In this time of opening up
the country during the COVID-19 pandemic, ethics becomes a primary
issue. “Ethics” is the investigation and analysis of moral
principles and dilemmas. The term ethics can refer to rules or
guidelines that establish what conduct is right and wrong for
individuals and for groups.
Systematizing, defending,
and recommending concepts of right and wrong behavior is fraught with
disagreement and varied interpretations. It should be understood that
no matter what choices are made to address a pandemic, there will be
skepticism, criticism, and differences of opinion. There is no way to
avoid the dilemmas posed by acting without full scientific knowledge.
Still, the only workable
safeguard is the adoption of ethical values in formulating and
implementing public health decisions. Social distancing, facemasking,
quarantining, and testing – all of the employment of these measures
meant to stop the spread of the pandemic ultimately rest on the
ethics of the individual. The “right thing to do” under this
novel and deadly set of circumstances comes down to “you.”
The ethical dilemma you
face, like any other, involves choices between one good and another
good. For example, the choice between continuing to shelter in place
to stop mass infection and reopening the economy to preserve jobs is
a choice between two “goods,” not a clear-cut moral decision of
proper conduct.
Unlike many human-rights
situations, the decisions made during COVID-19 do not involve
choosing between doing the right thing, on the one hand, and clearly
violating people’s rights, on the other. Instead, they are
difficult decisions because both choices are good ones. Western
societies that are generally in health care have the utmost respect
for individual choices. The collective interests embodied in
traditional public health measures are less often acknowledged
despite their clear and strong history.
But now, America, like so
many parts of the world, is NOT “in good health.” Far from it,
the virus still rages, taking hundreds, even thousands of lives in a
day in its cruel devastation. And, although public health measures
are inevitably going to be imperfect, the basic question YOU face as
an individual is: “What should be YOUR primary focus of moral
regard?
COVID-19 points to the
need to move beyond attempts to balance individual freedom with
collective need. The true, good life cannot be reduced to individual
happiness. We are interdependent humans who should respect all life …
and that means respecting the common existence of everyone. Putting
others in danger denies that most important moral obligation we have
as human beings – brotherly love. When both the moral and legal
spirit lean towards this understanding of common humanity, the
question is not if we should extend our hand to protect, but how.
YOUR ethical obligation
related to care for the vulnerable places strict limits on what YOU
CAN DO, indeed, on your personal freedoms. However, I believe the
denial of some freedoms in this unusual and extreme case is ethically
warranted. It prevents the unforgivable domination, exploitation, and
abandonment of others.
Here, in Southern Ohio,
YOU likely haven't had COVID-19. YOU likely don't personally know a
person who has had the virus and, certainly, YOU do not know a county
resident who has died from the virus. You may consider the virus
“just another flu” or even a political “hoax.” However, those
mindsets still do not release you from the reality of the spread of
death and devastation.
Here is a kind and
sobering fact – YOU do not know how the precautions YOU are taking
during the virus may save the lives of vulnerable others. These lives
could reside anywhere, as this pandemic knows no boundaries of
counties or states or countries.
The individual freedoms
YOU lose during this time are real concerns. The loss of these
privileges evoke valid grievances. Restricting them hurts all of us,
and some people are paying a tremendous price in loss of income and
in emotional distress. Yet, most of these damaged individuals are
weathering the storm with an understanding of their moral obligations
to the common good. How they must be revered. They are truly American
heroes.
YOU can filter YOUR
ethical obligations to reactions to COVID-19 through all the local,
state, and national regulations and recommendations, and still, YOU,
as an individual, must decide the actions (or lack of actions) YOU
will take. In my opinion, doing the right thing means does not mean
going to crowded vacation spots, attending mass gatherings, ignoring
the continued need to social distance and facemask, and, instead,
continuing to follow good health measures to stop the pandemic.
Theologian and philosopher
Albert Schweitzer once said: “A man is truly ethical only when he
obeys the compulsion to help all life which he is able to assist, and
shrinks from injuring anything that lives.” I think Schwietzer's
words speak to Americans in this time of turmoil and indecision.
Still, the decision to assist others is up to YOU.
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