The ACLU made the remarks in a January 12 hearing before an Institute of Medicine committee, which has been charged with determining what should be covered as preventive care under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. The group called birth control coverage “good medicine” and “a critical component of basic health care for women.”
“Whether the new health guidelines should mandate contraceptive coverage is not a religious question, as the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops has argued,” read the statement, which the organization posted online. “It is critical that the guidelines that the Department of Health and Human Services issues later this year recognize the importance of birth control as preventive care and put an end to politicians and faith leaders imposing their religious beliefs on women and their families.”
“Religious leaders are free to express their belief that birth control is immoral, but they cannot interfere in our personal decision making by turning their religious beliefs into federal law and taking away access to critical health care,” the statement concluded.
The US Bishops have argued that birth control is not health care at all, but a lifestyle choice, and that mandating coverage would amount to a drastic infringement of the conscience rights of employers and insurance issuers.
In November, Dierdre McQuade, Secretariat of Pro-Life Activities of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, urged against contraception and sterilization coverage, saying that, “To prevent pregnancy is not to prevent a disease.”
“Indeed, contraception and sterilization pose their own unique and serious health risks to women and adolescents,” said McQuade. In addition, she noted that birth control, while not curing any disease itself has been linked to increased risk of stroke, heart attack and blood clots, making a coverage mandate “in contradiction with itself.”
In addition, while employers are currently free to purchase and offer health coverage that excludes contraception, “They would lose this freedom of conscience under a mandate for all plans to offer contraception and sterilization coverage,” McQuade said, making President Obama’s claim that Americans can keep their current coverage unchanged “a hollow pledge.”
The USCCB’s Office of the General Counsel, in a September letter to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), also said such a coverage requirement “would pose an unprecedented threat to rights of conscience.”
An aggressive campaign for taxpayer coverage of contraception has also been launched by Planned Parenthood, which would directly benefit from a steady source of taxpayer funding of contraception.
In a radio appearance last October, Planned Parenthood president Cecile Richards said that federal officials should consider birth control coverage a good investment because preventing children from being born would reduce the government cost burden.
“Unlike some other issues of cost, birth control is one of those issues that actually saves the government money,” Richards told DC radio host Bill Press. “So an investment in covering birth control actually in the long run is a huge cost savings because women don’t have children that they weren’t planning on having and all the sort of attendant cost for unplanned pregnancy.”
The decision on preventive care coverage is expected to be announced by HHS in August.
(End of story. My comments follow.)
Okay, here's where the rubber hits the road; as long as my money is used to support any entity that funds artificial birth control I DEFINETLY have a say if that funding violates my religious beliefs. End of story.
If I find myself employed again and my health care plan contains a provision against my beliefs then I'm obligated to speak up.
If my 401K invests in health insurance companies who provide this item, I'm obligated to speak up.
If for some reason my tax dollars are used to support artificial birth control, I'm obligated to speak up.
This isn't a "personal choice" for me, it's something that has a direct impact on the salvation of my eternal soul. Silence isn't optional if I'm involved in any fashion with something that goes against the teachings of my Church.
Since B.O. & Co. are making health insurance coverage and the coverage of artificial birth control mandatory, there will be no chance of any ducking this particular issue. Any Catholic involved will either be a part of the solution or a part of the problem.
As for myself, you can bet your sweet ass they'll mandate the Feds offer this in their military health care system. Yes, I know our esteemed Command in Chief has issued an executive order that goes directly against that, just what is likely to be the outcome when these two contradictory mandates meet? I've no faith in Executive Orders, they're so easily overturned.
So yours truly has some letters to write. Now. Before it's a done deal.
This looks like the right address:
Office of Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight
Department of Health and Human Services
Room 45-G
Hubert H. Humphrey Building
200 Independence Avenue, SW
Washington, DC 20201
The ACLU shouldn't foist their neo-pagan modernist views on us.
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