New York magazine's Jonathan Chait on conservative opposition to health-care reform:

Opponents of the law have endlessly invoked socialism. Nothing in the Affordable Care Act or any part of President Obamas challenges the basic dynamics of market capitalism. All sides accept that some of us should continue to enjoy vastly greater comforts and pleasures than others. If you dont work as hard as Mitt Romney has, or were born less smart, or to worse parents, or enjoyed worse schools, or invested your skills in an industry that collapsed, or suffered any other misfortune, then you will be punished for this. Your television may be low-definition, or you might not be able to heat or cool your home as comfortably as you would like; you may clothe your children in discarded garments from the Salvation Army.This is not in dispute. What is being disputed is whether the punishments to the losers in the market system should include, in addition to these other things, a denial of access to non-emergency medical treatment. The Republican position is that it should. They may not want a woman to have to suffer an untreated broken ankle for lack of affordable treatment. Likewise, I dont want people to be denied nice televisions or other luxuries. I just dont think high-definition television or nice clothing are goods that society owes to one and all. That is how Republicans think about health care.

Read the whole thing here.

Matthew Boudway is senior editor of Commonweal.

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