We are beginning to get reactions from Catholic and other
religious leaders who had complained about the HHS mandate for contraception
coverage concerning Obama’s compromise on the issue. Under the proposed compromise, religious
groups who object to contraception would not have to provide the coverage but
their insurer would have to reach out to the women affected to inform them that
they can obtain contraception coverage at no cost.
As we might expect, some of the most extreme opponents have
already rejected the compromise. For
example, John Garvey President, The Catholic University of America, Mary Ann
Glendon Learned Hand Professor of Law, Harvard University, Robert P. George McCormick
Professor of Jurisprudence, Princeton University, O. Carter Snead Professor of
Law, University of Notre Dame, Yuval Levin Hertog Fellow, Ethics and Public
Policy Center released a statement today which reads in part:
This so-called
“accommodation” changes nothing of moral substance and fails to remove the
assault on religious liberty and the rights of conscience which gave rise to
the controversy. It is certainly no compromise. The reason for the original bipartisan
uproar was the administration’s insistence that religious employers, be they institutions
or individuals, provide insurance that covered services they regard as gravely immoral
and unjust. Under the new rule, the government still coerces religious
institutions and individuals to purchase insurance policies that include the
very same services. It is no answer to
respond that the religious employers are not “paying” for this aspect of the
insurance coverage. For one thing, it is unrealistic to suggest that insurance
companies will not pass the costs of these additional services on to the
purchasers. More importantly, abortion-drugs, sterilizations, and
contraceptives are a necessary feature of the policy purchased by the religious
institution or believing individual. They will only be made available to those
who are insured under such policy, by virtue of the terms of the policy.
Now, if you except this logic then ANY provision of
contraception services of ANY type to ANYONE in ANY organization, religious or
not, results in religious organizations
paying for this aspect of insurance coverage since the cost of providing
these additional services would be passed along by insurance companies to its policy
holders. If that is true, the only way
avoid such so-called pass through of the cost would be for all insurance
companies, or at least those who sold policies to religious employers, to REFUSE
TO COVER CONTRACEPTION AT ALL for any policy holder regardless of religion.
Of course this whole line of reasoning is absurd for one
reason if no other. Long term the provision of free contraceptive services
drives down the cost of health insurance because it is much cheaper for insurance companies to provide women with access to contraception than to absorb the increased cost
of medical care that often results from unplanned pregnancies. The
net cost of providing women with access to free contraceptive services is either
zero or results in a reduction in premium costs assuming the savings are passed
along to policy holders.
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1 comment:
The Catholic Church is one of the largest providers of charity in the U.S. The Church wants to function as it always has, free of government intervention.
The Blunt Amendment simply uses exact text from the Respect for Rights of Conscience Act (S. 1467), so the church can function as it did before Obamacare.
So basically no one wants anything other then to function with the same "Religious Liberty" as the Church always has. Did you really think everyone who warned us about the Obamacare Mandates would just say- "Oh, OK"- we didn't really want the "Religious Liberty" our country was founded on anyway. Colleen Barry
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