Lunatic Fringe
A
(male, repugican, naturally) Missouri state representative is suing the
federal government for a personal family exemption from the Obamacare
birth control mandate on the grounds that it violates his religious
liberty. Since we can assume that this male repugican is not worried
about blocking his own access to a pharmaceutical made for and taken
exclusively by women, we can conclude that this guy is basically suing
to keep his wife and daughters from having the option to access free
birth control. I guess I missed that day in catechism when we learned
about how the cult believes that the man's religion gets to determine
his wife and female offspring's insurance benefits.
To be fair,
State Rep. Paul Wieland isn't alone in his lawsuit; joining him is his
wife, Theresa. The pair claim that simply having the option to
access copay-free birth control through Wieland's state-provided
insurance plan violates their catholic dogma, which famously views birth
control as basically punching god in the face (god, in his omnipotence,
has yet to use his magic to overcome birth control nor is he able to
make fetuses less abortable, but give him time. Angels in godlab are
working around the clock to overcome the simple inventions of the people
god created). Wieland and his wife have three daughters, all of whom
would be ostensibly blocked from accessing birth control if Paul and
Theresa's dumbass lawsuit is successful. From the St. Louis Post-Dispatch,
“I see abortion-inducing drugs as intrinsically evil, and I cannot in good conscience preach one thing to my kids and then just go with the flow on our insurance,” said Rep. Wieland, who has three daughters. “This is a moral conundrum for me. Do I just cancel the coverage and put my family at risk? I don’t believe in what the government is doing.”
Do
lie-riddled arguments like this give anyone else an instant stress
headache? Rather than pointing out all the falsehoods and laughable
moral inconsistencies in that statement, I encourage all of you to
Highlights: For Kids-style Seek N' Find them. Here's a freebie: birth
control doesn't and never has induced abortions; it just interferes with
ovulation and possibly sperm mobility. Go!
Further,
here's a neat trick that I use when I want to "exempt" myself from
certain benefits my insurance plan provides: I don't use them. I don't
have diabetes, so I don't use insulin. I've used prescription anxiety
medication in the past, but I didn't like how it made me feel, so I
don't use it. I'm uncomfortable with the idea of an IUD because I know,
like, four people who have gotten pregnant while using them, so I
haven't used my insurance benefits to get one. I don't have a dick, so I
don't use Viagra.
I don't do things all the time. I'm not doing literally dozens of things right now.
Moreover,
it always raises my hackles when allegedly religious people play pick
and choose with the tenets of their faith, dishing up a heaping plate of
sexual moralizing but skipping the entire peace/anti-poverty/compassion
hot bar like a lumpy tub of gravy. You know catholicism isn't Old Country
Buffet, folks. It's prix fixe, and the chef is super cranky
about substitutions. And if the Wielands are so very catholic that it's
an egregious moral violation for them to have the option to use birth
control, then we can expect them to sue the federal government for
exemption from paying taxes that support wars that the cult condemns
as well, right? We can expect to see the Wielands selling their
possessions and giving them to the poor, like that Jesus dude did,
right? And it should completely go without saying that the Wielands
should support any and all social safety net programs that provide for
the less fortunate, right?
I'm not holding my breath.
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