As
one of those aged, I sympathize with Ryan and his Tea Party colleagues in their
unhappiness over such dependence; I deplore it in myself and am shamed, after a
lifetime of caring for others, to need so much assistance in just staying
alive. Should it really take an MD to cut our toenails?
But
short of setting up Sarah Palin death panels (it was never clear whether she
was accusing Democrats of planning them or advocating them herself), what are
we as a “Christian,” humane society to do with people who paid their dues and
unexpectedly outlived everybody’s expectations, including their own?
From
this pain-filled old age that movie star icon Bette Davis characterized as “not
for sissies,” a more mentally than physically competent nonagenarian would
suggest that younger generations, now that Obamacare is legal and more or less
in effect across the country, come to terms with what they consider its unfairness:
that the young grit their teeth and deal with it, not only because it protects
them against the unlikely chance that they will be stricken but because,
imperfect as it is, it is their turn to pay a toll on the long road toward a
fair life in a just society.
In an
America that became the most powerful nation in the world by, however slowly
and grudgingly, recognizing that race and gender should not overwhelm empathy, it
would be foolhardy to sells others (and ourselves) short by not looking far enough
ahead.
Sooner
or later, if we live long enough, we all become physically dependent. It would
be a shame if we couldn’t find some morally just ways to live with that
inevitability.
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