The other day, I posted a link to a story on a health care company
firing smokers. At the time, I said it is the sort of thing that it
would be nice to see state and local governments doing.
This
article/a, from the BBC, has some more details. Most of the article is
the same as the other. All seems very positive, after all, we all know
smoking is bad for you. Most of us don’t like smoke. Its all very
unpopular. Very easy to dismiss, or even feel encouraged by, someone
banning smokers. However, “Ask not for whom the bell tolls, it tools for
thee”. Towards the end of the article, is the following snippet of
information: “According to Reuters news agency, Mr Weyers wants to turn
his attention next to overweight workers.” Again, at first, this sounds
fairly innocuous. But then remember, that according to our definitions,
most Americans are overweight. Now, I say I’m fat all the time. And I do
weight more than I should, by about 50 pounds. But most of my friends,
while recognizing that I could and should loose some weight, say that it
doesn’t show that much, and most have trouble agreeing to my 50 pound
figure. And that figure itself, at my height, I would still probably be
considered overweight if I did loose 50 pounds, even though that would
put me within 15 pounds of the weight I wrestled in high school, and
never mind the fact that I’m stronger now than I was then, though in
worse shape. This long tangent really does tie in. If I worked for
Weyco, and Mr. Weyers were able to implement his dream of enforcing
health standards further, I’d prob be at risk of loosing my job. That
puts a different light on it, doesn’t it? We always have to be VERY
careful allowing our employers, or our governments, since government
could do this as easily as Weyco has, control over our lives. This sort
of thing brings out the libertarian in me, and some people would dismiss
me out of hand. It is, however, imperative that individual
responsibility be promoted, enhanced, and protected. “Freedom” is not
the same as “license”, in part because freedom, unlike license, is
directly proportional to responsibility. Almost sounds like a
contradiction or paradox. But in an absolute sense, we cannot have free
will without the ability to cause real harm. That does not mean that
causing harm is not wrong, we have the
responsibility/strong/em not to cause harm. We are free
to do what ever, but some things are wrong. Contrast this to “license.”
If you have a license to hunt ducks, there might be restrictions on your
license, but within the bounds of that license, you are not responsible
for what duck you choose to hunt, or how you choose to hunt it. This is
not a perfect analogy, because while the license to hunt does not impose
responsibility, you are still responsible for your actions because of
other things. For instance, you are still responsible, under our still
somewhat free government, to not kill or recklessly endanger anyone. But
as bad as my ability to demonstrate it may be, properly understood
(consult a dictionary, its definition number 3 and 4 in both Webster’s
and Wordnet), license is different from freedom. Again, I am tangenting.
But again, the tangent is related. We do not want a license to eat (so
much), but the freedom to eat what we see fit. And, if we overeat, we
accept (or should accept), as part and parcel of that freedom, the
responsibility for the impact on our health. The problem is that it
isn’t quite so simple. Health-care costs have skyrocketed, and without
insurance, many people would be unable to afford a level of care that
many of us would now consider “basic.” Thus we are all in need of
medical insurance, and by that need, the increased cost of my/em
choices affect (effect?) the premiums you/em pay. And my freedom,
reasonably, necessarily, ends where yours starts. So where is the line
drawn? That’s a good question, one we should be hesitant to allow health
insurance companies, employers, or governments draw casually.