women's rights and
let me remind you, she is a woman.
she states in the article referenced below that over 2 million women who do not have health insurance do NOT HAVE ACCESS to contraception would have such access with passage of the HCR bill under consideration.
In HER opinion this is a good thing.. I don't know any woman alive who would not prefer to use contraception to avoid a pregnancy to having to get an abortion. It seems to me Ms. Laser makes a very good point. If your objective is to help women, making contraception available to over 2 million more women is eminently worthwhile.
If you have an objection with that position I suggest you convince Ms. Laser that she is wrong ....and insensitive to women's medical concerns.
NOw, the fact that some pharmacists refuse to fill prescriptions for contraceptives is NOT an argumant against this HCR bill as obviously it is a small fraction that are doing this. It is not impossible to get these prescriptions filled and many insurance plans make it possible to get your prescriptions filled through the mail.
For my part I think we should keep religion out of government and legislation. I hope that we can reassert the principle of separation of church and state. But, killing HCR with it's provision of the means of contraception to millions of women who currently do not have such access is not accomplishing anything positive.
There are those who are out to sabotage HCR any way they can. These people will use any issue available to them in a cynical tactic to kill HCR. I think many well meaning people are being fooled by these machinations. Republicans will use any tactic they can no matter how cynical to undermine progress and protect corporate profits. Republicans (some call themselves moderate-Democrats) are trying to get a provision to deny abortions to women into the bill only to kill HCR. I hope amendments to restrict access to abortions in the end are stricken from the final bill.
http://www.christianpost.com/article/20090907/health-care-bill-would-reduce-abortion-says-progressive-think-tank/index.htmlOver two million women who are in need of access to contraception but are not insured or covered by Medicaid would receive this coverage through the health care bill, highlighted Rachel Laser, culture program director at Third Way.She also noted how many uninsured women might decide to keep their baby if they had health coverage that would ease the cost of pregnancy and early childhood.
Fifty-seven percent of abortions, Laser pointed out, are preformed on women who live at or below 200 percent of the poverty line.“Prevention and support are keys to reducing abortions,” wrote Laser in a column posted in The Huffington Post. “Thus, the overall effect of this reform package, with increased prevention and support services, will likely be to reduce abortions.”
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