Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
How to turn social distancing into love
How to turn social distancing into love
Jun 28, 2026 2:30 AM

The most ubiquitous phrase popularized by the coronavirus epidemic, “social distancing,” carries connotations of shunning or anti-social behavior. The isolation of the elderly particularly tugs at our heartstrings. The widely shared photo of 88-year-old Dorothy Campbell speaking through a nursing home’s window to her 89-year-old husband, Gene, poignantly depicts the deep-seated need for human contact amid the obstructions of anti-virus protocols.

But distancing in a time of global pandemics preserves life. As such, it should be seen as a form of “applying love through prudence,” writes Dustin Siggins at . “And in doing so, it offers an amazing opportunity for those who care about the elderly to find new ways to love them.”

As Doug McCullough and Brooke Medina note in this week’s Acton Commentary, “[W]hen social interaction is discouraged, or forbidden, it can foster feelings of loneliness and isolation.” But proper care for the physical health of older adults need not require neglecting their emotional health. Younger people experiencing forced time off from school or work now have more opportunities to contact the elderly and “to create closer familial relationships,” Siggins writes.

Another way to care for the whole person, body and mind, is to facilitate senior citizens’ use of modern technology:

Skype,Zoom and FaceTime may be newfangled, but they may also be mental health savers for quarantined senior citizens. The gift of an iPad or laptop will teach people who may have never seen the value in technology-based social tools, keeping their minds sharp through continued learning and the human need to be with those whom we love. A digital picture frame takes less work, but the one my cousin and his wife bought Nana a few years ago is one of her most valued possessions.

All of these connecting forting technologies emerged in a free economy. Zoom founder Eric Yuan emigrated to the United States from China’s Shadong Province. FaceTime was created by Roberto Garcia for Apple. Skype grew out of the code developed by three Estonians (Ahti Heinla, Priit Kasesalu, and Jaan Tallinn) for Kazaa. The pany, initially called “Skyper,” was founded by Niklas Zennström of Sweden and Janus Friis of Denmark. This is no coincidence.

Economic freedom is the silent partner in eradicating the loneliness of COVID-19. The Global Innovation Index tracks closely with the Heritage Foundation’s Index of Economic Freedom. Only seven “mostly unfree” nations (China, Greece, Vietnam, Ukraine, India, Mongolia, and South Africa) and one nation rated “repressed” (Iran) rank above GII’s global median; all but e near the bottom. (And one could plausibly argue much of the innovation es out of China originated elsewhere.) Their inclusion is an eloquent testimony that even the most determined government cannot stamp out the creativity infused into every human being created in imago Dei.

A free-market system incentivizes technological progress, because it allows inventors to profit from their innovations. In a true market economy, profits flow from meeting consumers’ needs or desires.

For this reason, entrepreneurs watching the Zoom founder’s success will seek to create similar technologies that repair the breach between loved ones created by the coronavirus. Yuan has added $2 billion to his net worth since the beginning of this year—$20 million on Monday alone. But he refused a lucrative source of profits last week, when he gave Zoom to K-12 schools for free.

The 50-year-old invented Zoom, because he got tired of driving 10 hours to see his college girlfriend. His technology was the byproduct of economic freedom and love.

Employing munications technologies to facilitate human contact during a time of isolation, Siggins says, offers us a chance to “turn fear into love.” Isn’t that the essence of the Christian faith?

Burrows. This photo has been cropped. CC BY-SA 2.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
European Commission attacks its own scientists
On Wednesday the European Commission again delayed a decision on whether European farmers may grow more genetically modified (GM) crops. mission claimed that more scientific analysis is needed before three new crops can be approved. But curiously, the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) has already twice analyzed the crops and found that they pose no danger to public health. Divisions seem to have broken out within mission on how to proceed with GM food. es at a time when biotech...
35th Anniversary of ‘The Passing of the Night’
“I want to show that the smartest and the bravest rely on their faith in God and our way of life,” was Robinson Risner’s answer to why he wrote The Passing of the Night: My Seven Years as a Prisoner of the North Vietnamese. 2008 marks the 35th anniversary of the release of American prisoners of war from North Vietnam and the publication of Risner’s often horrific but ultimately triumphant account. Many books written by and about American military prisoners...
Another tale of glory from the world of socialized medicine
From the UK: I never for a moment thought that a life could be decided by something as arbitrary as one’s address. The often-maligned US health care system is by no means a free market for health care services; rather, it is more of a hybrid public/private system. It’s imperfect and in need of reform, to be sure. But heaven help us if that reform takes the form of a governmental takeover of the entire system. How such a “reform”...
Bubble behavior and market panic
Congress is debating a number of measures designed to “rescue” homeowners facing foreclosure as the housing and credit crisis grinds more and more financial and real estate assets to dust. Much of the reporting on the credit crisis, in the tradition of objective journalism, strains to explain the problem objectively, as if what was happening in the markets was somehow an act of nature, something unguided by human action. Thus, people “fell” into the problem as if pulled by a...
Christian shareholder activism: Good or bad?
Over the years, mentators have had reason to criticize religious groups that try to influence corporate policy through shareholder resolutions and similar activities. The criticism has revolved around two points. One, Christian shareholder activism has often focused on issues that are matters of prudential application of moral teaching (e.g., environmental practices) rather than non-negotiable moral evils (e.g., abortion). Two, such activism often seems to imply, if not explicitly proclaim, that the normal operation of business is not adequately “good,” and...
Catholic High School Honor Roll: “When it comes to recognition, this honor is priceless!”
Why should your high school apply for the Catholic High School Honor Roll? One reason is ecclesial recognition. The video below highlights the experience of St. Theodore Guerin High School in Noblesville, IN. Bishop William L. Higi of the Diocese of Lafayette-in-Indiana attended the school’s press conference to honor the school’s plishments. The video shows the press conference, and does a fantastic job of describing the Honor Roll. Other schools also saw this type of recognition, including Salesianum School in...
The 2008 EO/Wheatstone Academy Symposium
My blog post titled “Toward a Theological Ethic for Internet Discourse” has been recognized in the 2008 EO/Wheatstone Academy Symposium. Here is a full list of the top five posts (along wtih an honorable mention): First Place: Mark Fedeli at A Deo Lumen Second Place: Jordan J. Ballor at The Acton Institute Power Blog Third Place: Mark Stanley at Digital Reason Fourth Place: Jeff Nuding at Dadmanly Fifth Place: Letitia Wong at Talitha Koum Honorable Mention: Donnell Duncan at The...
The federal landlord
Dana Joel Gattuso of the National Center for Public Policy Research warns that a provision in the pending farm bill will encourage increasing federal control of private lands (de facto federal ownership) via the mechanism of conservation easements. That got me wondering just how much of the United States is owned by the federal government. Surprisingly, the information seems hard e by. A study (pdf) conducted by congressional Republicans in 2005 and based on 2004 data found that the federal...
Italy’s new ‘post-Catholic’ government?
The new Italian government was sworn in on May 9, headed for the third time by Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. The center-right coalition has a vast majority both in the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate, giving it a good chance of serving its full five-year term. For the first time since 1948, there will be munists represented in either chamber. For forty years following World War II, the Italian Communist Party was the second largest party in the country...
Incrementalism and public policy
There’s a long-running debate among public mentators concerning the prudence of pursuing an all-or-nothing agenda or moving incrementally toward a particular goal. How much modation is wise if that modation does make movement, however small, towards an ideal state of affairs, and yet also reinforces a system that is structurally opposed to the ultimate realization of that same ideal? When is it politically prudent to let the perfect potentially be the enemy of the good? These questions in the context...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved