The Long History of the War Against Contraception
Tuesday, 02/14/2012 - 10:39 am by Ellen Chesler
For those surprised about the recent fervor over Obama’s contraception coverage decision, a look at its deep roots.
Republicans for Planned Parenthood last week issued a call for
nominations for the 2012 Barry Goldwater award, an annual prize awarded
to a Republican legislator who has acted to protect women’s health and
rights. Past recipients include Maine Senator Olympia Snowe, who this
week endorsed
President Obama’s solution for insuring full coverage of the cost of
contraception without exceptions, even for employees of religiously
affiliated institutions. And that may tell us all we need to know about
why President Obama has the upper hand in a debate over insurance that
congressional Tea Partiers have now widened to include anyone who seeks
an exemption.
It’s a long time ago, but it is worth remembering that conservative
avatar Goldwater was in his day an outspoken supporter of women’s
reproductive freedom — a freethinker who voted his conscience over the
protests of Catholic bishops and all others who tried to claim these
matters as questions of conscientious liberty and not sensible social
policy. With Goldwater on his side, Obama sees a clear opening for
skeptics wary of the extremism that has captured Republican hopefuls in
thrall to the fundamentalist base that controls the GOP presidential
primary today. Holding firm on family planning — even if it means taking
on the Catholic hierarchy and other naysayers by offering a technical
fix that would have insurers cover costs instead of the churches
themselves — is a calculated political strategy by the Obama campaign,
not a blunder as it has been characterized by many high powered pundits,
including progressives like Mark Shields of PBS and E.J. Dionne of the Washington Post.
Saturday, February 18, 2012
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