Register for E-mail alerts. Comment on articles. Sign up today, it's easy.
Close
The Washington Times Online Edition

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: On contraception, keep eye on the ball

We’ve taken our eye off the ball in the uproar over federally mandated contraception coverage ( “Contraception battle: not a war on religion, but a war on women,” Web, Friday).

The administration knew this would happen. The issue that has been lost in the scuffle is the fact that the federal government has no constitutional basis for telling any private insurer what to cover or what not to cover. If it did, would we not have a corporate mandate?

After the outcry from religious organizations’ reached a crescendo, President Obama conceded that the Department of Health and Human Services erred, announcing that the mandate will be administered by insurance companies rather than religious employers. The religious community in the United States mostly breathed a collective sigh of relief and declared victory. But now the administration will simply continue imposing new regulations on private businesses and organizations across America.

Members of the religious community in America will bask in the glory of a hard-won victory for the First Amendment. Nevertheless, they will have failed to observe what the other hand was doing while they fought for freedom of conscience.

As the administration implements the new Health and Human Services regulations, it will be setting a precedent for the individual mandate. When it comes time for the Supreme Court to render its decision on Obamacare, the liberal wing of the court will have been given the perfect excuse for upholding it.

We must keep our eye on the ball and never stop watching the other hand.

THE REV. WILLIAM COOK

Round Hill, Va.

© Copyright 2012 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.

Comments
blog comments powered by Disqus
You Might Also Like
  • U.S. Navy via Associated Press
The Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS John C. Stennis transits the Strait of Hormuz on Nov. 12. The Pentagon declared Tuesday that U.S. warships will continue regularly scheduled deployments to the strategic waterway, despite warnings against doing so from Iran.

    GAFFNEY: Bad timing for LOST

  • Illustration: Economic recovery by Linas Garsys for The Washington Times

    GHEI: Springtime blues for consumers

  • ASSOCIATED PRESS
A copy of Fred Torrey's statue "Lincoln Walks at Midnight," showing President Lincoln contemplating the prospect of statehood for West Virginia, stands in Independence Hall in Wheeling, W.Va. It is one of the destinations highlighted by the Appalachian Regional Commission on a 13-state map of history.

    EDITORIAL: Obama makes history - up