Rick Santorum is against the use of contraception even for married couples.
With the Republican Primaries and current events somehow devolving into an American cultural war, it has never become clearer than ever that the masses need to be checked from their biases as much as the government needs to be checked from its abuse of power.
I’ll show my bias at once. Social conservatives scare me and they seem judgmental and hateful to me. And I dislike that they believe the “power of the people” and “real America” should mandate my rights.
As this great LA Times Piece shows, the confluence of current events with the Republican Primaries has turned our usual bipartisan anger into a veritable culture war. Old time values are clashing with contemporary life in an unfathomable way. I’ll take advantage of the piece to go in order of these events to show exactly how this culture war is pure rhetoric, dangerous one at that.
With the new decision by the 9th District Court to strike down Prop 8 the case of gay marriage will go to the United States Supreme Court. Republicans have been quick to call out the ‘activist judges’ for going against the case of a majority.
Well, let’s look at the facts. That vast “majority” being disrespected is one of 52% to 48%. The difference between yes and no was around 600,000 votes in a state that holds almost 37 million people. If we are to ere in the side of giving instead of taking away rights, that is hardly a majority that can really mandate that sort of change.
Same sex marriage just passed in Washington and will be in the ballots in New Jersey and Maine in November. In New Jersey the governor Christie (who likes to make jokes about women giving blow jobs), says he will veto the move which I’m sure Republicans would not see as going against the majority in the least.
Then comes the Susan G Komen controversy, a grayer one at that. It really has nothing to do with the government but the fact that these culture war proponents are obsessed enough to take away cancer prevention from women shows the extremes that this rhetoric can go to. For those wanting to argue, here is the breakdown of Planned Parenthood's annual report and how they spend their money.
Seems like a strange battle to make to keep from saving lives to possibly save the life of a fetus that may or may not be alive according to your definition. It would be easier to simply state in donations that they not be used for abortion purposes rather than not provide them altogether.
Finally comes the latest attack on religion through Obama’s new contraceptive law. A new law passed from Obama planned to force religious institutions to cover contraceptives in their health insurance for non-church employees. Let’s say the churches weren’t engaging in rhetoric, if they were hiring people that followed their beliefs, wouldn’t it be a moot point regardless?
Obama gave in to the pressure and now the institutions themselves won’t be mandated to cover it, but the insurance companies will have to provide the contraceptives if one of these employees reaches out to them. But not before the religious right decided to compare a contraceptive law to the holocaust. They always find a way to do it don’t they?
Please let’s stop this stupid rhetoric and focus on what matters: the economy. Don’t let these distractions get in the way of an important voting cycle for 2012, vote which way you wish but don’t let rhetoric mandate that choice.
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