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-   -   *shaking head* (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=30241)

Beest 07-01-2014 12:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DanaC (Post 903411)
I don;t see how it is a complicated notion that the health insurance given to employees becomes their property - and it should be up to them how they use it.

My employer doesn't have to right to tell me how to spend what it pays me.

As henry quirk says the employer contracts with the insurance company the employee is just a covered party.

The insurance isn't provided to the employee at no cost, the employer can then take the cost of the insurance out of the employees pay check ( or some proportion). The employee cannot just refuse the insurance either, unless they can prove alternate coverage. (That's how it works for me).
So yes, the employer is spending the employees pay.

At my corporation employees earning over $150K gross are responsible for 100% of the $22K cost of insurance. and it's crappy insurance for that money.
Theres sliding scale below that.
The big investor that owns this corporation and many others sets this as standard across all his companies.

"Insurance" is a misnomer anyway but I don't know a better word, "shell game" might be it. On our insurance you can still easily be out of pocket for thousands for day to day occurences, it just limits it instead of climbing into the tens of thousands in a dire circumstance.

glatt 07-01-2014 12:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by infinite monkey (Post 903422)
Viagra is for fixing something that's broken and vasectomies are for breaking something that works.

Which is it?

It's both. Viagra is for fixing something that's broken and vasectomies are birth control. If female birth control isn't covered, then it's hypocritical to cover male birth control. But Viagra shouldn't come into it at all unless you want to mock men with health problems.

Big Sarge 07-01-2014 01:05 PM

So let me see, we've had a Supreme Court ruling that upheld that the government could not force you to go against your political beliefs with your privately owned business. Isn't this part of the intent of the Bill of Rights?

If the employees aren't happy with their health care coverage, why don't they work some place else?

infinite monkey 07-01-2014 01:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by glatt (Post 903408)
Viagra is for having sex and IUDs are for having sex, so they are the same.

Viagra is for fixing something that's broken, and IUDs are for breaking something that works. They are opposites.

Which is it?

Quote:

Originally Posted by infinite monkey (Post 903422)
What's opposite is covering Viagra AND vasectomies. Whatever the male wants, is good with them.

In other words: Viagra is for having sex and vasectomies are for having sex (without those pesky pregnancies.)

Viagra is for fixing something that's broken and vasectomies are for breaking something that works.

Which is it?

Quote:

Originally Posted by glatt (Post 903424)
It's both. Viagra is for fixing something that's broken and vasectomies are birth control. If female birth control isn't covered, then it's hypocritical to cover male birth control. But Viagra shouldn't come into it at all unless you want to mock men with health problems.

I'll tell you what, I won't mock men who may have health problems if you won't mock women who may also have health problems that would make pregnancy a risk.

Big Sarge 07-01-2014 02:32 PM

Why should this have anything to do with "mocking health issues"? This is simply the right of privately owned businesses to provide benefit packages of their selection. If you don't like it, work someplace else or pay out of your pocket. I don't believe any of their employees are indentured servants and not free to change employment. BTW:

The Green family has no moral objection to the use of 16 of 20 preventive contraceptives required in the mandate, and Hobby Lobby will continue its longstanding practice of covering these preventive contraceptives for its employees. However, the Green family cannot provide or pay for four potentially life-threatening drugs and devices. These drugs include Plan B and Ella, the so-called morning-after pill and the week-after pill. Covering these drugs and devices would violate their deeply held religious belief that life begins at the moment of conception, when an egg is fertilized.

Gravdigr 07-01-2014 03:38 PM

Keep on dividing, people, keep on dividing...

Undertoad 07-01-2014 05:43 PM

Quote:

These drugs include Plan B and Ella, the so-called morning-after pill and the week-after pill. Covering these drugs and devices would violate their deeply held religious belief that life begins at the moment of conception, when an egg is fertilized.
I don't know about Ella, but on Plan B: this is all due to an anti-scientific misunderstanding of how the drug works.

It works by preventing ovulation.

Somehow, and good fuckin' lord I have no idea how this might happen, but somehow a bunch of miserable fucking dickheads got it into their tiny, uneducated minds, that Plan B prevents implantation of a fertilized egg.

