2) No one is being forced to take
contraception against their beliefs.
Not exact matches
CNN: Catholics clergymen come out swinging
against HHS regulation Catholics around the country got an earful on Sunday from the pulpit over a new health insurance policy by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services that forces employers to cover
contraception and abortion as part of preventative care regardless of religious
beliefs.
If you approve of planes flying into buildings, dressing women in cloth bags, denying stem cell research, discrimination
against women, gays and anyone with alternate
beliefs, denying
contraception to people who can't afford families, picketing soldiers funerals, etc, etc, then keep your fuzzy mindset about good and evil.
My guess is that it will be a difficult case to argue
against the impact of the contraceptive coverage rule as anything but an «incidental effect» given it targets a market and there's no evidence that the rule is over or under inclusively fashioned as a pretext to target the religious
beliefs of those opposed to
contraception.
If the churches do not want to offer
contraception because it is
against their
beliefs, that is their right.
Just as a Christian Science organization would have to provide insurance coverage for real medication, even though it goes
against their
beliefs, so are the Catholics now having to do so with
contraception coverage.
If their
beliefs are
against contraception then providing them for their employees is forcing them to go
against their
beliefs, it's simple.
No, but they are forcing Catholic sponsored organizations to purchase
contraception products which are explicitly
against their moral
beliefs.
(UPDATED) 5 - 4 decision on healthcare rules that the government can not require faith - based organizations to provide
contraception against their owners» religious
beliefs.
Anyone who thinks that Catholicism, much less the Vatican is
against «Dogma» or approves of abortion,
contraception, or divorce, clearly displays their ignorance of Catholic
belief.
Hobby Lobby, a chain of arts and crafts stores, said requiring the company to provide coverage for some types of
contraception was
against their religious
beliefs.