Re: Levitt and Contraception
by
vangoghscat
08/28/2008, 4:07 PM #
Where does the right of conscience end?
Could pharmacists decline to dispense contraceptives (of any kind) unless proof of marriage were offered, if they believed that sex outside of marriage was immoral? After all, they might be facilitating an immoral act.
Could pharmacists refuse to dispense Viagra to unmarried men, for the same reason?
If a pharmacist believes that a drug is potentially harmful, could he or she refuse to dispense it? There have been occasional claims that some of the drugs used to treat ADHD, for example, might have adverse, even fatal effects, but the medical consensus so far is that they are generally safe when used as prescribed. But what if a particular pharmacist doesn’t believe the reassurances, the “experts,” and decides that the drugs are dangerous, potentially fatal, and refuses to dispense them?
Of course people shouldn’t be forced to act against their consciences, but perhaps if a particular job is going to compel a person, as a requirement of the job, to do something that comes into conflict with his or her conscience, then it’s the wrong job for that person. If you are a pharmacist, your job is to dispense the prescriptions, not to dispense moral judgments. If the demands of your conscience are so imperative that you cannot do your job, then it is you who should make the sacrifice for your conscience, not others: quit your job, and find another that allows you to live your life with the tranquility of heart and soul that only a quiet conscience can bring. Although as for that, I suspect a quiet conscience is a dead one.