“The Obama administration has not yet indicated what
specific actions it might take in response to the Court’s ruling, but
it has stated that it “will work with Congress to make sure that any
women affected by this decision will still have the same coverage of
vital health services as everyone else.” The administration could take
the Court’s suggestion and expand the existing accommodation to closely
held for-profit corporations that assert a religious objection to some
or all contraceptive services and methods.”
They continue, “Congress, too, could act through new
legislation to protect employees and their family members from their
employers’ objections.”
Yes, all is not lost. As we pointed out, this is a huge platform to hand to Democrats in an election year. The repugicans are now going to be running against birth control, and as
Guttmacher notes, “More than 99% of women aged 15-44 who have ever had
sexual intercourse have used at least one contraceptive method.”
Discriminating against contraception because it might be used as an abortifacient is a fail. Furthermore, Hobby Lobby objected to at least one form of birth control that regulates a woman’s eggs even before they are fertilized.
But taking this a step further, contraceptives are often prescribed for
medical reasons. Take the IUD as an example. Before Obamacare,
insurance could and did refuse to cover an IUD ordered by a doctor for
medical reasons because it could be used as contraception.
IUDs are often ordered for women suffering from hemorrhaging. The only
other option is endometrial ablation surgery, which usually means she
can never have children.
Let that sink in for the family values.
The Guttmacher Institute also made it clear that the
government has a strong case for its contraceptive policy, “Indeed, in
an impassioned dissent, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg—citing the
Guttmacher Institute’s amicus brief
—made it clear that the government’s case for the contraceptive
coverage policy is very strong. Decades of scientific evidence and the
life experiences of millions of women show that contraception enables
women to prevent unintended pregnancies and to plan and space wanted
pregnancies. That, in turn, has numerous health benefits for mothers and
babies and promotes women’s educational, economic and social
advancement.”
There are 100 entities that sued over the
contraceptive mandate in the Affordable Care Act, so the wingnut
(and hypocritical) Hobby Lobby is not alone. Given Hobby Lobby’s history
and other business dealings, it’s obvious that they don’t really object
to birth control, but rather to this president and the ACA. However,
this is the position repugicans find themselves in given President
Obama’s relentlessly sound judgement and willingness to entertain ideas
from the opposition.
As repugicans chase themselves off a wingnut
cliff, not only their 2012 platform embraced the liberty killing
personhood amendment, but when parsed out, it was looking like they
wanted to abolish contraception all together. And here we have Hobby
Lobby making that argument.
The thing is, a real Congress could change this. A
Congress that was willing to put people first could change this.
Democrats and Independents can run on something that almost everyone
agrees upon, and that is that women’s healthcare should not be something
an employer can opt out of, and birth control is part of a woman’s
healthcare.
The worst hypocrisy of this whole debacle is the fact that birth control is the single best way to reduce abortions,
and yet Hobby Lobby and the repugican cabal are against it for “religious” reasons,
which they tie to being “anti-choice”. This is not even the usual repugican cabal position of being pro-fetus, but rather, this is being pro-abortion.
They are actually causing more abortions on purpose, because they know
that empirical evidence shows that access to birth control reduces the
number of abortions.
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