Robert Traer's Blog
September 18, 2009
Bob the Builder
I first heard of Bob the Builder stories from my youngest daughter, who as a medical student told me about a party with her friends that involved dressing up in working clothes and singing songs that everyone knew from the television show. These stories are designed to show children that happiness involves developing the virtues of industry and perseverance.
The show's website includes this exuberant affirmation: "Bob the Builder knows that the fun is in getting it done! With his...
Published on September 18, 2009 08:50
September 12, 2009
Ordinary care
When my dad at age 90 suffered a stroke that left him paralyzed on his left side and unable to swallow, but alert and able to talk, he chose to have his IV removed in order to let nature take its course. He said that he had lived a full life, was ready to die, and didn���t want to be kept alive by machines when his body couldn���t care for itself.
His death took four days. He was not on medication for pain, and by the second day he was unable to speak. By the third day he was unconscious. About thirty minutes before he died, his breathing slowed, with a long pause between each deep breath. I recited psalms and prayed for him, until he was still.
At his memorial service I shared with other family members and friends of my father that I was moved by the way my father faced death. He wasn���t afraid or depressed. He was grateful for his family and for the years he had lived, and he saw accepting his death as a way of expressing his gratitude for the gift of life.
In the university ethics class I teach, I mention my father���s death when we discuss health care, because it illustrates the right of a patient to withhold consent for medical treatment. In the 1990 Cruzan decision the US Supreme Court upheld this right, citing a ���liberty interest��� in the 14th Amendment of the Constitution and the common-law tradition supporting the right not to be touched by another person without consent or legal justification.
International law also supports the right of informed consent, which creates a duty for those providing health care to adequately inform patients of their condition, possible treatment, and their right to consent or decline treatment.
The story of my father���s death illustrates why Catholic moral teaching requires only health care that offers a reasonable hope of benefitting a patient and is not excessively expensive, painful, or inconvenient. This ���ordinary��� care is distinguished from ���extraordinary��� care. Catholic teaching supports using medication for a terminally ill patient to reduce suffering even if this may shorten the patient���s life. For medication is ordinary care and, if it hastens death, this unintended consequence does not outweigh the duty to reasonable means that are not excessively expensive to alleviate suffering.
My father was not Catholic, nor am I. But as a senior now, I support limiting health insurance to coverage for ordinary medical care, and I urge other seniors to do the same for the sake of the common good. We can help those who are younger overcome their fear of death by facing this fear ourselves. We should support health care as a human right for all, which is Catholic teaching and international law as well, but we should also affirm our right to decline medical treatment. And when treatment is very costly and offers only a short-term benefit, why not affirm life by accepting death?
With hope...Bob[image error]
Published on September 12, 2009 16:13
May 18, 2009
Fair-minded words
President Obama's speech at Notre Dame's graduation included a call (and a pledge) for open hearts, open minds, and fair-minded words when we address our differences and look for ways of working together.
In that speech Obama reflected on his work as a community organizer in Chicago where he was "touched by the words and deeds of men and women" he worked with from many Catholic parishes. "I'd like to think," Obama said, that in our community service "we touched the hearts and minds of the neighb
Published on May 18, 2009 07:35
March 2, 2009
Economic inequality
In an op-ed piece published in The Washington Post on March 2nd, E. J. Dionne Jr. argues that Obama is right to try to correct the growing economic inequality in the US. Dionne quotes Peter Orszag, Obama's budget director, who points out that: "Over the past two or three decades, the top 1 percent of Americans have experienced a dramatic increase from 10 percent to more than 20 percent in the share of national income that's accruing to them."
"The ethical measure of an economic policy," I argue i
Published on March 02, 2009 07:31
January 29, 2009
Language matters
In Obama's recent interview with the Al Arabiya news network he said, "The language we use matters." This might be understood to mean simply that we should try to be as persuasive as possible in promoting our ideas. But in the context of this interview about relations between the US and Muslim nations, Obama is affirming a commitment to respecting others even when we may disagree with them.<>In the language of ethics, virtues matter. We should be concerned not only with taking the right action, b</>
Published on January 29, 2009 07:22
January 23, 2009
Hard choices 2
In my first blog on hard choices I noted President Obama's assertion that the economic crisis wasn't simply the result of "greed and irresponsibility on the part of some," but a consequence of "our collective failure to make hard choices and prepare the nation for a new age."
Hans Morsbach, my brother-in-law and a successful businessman, responded with this comment: "Greed is a big part of the problem. The system allowed financial expert to collect commission on services of no value. Experts bun
Published on January 23, 2009 08:48
January 22, 2009
Renouncing torture
Affirming that "our ideals give us the strength and moral high ground" to combat terrorism, President Obama today signed executive orders that will end the CIA's secret overseas prisons, ban coercive interrogation methods, and close the Guantanamo detention camp within a year.
I applaud the President's commitment to the rule of law. A chapter in Doing Ethics in a Diverse World is devoted to the war against terrorism and explains that the right not to be tortured is a human right under internatio
Published on January 22, 2009 12:06
January 21, 2009
Hard choices
In his inaugural address President Obama told us that the economic crisis wasn't simply the result of "greed and irresponsibility on the part of some," but a consequence of "our collective failure to make hard choices and prepare the nation for a new age."
He was talking about ethical choices. Doing what is right and being good persons even when it seems that we might profit by doing what is wrong, or when we want good government but are unwilling to pay the taxes necessary for government that wo
Published on January 21, 2009 09:10
January 20, 2009
Embracing crisis
In his inaugural address this morning Barak Hussein Obama quoted these words of George Washington: "Let it be told to the future world...that in the depth of winter, when nothing but hope and virtue could survive...that the city and the country, alarmed at one common danger, came forth to meet it."
President Obama's call to renew the spirit of America is a call to an ethic of duty, virtue, and compassion. Rather than blame, we should build. Rather than giving up, we should give to others. Rathe
Published on January 20, 2009 10:44
January 19, 2009
Gay love
Singer and musician Melissa Etheridge recently said about homosexuality that: "Love is all there is, and love is never wrong. Why should we be threatened by love?"
The subtitle of the chapter on "Sex" in Doing Ethics in a Diverse World is "Consent Plus What?" Love is a good answer, as long as by love we mean mutual respect and commitment and not only passion.
In the law we presently have a clash of rules. Marriage in most places is heterosexual by definition, but the human right of nondiscriminat
Published on January 19, 2009 16:11


