Pepsi, Visa, and Chevron are Exempt From HHS Mandate, But Little Sisters of the Poor

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Pepsi, Visa, and Chevron are Exempt From HHS Mandate, But Little Sisters of the Poor are Not…


http://www*****news.com/2016/03/23/p...-poor-are-not/


Muslim Obama war on Christians
 
Pepsi, Visa, and Chevron are Exempt From HHS Mandate, But Little Sisters of the Poor are Not…


http://www*****news.com/2016/03/23/p...-poor-are-not/


Muslim Obama war on Christians

We'll tell how things ought to be left at it again.
 
It looks like the religious right didn't find the right unassailable complaintant in the Nuns for their challenge to the ACA.

As it turns out, chaste older nuns sometimes need birth control too.

Birth control pills are prescribed for a wide variety of health problems, such as irregular menstrual bleeding, that have nothing to do with preventing pregnancy—and many of these health problems are widespread among older women, including nuns. Beyond the practical health care applications of contraception, birth control also does prevent unwanted pregnancies. And, in rare occasions, religious women require this as well.

All the nuns had to do to avoid the contraceptive mandate was fill out some forms and let the government know of their religious objection, and the government would arrange for third parties to provide the contraceptive coverage. Failing to file the paperwork and also failing to provide the contraceptive coverage, though, would subject the nuns to heavy fines.

The nuns sued, asserting that even filling out the paperwork to claim a religious accommodation would compromise them by involving them in the immoral practice of facilitating access to contraception for their employees, many of whom are laypeople.

They lost because their argument is bull shit.
 
It looks like the religious right didn't find the right unassailable complaintant in the Nuns for their challenge to the ACA.

As it turns out, chaste older nuns sometimes need birth control too.

Birth control pills are prescribed for a wide variety of health problems, such as irregular menstrual bleeding, that have nothing to do with preventing pregnancy—and many of these health problems are widespread among older women, including nuns. Beyond the practical health care applications of contraception, birth control also does prevent unwanted pregnancies. And, in rare occasions, religious women require this as well.

All the nuns had to do to avoid the contraceptive mandate was fill out some forms and let the government know of their religious objection, and the government would arrange for third parties to provide the contraceptive coverage. Failing to file the paperwork and also failing to provide the contraceptive coverage, though, would subject the nuns to heavy fines.

The nuns sued, asserting that even filling out the paperwork to claim a religious accommodation would compromise them by involving them in the immoral practice of facilitating access to contraception for their employees, many of whom are laypeople.

They lost because their argument is bull shit.

Pepsi, Visa, and Chevron are Exempt From HHS Mandate,:cool:
 
Pepsi, Visa, and Chevron are Exempt From HHS Mandate,:cool:

They applied for and received waivers.
The Little Sisters were offered the chance (several times in fact) to apply for a waiver so that they didn't have to provide contraception directly and let the government handle it, and they refused.
 
take off the pantyhose and man up, you pussy coward.



They applied for and received waivers.
The Little Sisters were offered the chance (several times in fact) to apply for a waiver so that they didn't have to provide contraception directly and let the government handle it, and they refused.
 
They applied for and received waivers.
The Little Sisters were offered the chance (several times in fact) to apply for a waiver so that they didn't have to provide contraception directly and let the government handle it, and they refused.

link:rolleyes:
 
Bitch please.

They tried to argue in court that even filling out the paperwork to exempt them from having to provide contraceptives to their employees violated their religious beliefs. They could have filed the exemption paperwork at any time.

They lost in every single courtroom they tried the argument in and held hope that the SCOTUS would overturn those cases.

Unfortunately for them Justice Scalia passed and the court will deadlock, leaving the lower court's decisions, ALL OF THEM, intact.
 
They applied for and received waivers.
The Little Sisters were offered the chance (several times in fact) to apply for a waiver so that they didn't have to provide contraception directly and let the government handle it, and they refused.

Don't go disobeying the left now. When they say march they mean it. Apply for that waiver sisters, you all behave like "Sister Act" anyway, I saw it in a movie with Whoopi!
 
Bitch please.

They tried to argue in court that even filling out the paperwork to exempt them from having to provide contraceptives to their employees violated their religious beliefs. They could have filed the exemption paperwork at any time.

They lost in every single courtroom they tried the argument in and held hope that the SCOTUS would overturn those cases.

Unfortunately for them Justice Scalia passed and the court will deadlock, leaving the lower court's decisions, ALL OF THEM, intact.

non responsive

LINK.....:cool:
 
Here's an easy one: prove that Little Sisters of the Poor is a religious organization.

When that's done, you might be able to make a point about not doing Caesar's paperwork.
 
Bitch please.

They tried to argue in court that even filling out the paperwork to exempt them from having to provide contraceptives to their employees violated their religious beliefs. They could have filed the exemption paperwork at any time.

They lost in every single courtroom they tried the argument in and held hope that the SCOTUS would overturn those cases.

Unfortunately for them Justice Scalia passed and the court will deadlock, leaving the lower court's decisions, ALL OF THEM, intact.

non responsive

LINK.....


you LIED, as usual
 
non responsive

LINK.....


you LIED, as usual

Lying is your shtick DizzyDummy.

Just one of many decisions against the "Little Sisters" that sent them to SCOTUS.

they were offered the chance, again, to sign the waiver that would relieve them of the responsibility to provide contraceptive care in their insurance plans.
They once again refused, arguing that even signing a form stating that they object to provide that coverage on religious grounds so that the government can step in and provide it for their religious and secular employees would be a substantial burden on their religious freedoms. The very same argument that was rejected in other courts.

Court rules against Little Sisters of the Poor in contraceptive coverage case

The U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that if the Colorado-based Little Sisters of the Poor want to refuse contraceptive coverage to their employees, they must sign a waiver to be exempted, and that such a waiver is not a substantial burden on the nuns' religious freedom.
 
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