R. Albert Mohler Jr.'s Blog, page 221
May 8, 2018
Tuesday, May 8, 2018
Two hundred years after his birth, Karl Marx becomes cool once again despite the deadly consequences of his ideas
A deadly legacy: How Marxism in its truest forms became a deadly ideology that led to human miseryNew York Times (Chris Buckley) — On This Chinese TV Show, Participants Have Nothing to Lose but Their ChainsWall Street Journal (Valentina Pop and Andrea Thomas) — Marx Is Home for His Birthday, and Not Everyone Is HappyWall Street Journal (Paul Kengor) — Marx’s Apologists Should Be Red in the Face
The theological dimensions of Marxism as understood in the four essential components of a biblical worldviewThe Economist — Rulers of the world: read Karl Marx
Why making bad ideas illegal makes even the worst ideas more popularCBS News — "Nazi grandma" arrested after failing to report to prison
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May 7, 2018
Monday, May 7, 2018
After series of moves to the left, Boy Scouts officially drop the ‘boy’Washington Post (Rachel Siegel) — Boy Scouts drop the ‘boy’ as they welcome girls to Scouts BSA
Amidst fast-paced moral revolution, few organizations have shifted as rapidly as the Boy ScoutsUSA Today (John Bacon) — Boy Scouts are dropping the word 'Boy' from flagship program; Girl Scouts shrug
Iowa adopts new pro-life legislation that will be very hard for the Supreme Court to ignoreUSA Today (Stephen Gruber-Miller) — GOP hopes a challenge to Iowa's abortion bill will overturn Roe v. Wade. How would that work?New York Times (Julie Bosman and Mitch Smith) — Iowa Lawmakers Pass Abortion Bill With Roe v. Wade in Sights
In the face of opposition from tech companies, Kansas and Oklahoma adopt legislation protecting faith-based adoption agenciesAP (Mitchell Willetts) — Kansas, Oklahoma approve religious veto on LGBT adoptions
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May 6, 2018
John 1:9-14
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May 4, 2018
Friday, May 4, 2018
Examining the radical worldview and ideological imbalance on America’s college campusesWashington Times (Bradford Richardson) — Democratic professors outnumber Republicans 10 to 1, study shows
Historic women’s colleges struggle to answer the question, ‘What is a woman?’Chronicle of Higher Education (Julian Wyllie) — ‘What It Means to Be a Woman Is Not Static’: How Women’s Colleges Are Handling Transgender Applicants
MCAT changes highlight the transformation of medicine as a professionWeekly Standard (Devorah Goldman) — The Politicization of the MCAT
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May 3, 2018
Thursday, May 3, 2018
Sexual liberation vs. the morality of consent: #MeToo feminists find themselves at odds with an earlier generation of feministsLA Times (Kay S. Hymowitz) — #MeToo feminists may not realize it, but their other target is sex and drugs and rock 'n' roll
Why are many feminists so absolutely insistent on abortion as an essential human right?New York Times (Elizabeth Gumport) — The Forgotten Anger of ‘Our Bodies, Ourselves’
With urbanization on the rise, a very clear cultural and moral change comes with itWall Street Journal (Kevin D. Williamson) — Republicans Do Well in Texas. Except for Dallas, Houston, Austin . . .
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May 2, 2018
Wednesday, May 2, 2018
Religious liberty is once again the loser amidst the secularization of western societiesCourthouse News Service (Barbara Leonard) — EU Court Adviser Cracks Whip on German Religious Employers The Economist (Erasmus) — A court ruling makes it harder for faith-based employers to discriminate
Why Artificial Intelligence is incapable of driving us toward a better system of moralityQuartz (Ambarish Mitra) — We can train AI to identify good and evil, and then use it to teach us morality
Conscious machines, cruelty, and conventional morality: Confronting the ethics of HBO’s ‘Westworld’New York Times (Paul Bloom and Sam Harris) — It’s Westworld. What’s Wrong With Cruelty to Robots?
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May 1, 2018
Tuesday, May 1, 2018
Which side in America’s great cultural conflict is winning—is it the right, or is it the left?NPR (Tim Mak) — Despite So Much Winning, The Right Feels Like It's Losing
White House Correspondents’ Association dinner reveals danger of the Hollywood-major media industrial complexNew York Times (Michael M. Grynbaum) — Did Michelle Wolf Kill the White House Correspondents’ Dinner?Washington Post (Margaret Sullivan) — For the sake of journalism, stop the White House correspondents’ dinner
Are corporations really demonstrating courage by taking progressive social stands? New Republic (Alex Shephard) — The Rise of Corporate Social Responsibility
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April 30, 2018
Monday, Apr. 30, 2018
British toddler Alfie Evans dies five days after being removed from life support against parents’ wishesNew York Times (Yonette Joseph) — Alfie Evans, Terminally Ill British Toddler at Center of Court Fight, DiesAlbertMohler.com (Albert Mohler) — Life in the Balance in Liverpool — Alfie Evans Is Not Alone
The deadly consequences of displacing the family as the centerpiece of societyNew York Times (Ross Douthat) — Alfie Evans and the ExpertsWashington Post (Ben Zdencanovic) — How Alfie Evans became the latest weapon in the conservative attack on universal health careThe Guardian (Staff) — Living children's glands given to drug firms
Many questions remain after North Korea changes the game before US meetingNew York Times (Mark Landler) — As Two Koreas Talk Peace, Trump’s Bargaining Chips Slip Away
Why human civilization cannot be sustained with artificial jobs, artificial wages, or artificial workersWashington Post (Megan McArdle) — Bernie Sanders wants you to have a good job. But there’s a catch.New York Times (Peter S. Goodman) — Finland Has Second Thoughts About Giving Free Money to Jobless People
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April 29, 2018
John 1:4-8
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April 27, 2018
Life in the Balance in Liverpool — Alfie Evans Is Not Alone
In Liverpool, a very little boy is still struggling for his precious little life. Alfie Evans was born on May 9, 2016. Under normal circumstances, he and his proud parents would be about to celebrate his second birthday. But Alfie suffered seizures beginning about seven months after he was born, and a team of doctors in Britain decided that he had suffered irreversible brain damage and should be allowed to die.
