Talking Points
- This issue is not
primarily about the Catholic Church; it is primarily about America, and
whether or not freedom of conscience will be respected and protected by
the law of the land. The HHS mandate affects virtually every employer
across the nation. Only a fraction of them are religious employers, and
an even smaller fraction of those are Catholic.
- Freedom
of conscience and religion are not just for religious groups. They are a
right of every American, indeed, every human being. Every employer,
every insurer, every person has a conscience, and has to be free to live
in a way consistent with it.
- There are many non-religious reasons for opposing the HHS mandate.
- What
is happening here is a clash of worldviews. The Obama administration
and other powerful forces on the other side of this battle see
contraception, abortion, and sterilization as goods to which all should
-- indeed must -- have access. Some of these forces strive to have
abortion declared as an international human right. For them, it is the
most natural conclusion in the world that these "services" should be
mandated.
- The argument
of the other side used to be freedom of choice and freedom of
conscience. Things have changed. It seems the Obama administration wants
to mire down the debate by heaping upon us detail after detail, nuance
after nuance, and difficult-to-understand accommodation
after accommodation. This we do not need. We want the mandate removed,
period.
- The religious
exemption in the HHS mandate is so narrow that countless religious
organizations -- including Priests for Life -- do not qualify for it.
The exemption requires that the entity to be employing members of its
own faith serving members of its own faith. But we do not serve others
because of their beliefs; we serve them because of our beliefs. Living
the faith means spreading the faith and having a mission to all the
world. But the administration does not make room for that fact in this
mandate. Moreover, the government should not be defining who is
religious enough to qualify as a religious entity.
- The
"accommodation" announced on February 10 was just a Presidential
speech. It did not actually implement new policy. The policy that has
been officially put in place is the same as it was before.
- The
"accommodation" announced on February 10, even if implemented, does not
change the moral or legal problems involved in the mandate. Whoever
pays for the objectionable services, and whoever speaks to the employees
about them, coerced cooperation is still in place, namely, that the
employer still has to provide an insurance plan that covers these
immoral activities. We want the freedom to provide insurance to our
employees that does not cover immoral activities.
- The
mandate speaks of a year's extension given to certain objecting groups
to "adapt" to the rule, without any provision for changing the rule. We
do not need a year or a moment to consider what we will do. The rule is
unjust. You don't adapt to injustice, you oppose it.
- Because
the FDA defines most abortion-inducing drugs as "contraceptives," this
mandate bypasses the federal restrictions on abortion funding or
coercion in matters of abortion. If this mandate is allowed to stand, it
will pave the way for coercion of abortion on demand.
- The
remedies to this unjust mandate come in various forms. First, it has
been challenged in federal court by various groups, including Priests
for Life. The Priests for Life lawsuit seeks to have the mandate
enjoined, and declared unconstitutional.
- There
is also a legislative remedy being formed in Congress. Americans should
express to their Senators and Representatives their support for laws
that protect the rights of conscience.
- Rallies
and demonstrations at federal buildings across the nation are also
being prepared. A national rally day has been declared for Friday, March
23. (See www.standupforreligiousfreedom.com).
- This
is and must be presented also as an election issue. Elections have
consequences. This whole problem is an example of trying to put the
toothpaste back into the tube. Many of those fighting this mandate also
worked hard to inform voters of the positions of the candidates in the
2008 election cycle, and warned that we could end up in a mess like we
have today. At the same time, many others fighting this mandate now were
nowhere to be found during that election cycle. This is an excellent
lesson to bring to this year's elections. Let's be active in
distributing voter education material that will help voters elect people
who respect life and conscience. (See www.PoliticalResponsibility.com.)
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