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He may be wrong on the Plan B....but from what I read, it sounds like he does not want to have to include ANY contraception in his company's health plan.
If he has a religious reason to not include contraception, that should be allowed, in my opinion. I know the government will see it differently, but from what I was reading, it sounds like he was looking into a health plan for his employees that won't cover contraception.
....I am still at a loss as to why contraception has become a "right" and religious or moral objections seem to no longer matter.
The more I read, the more I will support the store with my money. I think what the government is doing is WAY overstepping their bounds........ and you wonder why I have no trust in this government!
My candidate for quote of the year is from Jill Zorn, senior program officer at the Universal Health Care Foundation of Connecticut. This is what she said about The Affordable Health Care Act:
"The single biggest issue we face now is affordability....."
"The mandate to offer health insurance doesn't take effect until 2014, but the "measurement period" used by the feds to determine a firm's average number of full-time employees started last month. So the cutbacks and employment dodges are underway. " (WSJ)
A 2011 Hudson Institute study estimates that this insurance mandate will cost the franchise industry $6.4 billion and put 3.2 million jobs "at risk." The insurance mandate is so onerous for small firms that Stephen Caldeira, president of the International Franchise Association, predicts that "Many stores will have to cut worker hours out of necessity. It could be the difference between staying in business or going out of business." The franchise association says the average fast-food restaurant has profits of only about $50,000 to $100,000 and a margin of about 3.5%.
Because other federal employment regulations also kick in when a firm crosses the 50 worker threshold, employers are starting to cap payrolls at 49 full-time workers. These firms have come to be known as "49ers." Businesses that hire young and lower-skilled workers are also starting to put a ceiling on the work week of below 30 hours. These firms are the new "29ers." Part-time workers don't have to be offered insurance under ObamaCare.
But the damage won't be limited to franchisees or restaurants. A 2012 survey of employers by the Mercer consulting firm found that 67% of retail and wholesale firms that don't offer insurance coverage today "are more inclined to change their workforce strategy so that fewer employees meet that [30 hour a week] threshold." This week Nigel Travis, the CEO of Dunkin' Donuts, asked Congress to change the health law's definition of full-time to 40 hours a week from 30 hours so worker hours won't have to be cut.
The timing of all this couldn't be worse. Involuntary part-time U.S. employment is already near a record high. The latest Department of Labor employment survey counts roughly eight million Americans who want a full-time job but are stuck in a part-time holding pattern. That number is down only 520,000 since January 2010 and it is 309,000 higher than last March. (See the nearby chart.) And now comes ObamaCare to increase the incentive for employers to hire only part-time workers.
Democrats who thought they were doing workers a favor by mandating health coverage can't seem to understand that it doesn't help workers to give them health care if they can't get a full-time job that pays the rest of their bills.
http://www.americanthinker.com/blog..._that_it_is_not_affordable.html#ixzz2LomVr4hi
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100...8304072420873666.html?mod=WSJ_Opinion_LEADTop
Everybody gets to have TWO jobs in the new economy; one just to pay for mandated affordable health care...
The WSJ article says that worker working part time for economic reasons just dropped by a million workers and continues to decline.
http://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/ED-AQ452_1commi_D_20130220173305.jpg
What exactly is the "moral" objection to birth control?
Consequence-free sex promotes "sluttiness", of course.
Didn't you learn ANYTHING in your abstinence-based sex education class?
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What exactly is the "moral" objection to birth control?
meaning you pay for it, not insurance
Insurance doesn't pay for it, it's a net negative cost for them.
Never understood why contraception should be covered by insurance at all? There are many things that are paid for out-of-pocket...i.e. cold medicines, tylenol (etc), allergy meds, bandaids, upset stomach meds, even, condoms.
There are other over-the-counter birth control methods for women as well. Those already have to be paid for out-of-pocket.
Seems this may just be more of a topic that brings more media attention that actually makes sense.
I have always paid for mine, out-of-pocket.
Never understood why contraception should be covered by insurance at all? There are many things that are paid for out-of-pocket...i.e. cold medicines, tylenol (etc), allergy meds, bandaids, upset stomach meds, even, condoms.
There are other over-the-counter birth control methods for women as well. Those already have to be paid for out-of-pocket.
Seems this may just be more of a topic that brings more media attention that actually makes sense.
I have always paid for mine, out-of-pocket.
Maybe because it's not just women having sex, but also men? And men's desires and wants and needs often supersede the women's? Especially women getting the technical result of the activity in the end, when men just have to drop and go?
So, it's a matter of responsibility and a health issue.
Why shouldn't it be covered by insurance?
when you pay for health insurance, then I will explain it to you
until then, stop demanding others to pay
I'm already paying for it, you dumb fucking twat.
SO EXPLAIN IT TO ME, THEN.
Never understood why contraception should be covered by insurance at all? There are many things that are paid for out-of-pocket...i.e. cold medicines, tylenol (etc), allergy meds, bandaids, upset stomach meds, even, condoms.
There are other over-the-counter birth control methods for women as well. Those already have to be paid for out-of-pocket.
Seems this may just be more of a topic that brings more media attention that actually makes sense.
I have always paid for mine, out-of-pocket.
Why shouldn't it be covered by insurance?