On the National Review site:
(1) The first deception is that the president has issued a
“contraception mandate.” It is not that; it is a presidential power
grab. No state or other jurisdiction is trying to ban contraception.
Neither the Catholic Church nor any other religious body is trying to
ban contraception. The means of contraception are even more widely
available than in drugstores; one can pick up condoms in restrooms, even
in restaurants. The reason for this deception is to make opponents
appear to be doing something they are not. They are not banning
contraception. It is dishonest to focus on contraception instead of on
the real issue, the attempt to extend presidential power into areas
constitutionally forbidden to it.
The genius of this deception is its explicit attack on the Catholic
Church. This tactic was aided by the Church’s long and well-known moral
disapproval of contraception, as an artificial barrier between a man’s
and a woman’s complete self-giving. Yet the Church does not try to ban
contraception even among its own congregants, only to teach that it is
morally wrong, because it reveals a self-absorbed form of love.
In this way, by distorting Church doctrine, the president and his
enablers in the press masked his power grab of forcing conscientious
objectors to pay for contraception. The press also masked his
violation of the Constitution in defining which religious bodies are
religious, according to his ideas. Beginning with George Stephanopoulos, most of the press has been a delighted accomplice in misdescribing the issue.
(2) The second deception is that sterilization, contraception,
abortifacients and by logical extension, at the proper hour, abortion
are not matters of private choice, but matters of women’s health. This
definition is then expanded into an enforceable right to women’s health. This supposed right is then expanded into a duty upon
others to pay for the private choices and values systems of some women.
In other words, this is naked coercion in its most deceptive form, and
an illicit and twisted use of rights talk.
Pregnancy is a disease? The destruction of an individual human being within, boy or girl, is a matter of women’s health?
Read the entire piece.
In related news, House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi, a self-described "serious Catholic", insisted this week that the Catholic Church and Catholic institutions should pay for contraceptives, sterilzations, and other "health" measures:
At a press conference, Leader Pelosi was asked by THE WEEKLY
STANDARD: "The Catholic Church in Washington, D.C., is a self-insured
institution. Should the Catholic Church in Washington, D.C., be required
to pay for these morning-after pills and birth control if they find
that morally objectionable?"
Pelosi talked about the importance of women's health, and then said,
"Yes, I think that all institutions who cover, who give, health
insurance should cover the full range of health insurance issues for
women."
In other words, she apparently thinks the current HHS mandate is still too limited, because it provides an exemption for Catholic churches (though not for Catholic charities, schools, hospitals, etc.). I have no doubt that she is serious. But is she really Catholic or, better, is she a Catholic in good standing with the Church? It would be nice if her bishop(s) would clarify the matter.