The daunting effects on individual freedom of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) are legion, despite the Herculean efforts of statist advocates and the agenda media to ignore them or explain them away. One element of the law that created a storm of opposition is the requirement that employers provide 20 different forms of contraception to their female employees who have company-provided health coverage.
That element of the ACA prompted a legal challenge from
Hobby Lobby and Conestoga Wood Specialties, two closely held for-profit
businesses owned by people who oppose abortion on religious grounds, and
challenged the requirement to provide free access to four of the twenty
required items on the list that are regarded as “abortifacients,” or
abortion-causing drugs.
The United States Supreme Court upheld that challenge by a
narrow 5-4 majority, allowing the plaintiff companies to refuse to provide the
offending drugs that interrupt the fetal development process after conception,
and thus are abortifacients.
While relieving the two employers of the requirement to
provide coverage forbidden by their religious beliefs, the ruling did not
affect the requirement to provide 16 other contraceptive items.
Nevertheless, the businesses have been accused of waging a
“War on Women.” And, the case has unleashed a flurry of ill considered,
factually deficient, and inane comments from those who want to persuade others
that there actually is a “War on Women.”
To wit: “It’s very troubling that a salesclerk at Hobby
Lobby who needs contraception, which is pretty expensive, is not going to get
that service through her employer’s health care plan because her employer
doesn’t think she should be using contraception,” said Hillary Clinton last
week.
There are several problems with this statement, not the
least of which is that Ms. Clinton has no idea what she is talking about. Given
the facts of the ruling, the assertion that the employer thinks people
shouldn’t use contraception is plainly absurd. It is likely true that these
business owners probably do think women should use contraceptives to avoid the
“need” for abortions, which violate their religious beliefs. And, women may
“want” contraceptives, but they don’t “need” them.
Social justice attorney and California State Senate
candidate Sandra Fluke on MSNBC’s “Hardball”: “What this is really about at its
base is trying to figure out as many ways as possible to limit women’s access
to reproductive healthcare.” If you oppose 20 percent of required
“contraceptives” – the challenged items aren’t really contraceptives at all – you
are trying to limit women’s access to reproductive healthcare? Seriously?
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi called the decision “an
outrageous step against the rights of America’s women.” Of course, not
wanting to provide abortion drugs for women is tantamount to attacking all
women’s rights.
Senator Patty Murray said it is “a dangerous precedent and
takes us closer to a time in history when women had no choice and no voice.”
She apparently forgot that she, a woman, was elected to the US Senate,
and that women have held and currently hold many high positions in government
and the private sector.
Democratic National Committee Chair Rep. Debbie Wasserman
Schultz said, “It is no surprise that Republicans have sided against women on
this issue as they have consistently opposed a woman’s right to make her own
health care decisions.” Has she discovered a Republican bill now being drafted
to appoint male health agents to make healthcare decisions for all women?
Massachussetts Senator Elizabeth Warren tweeted:
“Can’t believe we live in a world where we’d even consider letting big
[corporations] deny women access to basic care based on vague moral
objections.” The First Amendment protection of religious beliefs is “vague”?
Perhaps the first reaction to comments like these is, “Do
these people really believe what they are saying?” And then you realize that
they either do or they don’t, and either possibility represents a serious
problem. Worse, all of these people are in or are seeking positions of
influence and power.
How about the idea that women somehow have a right to
contraception, as well as the right for it to be paid for by their employer? A
quick search of the Bill of Rights, however, found no such guarantee. But there
is a very prominent guarantee of religious liberty, the right to believe as one
chooses, a belief that is free from control by and interference from
government.
But in today’s upside-down America, business owners who honor
their religious beliefs opposing abortion are called “enemies of women.” These
businesses hire women, Hobby Lobby started all employees at $13 an hour before
the ruling, they probably have women in management positions, may have women
owners, make health insurance available to all employees, and somehow this
means they are waging a “War on Women.”
But since facts and truth are not on their side, deceit and
exaggeration are all they’ve got to work with, and these pathetic women are
doing their best to create another class of victims to collect government
largess.
But be forewarned: If you disagree with any aspect of a
“progressive” cause, no matter how ridiculous that cause is, or how tiny your
disagreement, you will be labeled a “woman-hater,” a “racist,” or something equally
horrible.
Cross-posted from Observations
Cross-posted from Observations
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