« First « Previous Comments 30 - 69 of 144 Next » Last » Search these comments
Pregnancy is not a disease and not covering the pill on an insurance policy doesn't prevent anyone access to the pill. You're comparison isn't fair and is disingenuous.
Surgery, drug coverage and pregnancy planning are not always life threatening or "necessary", but access to medical care improves health and increases the likelihood of a positive outcome.
Not covering surgeries or drugs does not prevent access to them either. However, for low income people the financial hurdle can effectively prevent access to any medical care including family planning.
Anyway, the point is whether or not a religious belief can be used to restrict health care options to an employee -- who may not share the same beliefs.
I find CL's comparison to be both fair and ingenuous.
Let's put this awful law in the hands of the other side - suddenly HHS Secretary Palin decides that insurers must cover abstinence education as a benefit. Who would be crying foul then?
Oh, this is an easy question; I am surprised that you don't know the answer...
-- NO ONE --
Yes, no one would be crying foul if insurers were required to cover abstinence education. I don't think that there is anyone -- anyone sane that is -- would would not agree that abstinence is the most effective way to prevent pregnancy and STDs. The problem arises when people want to teach abstinence exclusively at the expense of sex-ed. This is a foolish position, and we currently know that abstinence only education leads to equal if not higher levels of STDs and teen pregnancy just in the kids who "accept" the pledge. This says nothing to the other kids who are denied a comprehensive sex-ed.
Teach a man to fish and all that. I'd much rather have the fish comeback, so I can catch them myself, that to be feed Long John Silvers on Donald Trump's dime.
Yeah, but Trump already owns the lake with the fish, and all the game in the King's wood.
If he is feeling generous he may let you do a little hunting and fishing, and you only have to give him 90% of your catch.
I hope the lunch your eating right now meets federal nutritional guidelines cloud. Because you don't want to make the govternment angry, now do you???
Clambo said: We won't see Romney bow to a saudi prince who's descended from savage nomadic desert tribes...
Making worthless wasteful (mal)investments in solar schemes, electric cars and windmill boondoggles is not going to be repeated.
Well, its either one or the other. We currently get almost 10% of our oil imports from the Saudis (exceeded only by Canada & Mexico, with some African nations rising quickly). I'd rather keep that money in house than send it overseas like you want to do.
"We won't see Romney bow to a saudi prince who's descended from savage nomadic desert tribes..."
No, Romney just thinks that this guy, is a "prophet, seer, and revelator" of god's will on earth. i.e. - if this guy tells Romney to take a second wife, Romney does it. In fact if this guy tells Romney, "God wants me to marry your wife." Romney starts shopping for wedding gifts.
Oh, yeah... and Romney thinks that his underpants have magical powers.
Anyway, the point is whether or not a religious belief can be used to restrict health care options to an employee -- who may not share the same beliefs.
Pregnancy is not a disease. Pregnancy is the direct result of a decision to have sex not something you get from sitting on a dirty toilet or eating a rotten cheeseburger or the result of falling off a cliff. Not paying for insurance that covers the pill or the "morning after abortion inducing pill" is not restricting healthcare options. Hell, you can buy the morning after pill from a freaking vending machine now.
http://www.americablog.com/2012/02/how-mormons-and-scalia-prove-that-obama.html
"In United States v. Lee, the Supreme Court found that there was nothing unconstitutional in requiring an Amish employer to withhold and pay Social Security taxes for his workers even though “the Amish faith prohibited participation in governmental support programs.â€
Here’s how they put it:
“When followers of a particular sect enter into commercial activity as a matter of choice, the limits they accept on their own conduct as a matter of conscience and faith are not to be superimposed on the statutory schemes that are binding on others in that activity. Granting an exemption from social security taxes to an employer operates to impose the employer’s religious faith on the employees.â€
Pregnancy is not a disease.
Right, I thought we covered this. Neither is a broken bone, sprained ankle or tape worms, but they are all health issues.
