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Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
Employable Down's Syndrome cases and loving families miss the point of the question.
Jan
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govt uses force to take value from some and give it
to others. -- j
.
Objectivism is unique in that you are allowed to donate to whatever cause you find valuable, and to help whatever person you choose to. It isn't regarded as a duty to care for the handicapped, poor, or ill. It is a choice like any other, and Objectivism recognizes your right to make that choice.
But perhaps you ask: can one behave consistently with Objectivism by caring for another who cannot support himself? Well, hasn't it occurred to anyone that a mutual trade might obtain here? And that trade need not be intimate. It can just be a matter of "I like having this person around."
1. If you care for someone because you truly value him, then you are not sacrificing yourself and you are acting morally.
2. If you value him but provide "support" to the point of sacrificing yourself (e.g. it gets well beyond your original intent to help but you can't turn back), then you may end up sacrificing.
2. If you care out of a sense of duty, then you are sacrificing.
"Allow" is not the appropriate word; but I assume you meant "does Obj. say that it is proper to".
Meanwhile, I once suggested to a politically liberal friend that churches should handle charity, and she said it is immoral to require that someone have to hear a prayer when he is given a bowl of soup.
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