Entry tags:
The Supremes
Dear SCOTUS,
Let me see if I have this right: A corporation that has a small number of shareholders, like a family, is a "person", and a corporate "person" can reject at least one legally-required expenditures it objects to on religious or moral grounds, and thus Hobby Lobby doesn't have to follow Obamacare's requirement to fund contraception. Got it.
A corporation, while maybe a "person", is clearly no more of a "person" than an actual, real live person, like me. There are legally-required expenditures that apply to me that I object to on religious or moral grounds too. So, dear SCOTUS, could you please clarify which of those I can opt out of? If Obamacare or contraception is somehow unique, please specify how. If you say that I can't opt out, why not? Surely you're not saying that, for example, Hobby Lobby has more rights as a person than I do?
(Quite aside from how you feel about any particular law, while it's a law it should apply equally -- or there should be a clear reason that cases aren't equivalent.)
Let me see if I have this right: A corporation that has a small number of shareholders, like a family, is a "person", and a corporate "person" can reject at least one legally-required expenditures it objects to on religious or moral grounds, and thus Hobby Lobby doesn't have to follow Obamacare's requirement to fund contraception. Got it.
A corporation, while maybe a "person", is clearly no more of a "person" than an actual, real live person, like me. There are legally-required expenditures that apply to me that I object to on religious or moral grounds too. So, dear SCOTUS, could you please clarify which of those I can opt out of? If Obamacare or contraception is somehow unique, please specify how. If you say that I can't opt out, why not? Surely you're not saying that, for example, Hobby Lobby has more rights as a person than I do?
(Quite aside from how you feel about any particular law, while it's a law it should apply equally -- or there should be a clear reason that cases aren't equivalent.)

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(The belief that contraception is a sin, that's certainly a thing too, and the Court also issued several decisions relating to Catholic business owners objecting to contraception in general. But the Hobby Lobby owners were specifically objecting to certain methods, while okaying others, so they're not in a position to lean on that belief.
And not saying this is legally material in itself but I find it fairly remarkable: the "mini-Pill" is okay, "Plan B" is not; both are levonorgestrel, though the doses and product labeling differ. My recollection, actually, is that the sources that suggested that either would prevent implantation would suggest it of both of them. If one is to sail past factual questions in a religious belief, is it now a religious belief that Plan B can prevent implantation and hormonal contraception can't?)
no subject
I can't debate their beliefs for them, and do not wish to. Smart, stupid, vapid: who knows?
no subject
no subject