Pregnancy is the direct result of a decision to have sex not something you get from sitting on a dirty toilet or eating a rotten cheeseburger or the result of falling off a cliff.
If it abstinence only education programs have taught us anything it is that people have sex. Regardless of whether or not you feel that your god(s) don't want them to. You might not want to admit it but we are born addicted to sex. It is a basic human drive much stronger than people want to admit. It is entirely unrealistic to expect people to not engage in sexual activity, and that without proper precautions, pregnancy is a result.
Not paying for insurance that covers the pill or the "morning after abortion inducing pill" is not restricting healthcare options.
Yes, it is. Birth control is a health care option, and while it may be difficult for those in an ivory tower to understand, the price of the pill will effect the health care choices of poor people.
Hell, you can buy the morning after pill from a freaking vending machine now.
So you are suggesting the solution to expensive birth control like the pill is to provide cheap abortion pills in vending machines?
Yes, yes... it is funny how people so opposed to abortion don't actually want to do anything to prevent the unplanned pregnancies that will result in abortions.
Newt in 2012, with the option to vote for Mitt Romney.
Anything but Obama, frankly will do.. even Ron Paul.
If it abstinence only education programs have taught us anything it is that people have sex. Regardless of whether or not you feel that your god(s) don't want them to. You might not want to admit it but we are born addicted to sex. It is a basic human drive much stronger than people want to admit. It is entirely unrealistic to expect people to not engage in sexual activity, and that without proper precautions, pregnancy is a result.
A kick in the nuts usually will fix this natural attraction or addiction to sex. And yes it becomes a male health issue.
A kick in the nuts usually will fix this natural attraction or addiction to sex. And yes it becomes a male health issue.
While it might fix the "natural" attraction of an individual it does not fix the addiction to sex. That overwhelming drive just gets redirected...
Frankly, the whole thing smacks of Clinton-era cries, where despite getting all they wanted, the Right despised him.
Perhaps this is why there is a lack of specificity to the responses here for AIJ. It's hard to rail against your own policies, hopes and dreams.
Remember the SNL episode where Chris Farley is on a Japanese game show?
I don't see why anyone should have a problem with allowing a conscience exemption.
Because then we would be allowing a religious institution to, on their own free will, enter the commercial sector, and then impose their faith on their employees.
Perhaps you missed CLs post concerning how the supreme court has ruled on this.
CL says
“When followers of a particular sect enter into commercial activity as a matter of choice, the limits they accept on their own conduct as a matter of conscience and faith are not to be superimposed on the statutory schemes that are binding on others in that activity. Granting an exemption from social security taxes to an employer operates to impose the employer’s religious faith on the employees.â€
The constitution says freedom OF religion, not freedom FROM religion.
In that context "of" and "from" are the same. You can not have freedom of religion without being free from the dictates of other religions.
By your reasoning it would be OK for an islamic mosque to purchase a business and then require all employees to pray to allah 5 times a day. The employees are "free" to practice any religion they want, but on company time they are not free from the dictates of their islamic employers.
Birth control pills may be purchased with a prescription at a drugstore or clinic. They cost about $15–$50 a month.
Planned Parenthood works to make health care accessible and affordable. Some health centers are able to charge according to income. Most accept health insurance. If you qualify, Medicaid or other state programs may lower your health care costs.
Hmmm... you are making a good argument for national single payer heath coverage for all. If the government covered all health care -- as every other industrialized country does -- then religious employers would never have to worry about any conflicts if interest when providing health coverage.
you are making a good argument for national single payer heath coverage for all. If the government covered all health care
What does "Single Payer" even mean? It's not National healthcare. We need a not for profit, federal controlled, from top to bottom Health Care. Even if it means we paid considerably more in taxes to pay for it. A system where your publicly traded 401K sweet hearts can't participate in. The hospitals would be Government owned, the pupils would be Government trained(a perk for paying the higher taxes) Doctors would be educated on the governments dime, and then have to work in the Federal system for a set amount of years before they can practice in the Private practice. Which there would still and always be a private healthcare, as people that have money are NUTZ and think that unless they pay ungodly thousands for a nose bleed they are somehow getting ripped off or the medical care is inferior somehow.
