Notre Dame law professor Richard Garnett
explains in the USA Today that the Department of
Health and Human Service’s proposed rule requiring all new
insurance plans to include coverage for contraceptives would damage
religious liberty:
Of course, it is not always clear how a diverse political
community should respect and protect religious liberty, our “first
freedom.” We Americans have long agreed that religious freedom
matters, but we don’t always agree about what it means.
…
Even so, some things are clear: Governments should neither
require nor penalize religious belief, and they should not meddle
in religious disputes or presume to resolve religious questions.
Such matters are outside the competence and authority of secular
officials.
In addition, governments hoping to make good on Madison’s
promise will sometimes accommodate religious believers and groups
by exempting them from rules and requirements. This sounds like
special treatment for religion, and indeed it is. Our country’s
founders believed that such compromises are sometimes necessary and
justified, even when the rules in question are popular or seem
sensible, because religious freedom is both fundamental and
vulnerable.
It is true that the administration’s proposed
mandate includes an
exemption for some religious employers, but it is so
stingy as to be nearly meaningless. It does nothing for individuals
or insurers, and it applies only to employers whose purpose is “the
inculcation of religious values” and that hire and serve primarily
those of the same religious faith. The vast majority of religious
educational, social-welfare and health care organizations — not to
mention the ministry of Jesus on earth — do not fit this crabbed
definition.
The proposed exemption covers only inward-looking, members-only,
religious-instruction organizations while excluding those that
respond to the call to feed the hungry, care for the sick, house
the homeless and share the good news with strangers. Religiously
affiliated hospitals, charities and universities that serve people
of other religions would be vulnerable. The exemption assumes that
religion is only about belief and values, not service, sacrifice
and engagement. It purports to accommodate religious believers, but
it actually would confine their belief.
David W| 11.28.11 @ 3:32PM
my question is why should I be paying for someone else's birth control? Shouldn't that be part of their "choice" when engaging in "personal intimacy", and not force me to pay for it?