A mural of Charlie Kirk is re-painted after a protester defaced the mural at Graffiti Bridge Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025 during a Candlelight Vigil in honor of Charlie Kirk. The protestoer
A mural of Charlie Kirk is re-painted after a protester defaced the mural at Graffiti Bridge Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025 during a Candlelight Vigil in honor of Charlie Kirk. The protestoer
Home » News » National News » Ohio » Liberals are eroding our values. Medicaid fraud, Kirk reaction a symptom | Opinion
Ohio

Liberals are eroding our values. Medicaid fraud, Kirk reaction a symptom | Opinion

New Albany resident Philip Derrow is a regular Columbus Dispatch contributor.

Ohio Auditor of State Keith Faber has been making the rounds in Congress and media talking about the work of his office to identify areas of fraud, waste and abuse of our state’s Medicaid program.

Video Thumbnail

Amounting to as much as $4.4 billion, that much abuse of taxpayer money is bad enough, but one of his comments highlighted a far greater problem. And it’s one that threatens the very fabric of our nation as we ponder the USA’s 250th birthday.

During one interview, Faber said, “Our Medicaid program, like a lot of our social programs are predicated on a trust society.” He’s right. But it’s not just social programs that rely on trust. Virtually all of modern civilization relies on it to some degree. And the lack of it doesn’t just levy monetary burdens; it rots us from inside and robs us of time and peace of mind.

In 1798, John Adams, the second U.S. president, whose Massachusetts Constitution became a model for our national structure, wrote, “Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious People. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.”

While philosophers have long argued about whether religion is necessary for people to be moral, there’s little to debate about the value of widely shared views regarding civic morality (e.g., lying, cheating, stealing, murder, etc.) – and the costs of its demise.

I’m old enough to have grown up leaving doors unlocked, walking to school and enjoying unsupervised play from breakfast ‘til dinner with barely a thought of anything bad happening.

Store owners didn’t have to lock up the candy bars in my day

Part of the reason we had that freedom is because teachers, police and other adults trusted that – if we got caught doing something bad – we’d be in much more trouble from mom and dad when we got home. Our parents mostly trusted that most other families did the same.

No longer.

That’s enough to lament in itself but the consequences for self-government are truly dire. It is a well-established axiom that you cannot have enough police, courts or jails if the overwhelming majority of people don’t willingly follow the law. It’s even worse when those in power and influence make excuses for lawlessness since such vice varnishing just encourages more of it.

When 8-year-old me stole a candy bar from the local drug store, I not only had to go back and pay for it but apologize to the owners, promise never to do it again, and was grounded for what seemed like months.

I deserved the punishment and learned the lesson. The store owners didn’t have to lock up the candy bars.

On April 22, The New York Times’s opinion section not just excused but glorified theft by publishing “The rich don’t play by the rules. So Why Should I?,” a podcast episode and its transcript.

Times Opinion culture editor Nadja Spiegelman even gave it a catchy name – microlooting – to both minimize and justify thievery as legitimate protest rather than the corrosive juvenile entitlement it displays.

“I’m proposing a new term: Microlooting,” Spiegelman said. “People are taking small things from big corporations and they’re feeling justified. But is it a slippery slope? What’s going on with our moral code?”

Whether you get your opposition to stealing from the Ten Commandments or the social contract, only the worst slice of the American pie would laud it.

Here in Ohio, Faber identified two zip codes in central Ohio as comprising a significantly disproportionate number of suspected Medicaid fraud cases.

These are primarily Somali immigrant communities. Corruption runs rampant in their homeland and their survival depended on them taking what they could because everyone else was doing the same. Excusing or ignoring those behaviors here only invites the same corruption to take root in our communities.

Faber should certainly implement his recommendations for better controls and aggressive fraud prosecution if he’s elected Ohio Attorney General this fall. Yet it’ll all just be whack-a-mole if we can’t agree that stealing is wrong, and neither euphemism nor excuse changes that fact.

That’s because theft begets theft, which begets the next offense until we’re excusing murder. Numerous examples of support for the killings of Charlie Kirk and UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, and multiple assassination attempts on President Donald Trump suggest many of our fellow citizens already are.

Microlooting, Medicaid fraud, the shrug at an assassin’s bullet: different crimes, one disease.

A republic doesn’t fall when its laws are broken. It falls when we lose our shared values – and at 250, that’s the only audit that really matters.

New Albany resident Philip Derrow is a regular Columbus Dispatch contributor.

This article originally appeared on The Columbus Dispatch: Liberals are eroding our values. Medicaid fraud, Kirk reaction a symptom | Opinion

Reporting by Philip Derrow, Columnist / The Columbus Dispatch

USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect

Image

Image

By Philip Derrow, Columnist | USA TODAY Network

Related posts

Leave a Comment