What You Should Know About The Hobby Lobby Case

July 8, 2014

It’s all over the news. You’ve heard that Hobby Lobby can deny certain birth control coverage for their employees. But what really went down and what does it mean? Whether you agree with the ruling or not, you need to know the details because this is a landmark decision.

In Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc., the Supreme Court ruled that requiring closely-held (this could be up to 90% of businesses!) for-profit corporations to provide certain birth control to their employees (under the Affordable Care Act or Obamacare) violates the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. You may ask why this is a landmark decision–there are a couple of reasons. First and foremost, this is the first time the Supreme Court has recognized a for-profit corporation’s claims of religious belief. This is also a significant victory for Affordable Care Act opponents since it means that the Supreme Court has ruled against one of the ACA’s core laws.

If you are wondering why the ruling to Hobby Lobby case should matter to you, read on, friend. It’s important.

What You Should Know About Hobby Lobby Case

1. It’s in direct opposition to the Affordable Care Act’s contraceptive mandate, which says that birth control is preventative health care which must be covered by insurance with no co-pay.

The contraceptive mandate was a monumental move in the right direction for women’s equality and health care. This ruling does not invalidate the contraceptive mandate, but it certainly complicates it and renders its victory a sour one.

2. The Supreme Court’s 5-4 decision was nearly split along gender lines and the female justices issued a formal dissent about the decision.

You can read the full dissent here. None of the female justices voted in favor of this, meaning that this ruling was passed by men who–let’s be honest–do not have to face the reality of birth control as a healthcare necessity. Sure, making and raising families is something that shouldn’t be gender-based, but in our culture (and sadly, many places across the globe) the burden of reproductive control and health falls primarily on women.

3. This ruling is based on an ignorance of how birth control works.

The chief complaint in this case is that particular types of birth control put a substantial burden on the beliefs of these corporations because they actually cause abortions, which is incorrect. In particular, the types of birth control treated in this ruling are IUDs and emergency contraception. The corporations involved in this ruling believe that life begins at conception and that IUDs and emergency contraceptives end life. However, IUDs and emergency contraception both prevent the fertilization of an egg rather than cause termination of an embryo. This ruling gives credence to opinions that are scientifically untrue. But guess what? Other corporations affected by this ruling want to cover even fewer forms of birth control.

4. This is all only an issue because we rely on an employer-based healthcare system in the United States.

The Affordable Care Act grants corporations tax benefits for offering health insurance to their employees. So while it may seem convenient that your employer can offer you health insurance plans, in the long run it would be better off if we cut employers out of it entirely because it means they’re getting involved where they have no business being involved.

5. This ruling grants corporations the same rights to exercise religious freedom as people.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor and Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg posited that corporations do not have the right to religiously-held beliefs at all. This ruling equates the people who own corporations with the corporations themselves, which is a slippery slope. This is really starting to boil down to the argument of whether corporations have a better claim to personhood than women.

6. Some businesses are taking this ruling even further so as not to allow their female employees access to certain types of contraceptives, even through third parties.

The Supreme Court ruled that the government had to provide the least restrictive alternative to asking corporations with religious reservations to provide contraceptives for their employees. However, just days after the ruling, Wheaton College filed an injunction saying this is not acceptable because the government will still allow third parties to cover these contraceptives for employees even if Wheaton themselves will not allow them to be covered. The Supreme Court decided that the third-party least restrictive alternative is actually unconstitutional! And of course, every female Justice issued a dissent against this.

What can we do about this? Being informed is the first step. For further reading:

Also see: Opinion – Why All Vegans Should Be Feminists

Birth Control for the Health Conscious

Also by Samantha: 5 Best Uses for Castile Soap

Opinion: Why PETA Gives Vegans a Bad Name

 

 

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Photo: American Life League via Flickr

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Samantha is a vegan professional in the tech industry living in Austin, Texas with her boyfriend. Her background is in library & information science and classical studies. She loves cooking, biking, movies, reading, the science fiction & horror genres, crafting, thrifting, and the occasional video game. Check her out on Pinterest and Google+. You can also reach her at lestersn [at] gmail [dot] com.

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