No. Plan B works exactly like every other birth control drug. Don't believe me, you can look it up. And so those miserable, tiny, anti-scientific, uneducated pricks

ARE

ACTUALLY

CAUSING

MORE

ABORTIONS

BY

PROTESTING

PLAN B.

Big Sarge 07-01-2014 06:56 PM

Well why did this have to go to the Supreme Court?? The women could have simply decided not to get pregnant.

tw 07-01-2014 11:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by henry quirk (Post 903412)
"The issue boils down to this simple question. Can an employer impose his religious beleifs on employees."

I disagree.

The issue boils down to: can employees force an employer to provide a benefit said employer finds morally repugnant?

Repugnant is an emotion. Emotions have no standing in the court. If this was about an emotion, it would have been never been heard.

Your sentence is missing fundamental underlying word that is the basis of their suit. It is completely about their religious beliefs. Their standards for what is socially acceptable (along with other irrelevant emotions such as ego) were never discussed in this case, were never considered, and was completely irrelevant to the court and to all parties. In fact, one who is emotional is often considered irresponsible or negligent. And so the word repugnant is never discussed by anyone but Henry Quick.

This case is 100% about their religious beliefs. To ignore the religion behind it is hypocrisy. Court has said an employeer can impose his religious beliefs on his employees. Only posts relevent to this court decision must include the word religion. Some will try to justify that decision by ignoring the entire basis of this case - which is a religious belief. Repugnant is how one would avoid admitting the problem with this decision. The court says one can impose their religious beliefs on employees. Impossible to be honest and deny this is about religious beliefs.

tw 07-01-2014 11:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Big Sarge (Post 903436)
Why should this have anything to do with "mocking health issues"? This is simply the right of privately owned businesses to provide benefit packages of their selection.

The entire case is not about choice in general as you claim. It is completely about the right of privately owned businesses to impose their religious beliefs on employees benefits. Posting without mentioning the only issue - religion - is beyond absurd.

Nobody said anything about denying social security contributions, restricting safety equipment, providing employee parking, or other benefits based on the employers emotions or whims. Nobody suggested benefits denied due to an employee's race, gender, height, age, or citizenship status. Only discussed is whether they can deny benefits based on the owner's religious beliefs. Not based in anything else. Only based on the owners religious beliefs. Youf post is dishonest if it does not discuss prime issue of this entire case - religion.

How to inspire hatred and dissention? How to worship satan? Let anyone impose their religion on anyone else. Nobody expects a Spanish Inquisition.

sexobon 07-02-2014 12:00 AM

But if this employer claims that imposing their religious beliefs via employee benefits is their HOBBY, they may have found a loophole. :D

Big Sarge 07-02-2014 02:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sexobon (Post 903504)
But if this employer claims that imposing their religious beliefs via employee benefits is their HOBBY, they may have found a loophole. :D

There might even be a Lobby for this in Washington

Griff 07-02-2014 06:24 AM

Of course, Hobby Lobby invests in the companies that make the same drugs they won't pay for...

http://www.motherjones.com/politics/...on-drug-makers

Griff 07-02-2014 06:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Undertoad (Post 903477)
I don't know about Ella, but on Plan B: this is all due to an anti-scientific misunderstanding of how the drug works.

It works by preventing ovulation.

Somehow, and good fuckin' lord I have no idea how this might happen, but somehow a bunch of miserable fucking dickheads got it into their tiny, uneducated minds, that Plan B prevents implantation of a fertilized egg.

No. Plan B works exactly like every other birth control drug. Don't believe me, you can look it up. And so those miserable, tiny, anti-scientific, uneducated pricks

ARE

ACTUALLY

CAUSING

MORE

ABORTIONS

BY

PROTESTING

PLAN B.

Which is how we know this is more about politics using religion rather than an ethics based stand.

Undertoad 07-02-2014 07:01 AM

Wull that and being against sex for pleasure, their traditional stomping ground, which tells them sex should have deadly serious consequences... amongst which, strangely enough, is... abortions. And a bunch of half-parented kids.


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