Like for some stupid reason, India's health care we would call ridiculously inadequate, but yet we fawn all over the Indian Doctors, and pay them more than everyone else, when they come to practice in this country, like they are somehow smarter than everyone else.
We're so full of SHIT I don't even know where to begin sometimes.
I'm not don't subscribe to either party, but my vote would be Ron Paul.
Fiscal policy in this country is the real problem we face, and he has always resisted the road this nation has gone down financially.
Sadly, nothing is going to change no matter who is elected.
George Bush and Barack Obama are both guilty of spending vast amounts of money on wars and bailouts. I voted for Obama, and I'm frankly disappointed that he has continued the fiscal nonsense that had gone on for years before him.
No doubt Mitt Romney will do the same if he's elected.
Nothing will change in this country until people are pushed to the brink and violent revolution occurs.
It's time we stop blaming the 1% or the 99% for our troubles, and realize that the government is the problem.
It's time we stop blaming the 1% or the 99% for our troubles, and realize that the government is the problem.
But is is the 1% who finances the campaigns, gets elected to office, and pays for all the lobbying. If government is doing something that adversely effects the 99% you can be sure that they were directed to do it by the 1%.
Nothing will change in this country until people are pushed to the brink and violent revolution occurs.
I fear that you may be correct.
1%
If we don't stop with this bogus boogie man the evil "1%" and replace it with Names and facts, then the corruption and fraud will continue.
The problem is not the equality of income, it's the mass conflict of interest going unchallenged on so many corporate and government levels.
I can't for the life of me see how taxing these charlatans more will curb their livelihood, they'll just have to steal more to make up the difference.
I agree with the statements about corruption and lobbying. Our society, though, is confusing the 1% with the .00001%.
I fear that class warfare is brewing, when the real problem is that the government has allowed itself to turn into a fascist regime that works for corporations and not the people, rich or poor.
I agree with the statements about corruption and lobbying. Our society, though, is confusing the 1% with the .00001%.
Yes, I agree that it is not so much the 1% as it is the 0.5% or perhaps the 0.01% that really run things, but 0.00001% is like 30 people and I don't think that all power is concentrated so much. Even in a monarchy the empowered aristocracy is larger than 0.00001%.
However, the entire 1% have been the real benefactors of how things have been run.
I fear that class warfare is brewing, when the real problem is that the government has allowed itself to turn into a fascist regime that works for corporations and not the people, rich or poor.
Class warfare has been going on for a long time, and the bottom 99% have been loosing. One just needs to look at the economic divide over the past 40 years to see the results of the war.
I don't think the government is yet "fascist", but we are well on our way to getting there. It is however a regime that works for corporations. Regardless of what Mitt may think corporations are not people. The people behind the curtain that we are being asked to ignore is the 0.5% to 0.01% -- or perhaps if you are correct they are the 0.00001% -- and they are running things.
However, the entire 1% have been the real benefactors of how things have been run.
Got any names and just how they benefited?
I bet you are confusing classic Anti trust laws, being committed by living breathing human beings, with a name going unchallenged. Confusing that with this big massive rich man's club that consist of everyone that has over a million or two in the bank, and meets once a week to concoct ways to Fuck the little guy.
By your reasoning it would be OK for an islamic mosque to purchase a business and then require all employees to pray to allah 5 times a day. The employees are "free" to practice any religion they want, but on company time they are not free from the dictates of their islamic employers.
I see where you are going with this and I agree that simply buying a business and forcing Sharia on someone would be really wrong. A church opening a school with religious instruction (in addition to secular subjects) is a far different matter, don't you think? Besides, in this instance they aren't forcing someone to do something - they are simply not funding something. This is very different than the scenario you propose. In this case they are not forbidding anything - they just don't want to pay for it because it is against their teaching. The government is forcing them to DO something not the other way around.
