Women can decide if they want to be a mother or not during an accidental pregancy and men have no choice in becoming a father. Libs say this is equality. At least man up and say it is NOT equality but it is the best solution you can come up with.
Back to the subject at hand, if there is a meningitis outbreak that spreads because sick students don't have insurance and wait too long to see a doctor, the university will have some questions to answer, possibly in court.
Works for me, the Catholic Church is a shit organization, if this means fewer kids attend and they close down, that's a +1 right there.
Would they really? Would an employer that doesn't offer health insurance be liable if it's employees suffered through a wave of measles?
So why force anyone at all? Why not acknowledge that there are objections that could be easily anticipated and provide that coverage? Think of it as a mini UHC. You can have some government control and it's one thing that's hard to screw up.
I'm not surprised that Catholics don't like birth control (duh). But I am surprised that they care more about birth control than health care coverage for students at a Catholic University. We're not talking about an abstract moral stance here, after all. They're refusing to cover ANY health care for students because they dislike covering birth control THAT much. That's a pretty extreme reaction, if you ask me.
I'm guessing the key is that some of the medications induce abortion. That's a step beyond birth control.
Yet another example of the backfire from the Dem's pandering to feminists.
The University is saying they don't care as much about that as they do about taking a moral stance against birth control.
You need a prescription to get the pills.
You have to see a doctor to get a prescription.
You have to have money or insurance to see a doctor.
Then there is the cost of the pap smears and other test.
It's either a part of the woman's body that she has a right to remove, or it's a foreign object inside her body that she has a right to remove. You pick.
Of course it's about equality...but men don't get pregnant. The woman's choice isn't just about eventually having a baby or not, it's about having the choice to NOT be pregnant for 9 months and go through giving birth at the end of that time. Since that's a choice that doesn't apply to men, your objection doesn't really make sense.
I might not personally choose to get an abortion, but I could never decide for another woman whether or not she was ready to become a parent.
So, instead of offering services that they consider to be against the sacredness of life, they'll stop insuring students putting their health and life at risk. Great logic there Catholics. Boy has Catholicism as an institution been acting stupid lately.
Are you being deliberately obtuse? Going to a Catholic University is not the same thing as a seminary.I can't imagine why anyone would want to go to a Catholic University. Learning about Jesus all day every day will NOT get you a decent job.
Fair enough, but I would like to say that it is largely the clergy that oppose birth control, not the women in the pews every Sunday.I'm not surprised that Catholics don't like birth control (duh). But I am surprised that they care more about birth control than health care coverage for students at a Catholic University. We're not talking about an abstract moral stance here, after all. They're refusing to cover ANY health care for students because they dislike covering birth control THAT much. That's a pretty extreme reaction, if you ask me.
I think Catholic education has a very proud, and successful tradition. Mainly because it has always been primarily interested in educating students at all levels above and beyond what might otherwise be available. I went to a Catholic school as a kid for several grades, and the education was first rate for a lot less money than a non-religious private school would have been. We had a religion class and went to church once a week...but outside of that, a great education was clearly the goal.
The problem here is that education is obviously no longer the primary goal. When making a political or religious statement is the only thing Catholic institutions care about, that cheapens the value of Catholic education quite a bit.
Time will tell, but I think derisively labeling birth control a "feminist" issue is going to hurt the Republicans more than this hurts the Democrats.
Allowing women to purchase contraception as part of their health insurance coverage is not "free".Having the government provide "free" birth control for women is a feminist issue. FACT.
Allowing women to purchase contraception as part of their health insurance coverage is not "free".
edit: nor does adding "FACT" to your post alter its veracity.
No, I mean the coverage that is expected to more than pay for itself in reduced overall healthcare costs for women.You mean the coverage that Democrats are making men subsidize :hmm:
Everything the government does is some form of "tyranny." Because that's what government does. It desires nothing other than tyrannical control of every decision we make. We shouldn't have government. After all, who wants to be "forced" to do or not do anything, right? And with government off our backs, all forms of power are eradicated and man is truly free to do whatever the hell he wants for all eternity.
I'm sorry, were we talking about a health care bill?
- wolf
No, I mean the coverage that is expected to more than pay for itself in reduced overall healthcare costs for women.