His parents have fought for his life and a continuation of life support, encouraged by a multitude of friends who identify as #AlfiesArmy. Alfie has been supported by powerful friends. Pope Francis offered to pay all expenses for Alfie to be moved to the Gesu Bambino Hospital associated with the Vatican. Italy rushed to offer litte Alfie citizenship, but the British government, acting with the doctors in what it claims is the best interest of the child, has blocked every intervention, overridden the rights of his parents, and insisted that life support must be removed.
And so it was, on Monday. The doctors had declared in court that Alfie, once removed from life support, would die within minutes. As of now, Friday afternoon, Alfie is still alive breathing on his own, refuting the insistence of his doctors that he die.
The Alfie Evans story is a horrifying example of what ensues when the state denies parental rights.
Alfie’s case is just one more disturbing case of an ominous trend in the UK. As in case of Charlie Gard months ago, the state is denying parents the right to make medical decisions for their children. Instead, medical authorities, backed by the courts, have insisted that the child must be “allowed to die.”
One of the most important rights throughout human history is the right of parents to make decisions concerning their children’s welfare. Almost every culture and civilization has honored this principle—formally or informally–as a basic human right and a necessary foundation for family flourishing. Western countries often recognized parental rights as natural rights—rights that cannot be compromised by government interference. But in the case of Alfie, the state is redefining parental rights so that they extend only as far as the government or other elites, such as the medical elites, determine.
Furthermore, unlike the Charlie Gard case, Alfie Evans has only been examined by one medical team or acute care team. As Charles Camosy has pointed out, those acute care teams of medical experts often make the wrong decisions regarding the inevitability of death. To put the matter bluntly, there are numerous cases in which medical authorities said an individual would surely die, but those people are still alive.
Sohrab Amari, writing for Commentary Magazine, is on point: “The medical complexities of the case, played up by the court and its defenders, serve to obscure a basic moral principle. No one is asking the UK National Health Service to expend extraordinary measures to keep Alfie alive. All Alfie’s parents ask is to be allowed to seek treatment elsewhere, again at Italian expense, even if such treatment proves to be futile in the end.” The same principle, says Amari, was at stake in last year’s Charlie Gard case. Once more, British courts have distorted the relevant legal standard, the best interest of the child, to usurp natural rights. This disturbing point is a political issue, to be sure. But natural rights are pre-political. Governments do not invent or grant natural rights. The rightful role of government is to respect and protect the rights that exist prior to the state and its laws.
If the state does not recognize parental rights as natural rights and government authorities and elites can subvert the will of parents, then we’re going to witness a long succession of cases just like Charlie Gard and Alfie Evans—and not just in Great Britain.
Successful civilizations have always understood that parents bear the primary, non-delegable responsibility to raise their children. These civilizations have also recognized the fundamental right of parents to do so. Parents are those most likely to know how to act in the best interest of the child. Of course, modern civilizations have also had to deal with the question of what happens when parents are clearly not acting in the best interest of their child. In these instances, courts have and should intervene, but only when overwhelming evidence demonstrates that the parents do not pursue the good of their children.
When the government subverts parental rights, perverse incentives are often at play. Some of the government officials in the UK making the decisions about Alfie, and those like him, are the very persons trying to save money in the healthcare system. Many of these individuals making these decisions are driven by legal and moral assumptions that are wildly at variance with the sanctity of human life. Furthermore, many of the people making these decisions may be operating from worldviews directly at odds with those of both patients and parents.
The US and UK are markedly different with regard to when states can intervene in the lives of families. Historical, legal, cultural, and constitutional issues are ultimately behind these differences. But parents in the United States and elsewhere must be aware of the fact that many in our country want to make our own system more like the United Kingdom. Consider, for instance, the case of the teenager in Ohio who was removed from parental custody because they would not agree to move forward with the teenager’s desire for gender transition surgery.
Once we deny human dignity and the sanctity of every human life–once we deny parental rights as natural rights–disaster will ensue. The case of Alfie Evans demonstrates this is not a theoretical problem. A special 23-month-old child, a child loved by his parents, granted Italian citizenship, and sponsored by the Pope, is being denied medical treatment—treatment his parents desperately desire. This child wants to live, evidenced by the fact that, even after he was removed from life support, he is still breathing.
Those who promote a progressive redefinition of medical ethics and legal authority assure us that what happened to Charlie Gard and to Alfie Evans will not happen, but it does. It happened with Charlie Gard, and it is happening again.
Those who want government to take even greater responsibility and authority in health care decisions promise that government will be wiser than the rest of us. But any system that shifts authority for deciding what is in the “best interest of the child” from parents to the state and its agents puts every child in danger. Any system that eliminates the rights of patients, parents, and family members to make the most urgent decisions about medical care endangers every patient.
Right now, the most urgent thing most of us can do is to pray for Alfie Evans and his family and to tell his story as loudly and as clearly as we can. He is fighting for his life, breath by precious breath.
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