Hmmm... you are making a good argument for national single payer heath coverage for all. If the government covered all health care -- as every other industrialized country does -- then religious employers would never have to worry about any conflicts if interest when providing health coverage.
Single payer has the same problem that the current law has - the federal government is inserted into your personal life. Isn't this the complaint of the leftwing nutjobs all of the time - that the religious nutjobs are wanting to interfere with personal choices? GUESS WHAT! This is what the government is doing to the religious institutions - exactly what they decry.
If there were single-payer catastrophic coverage I could probably go along with it. No one should go bankrupt because they get seriously ill or injured. I have serious problems with yielding micromanagement of ANYTHING to the federal government - be it education or healthcare.
Here's my rant:
I'm part of the 1%, and I don't have a lobbyist. I pay a lot of taxes each year. From what I can see, I don't have much to thank the government for. They take my tax dollars and spend it on wars and bailing out even richer people than myself, and then they bail out homeowners that made bad bets on their house flipping game.
On top of that, people hate me for being one of the "greedy" 1% jerks that is making this country horrible. And it's all my fault because I worked 80 hours a week for years to build a business and provide a financial safety net for myself and my family, while the 99% watched football games and went out drinking with their buddies and sat on the beach every weekend.
But because I've been so "lucky" to give all that up to make money, I'm vilified by the 99%, and I "owe" them more of my money.
(Sigh)
On top of that, people hate me for being one of the "greedy" 1% jerks that is making this country horrible. And it's all my fault because I worked 80 hours a week for years to build a business and provide a financial safety net for myself and my family, while the 99% watched football games and went out drinking with their buddies and sat on the beach every weekend.
And there's supposed to be absolutely not a God damn thing wrong with none of that. Kudos to you for all of your hard work, and God bless the folks willing to ride in the back of the landscape truck, instead of driving the truck to the job. The problem is there are real people making real conscious decisions to draw lines in the sand, and are controlling business with the help of our government to give control of whole industries and verticals to a relative few. And they all want you to take the wrap, while they fuck the folks at the ball game on Sunday, in back room deals to screw them over even harder come Monday morning.
If I had to pick names to blame, I would certainly look at this list first.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_current_United_States_Senators
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_members_of_the_United_States_Congress_by_longevity_of_service
It's nice to know that there are people like you out there that get it. Thank you. I wish we had more people in this country such as yourself. One day the revolution will come. One day decent hard working people, no matter what % they're in, will come together to stop the oppression of our current political machine.
It's nice to know that there are people like you out there that get it. Thank you. I wish we had more people in this country such as yourself. One day the revolution will come. One day decent hard working people, no matter what % they're in, will come together to stop the oppression of our current political machine.
It's not people like you that are the problem. It's the top 0.1% or 0.01% that have enough money to buy politicians (e.g. the Koch brothers).
Yes that is true. It seems we as people are only blaming the .01%, and no one is noting that the politicians are to blame. They should resist temptation and vow to do what is good for the people they serve, rather than their pockets. I wish we were focused solely on occupying the white house, and not just wall street.
I'm part of the 1%
Forgive me if I am a bit skeptical, but often "successful" persons overestimate what % they are in, and how government/tax reforms would effect them.
Joe the plumber is a great example of this.
I pay a lot of taxes each year.
Well, clearly you don't pay Romney's tax rate.
On top of that, people hate me for being one of the "greedy" 1% jerks that is making this country horrible...
...But because I've been so "lucky" to give all that up to make money, I'm vilified by the 99%, and I "owe" them more of my money.
The 99% does not "hate" -- or you for that matter -- the 1%, they just want to be given the same level of opportunity that past generations has been given. Social mobility and wealth distribution over the past 40 years clearly shows that opportunity is a thing of the past.
If you are paying so much in taxes it is likely that you are doing productive work. Romney gets his taxes low through rent seeking unproductive activities (numerous other threads discuss this). Any tax reforms are unlikely to affect your income.
Also, people tend to vastly underestimate the level of luck that was required to achieve their financial success. Many people will work 80/hrs a week and do all the "right" things, but success never "clicks" for them.
