate is bad policy, in part because it imposes a burden, without good reasons, on the religious freedom of Catholic and other religious institutions.  It would not have been difficult to craft a policy that allowed an exemption to employers with religious objections to the mandate and that provided government contraceptives-purchase support to employees of such institutions.  

In addition to the Washington Post editorial criticizing the mandate, there have been powerful expressions of disagreement from liberal and center-left observers, including Roger Cardinal Mahony and Michael Sean Winters .  Archbishop Timothy Dolan has been particularly outspoken, and convincing, in his interventions, in USA Today  and the Wall Street Journal.  I also recommend Archbishop Jose Gomez's piece in First Things, "A Time for Catholic Action." 

The decision seems particularly cynical and insulting when one considers the support that Sec. Sebelius received from some prominent Catholics and the tone and content of the speech that Pres. Obama delivered at Notre Dame.  Coupled with the bizarre and extremist brief that the Administration filed in the Hosanna-Tabor case, this decision may reasonably seen as a betrayal of those Catholics who actually believed that the President intended to lead an administration that was sensitive to religious-liberty concerns.

The decision is all the more unattractive for being so obviously political, in a low sense.  It appears to me that the Administration simply decided that -- perhaps because the Bishops' stock is low in American culture at the moment, and perhaps because the polls and many advisors assure them that, because most Catholics report that they don't accept the Church's teachings on contraception (remember, though, this mandate covers some abortion-causing drugs, too) -- it would not face any serious political cost if it imposed the mandate, but it would demoralize "the base" during a re-election campaign if it did not.  Catholics were quite useful during the 2008 campaign and, apparently, the Administration believes that this decision will not cause Catholics to stay home or switch sides in sufficient numbers to undermine the 2012 effort.

Again, Archbishop Gomez:

But the issues here go far beyond contraception and far beyond the liberties of the Catholic Church. They go to the heart of our national identity and our historic understanding of our democratic form of government. In his address last Thursday, Pope Benedict gave us some prophetic advice for these troubling times:

Here once more we see the need for an engaged, articulate and well-formed Catholic laity endowed with a strong critical sense vis-à-vis the dominant culture and with the courage to counter a reductive secularism which would delegitimize the Church’s participation in public debate about the issues which are determining the future of American society. The preparation of committed lay leaders and the presentation of a convincing articulation of the Christian vision of man and society remain a primary task of the Church in your country; as essential components of the new evangelization, these concerns must shape the vision and goals of catechetical programs at every level.

 

There will be much more to say about this in the weeks ahead. But this much is clear at the present moment: Now is a time for Catholic action and for Catholic voices. We need lay leaders to step up to their responsibilities for the Church’s mission. Not only to defend our faith and our rights as Catholics, but to be leaders for moral and civic renewal, leaders in helping to shape the values and moral foundations of America’s future.

Monday, January 23, 2012

"The Unbearable Wrongness of Roe"

Here, at Public Discourse, is Prof. Michael Stokes Paulsen, reflecting on the Roe anniversary and on today's March for Life:

Today, thousands of people at the March for Life in Washington, D.C., are commemorating the thirty-ninth anniversary of a legal and moral monstrosity, Roe v. Wade, and its companion case, Doe v. Bolton. . . .

. . . It is important . . . to view reality with eyes wide open, focus clear, and gaze not averted. On this thirty-ninth anniversary of Roe and Doe, I would like simply to set forth what Roe and Doe held, in as clear-headed and straightforwardly descriptive legal terms as possible, and to lay out its human and moral consequences. My brief tour of Roe’s unbearable wrongness begins with Roe’s radicalism—its extreme holding creating a plenary right to obtain or commit abortion—proceeds with Roe’s legal untenability, and concludes with Roe’s immorality and the moral problem of our seeming passivity and quiescence in response to the greatest legal and moral wrongs of our age. . . .

God bless all those, in Washington at the March for Life and around the country, who today (but not only today) are not only bearing witness to Roe's wrongness but also reminding us of the what-should-be-very-uncomfortable fact that most of us have made our peace, perhaps with regret, with a culture and with a legal regime in which it is not only permitted, but regarded as a moral, fundamental right, to be protected and celebrated, for some people to cause the death of other people who are vulnerable and dependent.  Lord have mercy.

For another view, here is President Obama's statement, on the occasion of the Roe anniversary.   

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Transplant denial for disabled child

The Anchoress has the story (and links).  And, USA Today reports that advocates for people with special needs have taken up the cause.

MOJ readers and bloggers are, I am confident, deeply committed to radical human equality, and so would reject any claim that the life of a disabled child is "worth" less than that of anyone else.  That said, we owe it to ourselves to ask (I'm thinking of my teacher Guido Calabresi's book, Tragic Choices), what considerations are we allowed to take into account, and what mechanisms are we permitted use -- given our commitment to human equality -- for allocating much-needed but (presumably) scarce goods like organ transplants?  We could say, of course, that there's a line, and people get in it and wait; when someone's turn comes up, that's it, and the needed organ is theirs.  But, we don't say that (at least, I don't think we do).  If not, why not, and should we? 

UPDATE:  Prof. Charles Camosy, whose work has been discussed several times here at MOJ, is quoted in this news story about the case.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

"Justice Without Foundations"

Robert Kraynak, in The New Atlantis, makes a point (HT:  First Things) with which I'm sympathetic that I have tried to make myself, in (too) many MOJ posts:

What is so strange about our age is that demands for respecting human rights and human dignity are increasing even as the foundations for those demands are disappearing. In particular, beliefs in man as a creature made in the image of God, or an animal with a rational soul, are being replaced by a scientific materialism that undermines what is noble and special about man, and by doctrines of relativism that deny the objective morality required to undergird human dignity. How do we account for the widening gap between metaphysics and morals today? How do we explain “justice without foundations” — a virtue that seems to exist like a table without legs, suspended in mid-air? What is holding up the central moral beliefs of our times?

Inside Higher Ed.: "Battle over Birth Control"

A story about the HHS mandate, the religious-freedom objections that have been raised, and the two pending lawsuits about it, is here.