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Republican warriors against women stage
group hissy fit over birth conrol reform

Rep. Mike Kelly

Rep. Mike Kelly, R-Pa.

“I know in your mind, you can think of the times America was attacked. One is Dec. 7; that’s Pearl Harbor Day. The other is Sept. 11, and that’s the day the terrorists attacked. I want you to remember Aug. 1, 2012, the attack on our religious freedom. That is a day that will live in infamy, along with those other dates.”

“Today is the day religious freedom died in America.”

—Rep. Mike Kelly, R-Pa., during a Capitol Hill presss conference
in which he and several conservative Republicans
delivered tirades against a health care reform provision
taking effect today that requires insurers to cover
birth control for women, without co-pay or other charges.

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All that because insurance coverage for birth control at no additional charge becomes available today to students and employees at some religion-affiliated institutions that disapprove of birth control. Mind you, this Affordable Care Act reform doesn’t require those institutions to offer or pay for the insurance; it’s available directly to those who need or want it.

The reform isn’t just about contraception. The news story on this explains what else is included.

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In addition to the contraception mandate, health insurance plans must now cover additional screenings and services for women without passing on any of the cost to the patient.

“These include services that are essential to helping women stay healthy — such as domestic violence screening, FDA-approved contraception, breastfeeding support and supplies, gestational diabetes screening, HPV testing, sexually transmitted infection counseling, and HIV screening,” Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) wrote in a USA Today op-ed published Tuesday.

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Not that it will matter to Kelly and his fellow religious conservatives, but birth control isn’t just about freeing the wanton and wicked to misbehave in the way their fellow Republicans, Sens. David Vitter and John Ensign, and Gov. Mark Sanford, did, free of stork-drawn consequences.

Some women are told by their doctor they mustn’t become pregnant. Some learn that if they do become pregnant it could come down to a choice of having an abortion or losing their own life and maybe the baby’s as well.

It’s also true that birth control pills are prescribed for valid medical reasons that have nothing to do with preventing pregnancy.

But even in situations where women want birth control so they can engage in activities that could result in an unwanted pregnancy, Kelly and his ilk should pull up their big-boy breeches and let it be, thinking of birth control as abortion prevention.

We say that because House Republicans have wasted the past year and a half doing little legislatively besides two perverse things. One was holding various segments of the population hostage to ensure the richest Americans keep their Bush tax cuts. The other was passing some 35 bills intended to make abortion virtually impossible to obtain, even in cases of rape, incest and to save the woman’s life — all those bills guaranteed to go nowhere in the Senate.

Presumably, Kelly et al are even more vehemently opposed to abortion than they are to all women having access to affordable birth control. Presumably, there is some limit to their ignorance and sense of entitlement to impose their religious beliefs on everyone else.

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13 Comments

  1. So why exactly should the government determine that birth control must be free? Now that the Court has ruled ACA constitutional, I guess government gets to define minimum coverage, but why can’t people who use birth control pay for it?

    1. Jolly Roger says:

      Why can’t people who use gasoline pay the true cost of the Iraqi War? Believe me, you would cry like a scalded baby when you went to the pump next time.

      What titans of deep thinking like yourself never seem to realize is that we all ALL pay less by providing birth control. You genius types want every woman pregnant, but-again-you scream like scalded babies when we talk about paying for things like educating them.

    2. S.W. Anderson says:

      H.R., if you had read my post you wouldn’t have asked this question. Please do me the courtesy of reading posts before commenting.

  2. Do you remember a time when people didn’t have sex? Pepperidge Farm remembers.

  3. Dave Dubya says:

    “That is a day that will live in infamy, along with those other dates.”

    This goes unquestioned by our Republican visitor, for some reason. It must appear reasonable to him. The real “outrage” is goverrnment mandated “free birth control”, and as every Real American knows, that rates up there with Pearl Harbor and 9-11.

    Of course the birth contol is not “free”, but covered by insurance, as all medicines and treatments for heath issues should be.

  4. Tom Harper says:

    “House Republicans have wasted the past year and a half doing little legislatively besides two perverse things. One was holding various segments of the population hostage to ensure the richest Americans keep their Bush tax cuts. The other was passing some 35 bills intended to make abortion virtually impossible to obtain…”

    Now that is just patently unfair. House Republicans have TOO been productive. They’ve held over sixty votes on naming and/or renaming various post offices. And as we speak, they’re coming to grips with that crucial issue that every American is losing sleep over: making English the official language.

  5. S.W. Anderson says:

    J.R., H.R. might be thinking an aspirin held between the knees would be even cheaper. If so, he wouldn’t be the first on his side of the political divide to promote that approach.

    Randal, you seem to be thinking about rolls of a type Pepperidge Farms doesn’t sell.

    Dave, it appears you actually read the post. At least your comment makes clear you know what you’re talking about. Thanks. ;)

    Tom, ¡No me digas? ¿Nunca se pregunta cesar?

  6. Demeur says:

    I guess they want to go back to a time when the air was clean and sex was dirty.

    Hey wait a minute back then the air was dirty and sex was fun.

    1. S.W. Anderson says:

      I think in some dark corner of their minds they long for the good old days when many men kept their women barefoot, pregnant and in the kitchen. The mistresses some of them kept were another matter, of course.

  7. May I just say I love the hell out of your title for this piece? ;) It’s so true which makes it all the more sadder. (if sadder is a word)

  8. My morning smile.
    And I like the copy and paste password Spam prevention.

  9. S.W. Anderson says:

    Dusty, thanks to Kelly and his colleagues the headline came naturally..

    Blog Fodder, always glad to generate a smile. I hope the new anti-spam approach keeps working as well as it has worked the first few days. The blog was being inundated regularly and requiring more time to deal with it.

  10. Is that spamanator a plug-in? I really like it as well.