Yes that is true. It seems we as people are only blaming the .01%, and no one is noting that the politicians are to blame. They should resist temptation and vow to do what is good for the people they serve, rather than their pockets. I wish we were focused solely on occupying the white house, and not just wall street.
Well... the politicians themselves are more often than not in the 0.01%.
But, they are doing what is good for the people they serve. They serve the people who finance their campaigns, pay for SuperPacs and give them jobs after they leave office.
What we need is publicly financed campaigns to get the special interests out of politics.
That's fine to be skeptical. No worries. What any of us makes doesn't really matter in the overall discussion. I'm technically in the 1%, albeit the bottom.
But who cares. Big deal. My wife still gets mad at me over dumb stuff and I still have to take out the trash once a week.
From what I see in the Occupy movement, people are blaming "rich" people, or people that have more than them. If they want more opportunities, then they need to start protesting solely in front of the White House, because Obama and the presidents before him are slowly eroding the purchasing power of our dollars to the point that one day we will all be in the poor house.
What we need is publicly financed campaigns to get the special interests out of politics.
I agree. You're right on.
From what I see in the Occupy movement, people are blaming "rich" people, or people that have more than them. If they want more opportunities, then they need to start protesting solely in front of the White House, because Obama and the presidents before him are slowly eroding the purchasing power of our dollars to the point that one day we will all be in the poor house.
Well... I agree that not all "rich" people, or even all of the 0.01% are too blame, but the "rich" are the ones who have been behind the policy changes for the 40 year that got us to where we are today.
Sure, the politicians should be held to task, but should not also their masters?
I believe that they are protesting on Wall Street as a message that they understand who the politicians bosses are.
Why solely the White House? There should be protests at every senator and congressman's office. Unfortunately the occupy movement does not have the manpower to protest everywhere they should be.
Pregnancy is not a disease
I've been thinking about this. Since it is preventable and a decision (usually), then why even have it be covered under insurance at all? You chose to have children. Why should the childless be forced to pay higher premiums to cover your decisions?
And it could be a moral decision--like there are too many F%$^*(*^ people already, consuming too many resources.
In other words, a decision to breed is no different than a decision NOT to.
I'm in full agreement with you. I just hope the rest of the nation is aware of who's to blame.
Interesting view on why they're protesting at Wall Street. I never looked at it like that!
The White House to me is the top of the government food chain, so in protesting the government we should be at the top. I would rather see us protesting the government more, because the government works for all of us, and wall street does not. Wall street can be greedy and try to buy politicians, but ultimately it is the decision by the government to allow itself to be bought that is the problem. Our politicians should have more integrity, and we as people should be demanding it.
It's also just too bad that people end up taking sides, and blaming either Republicans or Democrats.
I want politicians to have integrity and stand behind their word. I want them to start doing their job of serving the masses to create a great place for human beings to exist and thrive. Time will tell!
Good discussion!
Unfortunately, even if one fights the machine, he (or she) is instantly pilloried by the right as antagonistic to business, campaign funding dries up, the media mocks them as loony, etc.
Not to mention all the hyper-power players who will beat any hint of upsetting the apple cart out of you.
And even if you do get through that gauntlet, integrity intact, you still have the prize of a thankless, stupid electorate waiting for you.
@gregfielding
Thank you for your input. I am back in California so I am able to talk to people directly now...
I have actually voted Republican in the past, but not in the last decade...I may never again...
@eightball
>Any answer will have the person drawn and quartered in this forum. You and a slew of others are just waiting to pounce.
Many may pounce but I will at least listen (read) and so will a number of others, if a good argument is made.
I have actually voted Republican in the past, but not in the last decade...I may never again...
Yeah, I am in the same boat.
« First « Previous Comments 30 - 69 of 144 Next » Last » Search these comments
How will the candidate of your choice be an improvement over Obama? What policies will be implemented...? Please be specific. I have my criticisms of Obama , incidentally, but I want to know who is better and why.
#politics