Oh people. You are wearing me
out. I wasn't planning on blogging for a few days, but you’re forcing my hand.
Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt has just filed a brief in the U.S. Supreme Court supporting Hobby Lobby’s legal challenge to provide
insurance that pays for emergency contraception, as outlined in the Affordable
Care Act, or Obamacare if you dig that moniker. (Personally, I do.)
And why, do you ask, would Kansas concern itself with the
business of a national craft store? I’m so glad you asked! It’s because Kansans
are disproportionately interested in all things artsy-fartsy.
FACT: No Kansas
child is allowed to progress from the 4th grade to the 5th
without first mastering the ancient art of wheat weaving. FACT: During the
great locust plague of 1889, Kansans were able to drive the pests to Missouri
by lighting millions of handmade scented candles. FACT: In order to renew his
or her driver’s license, every Kansan is required to have no fewer than two
Pinterest accounts. FACT.
David Green, owner and CEO of Hobby Lobby Inc., recently
published an open letter explaining his objections to Hobby Lobby being forced
to provide insurance for its employees that would potentially cover emergency
contraception. Here’s a particularly poignant excerpt from that letter:
A new government healthcare mandate says that our family
business MUST provide what I believe are abortion-causing drugs as part of our
health insurance. Being Christians, we don’t pay for drugs that might cause
abortions, which means that we don’t cover emergency contraception, the
morning-after pill or the week-after pill. We believe doing so might end a life
after the moment of conception, something that is contrary to our most
important beliefs. It goes against the Biblical principles on which we have run
this company since day one.
There are a few problems with this letter, many of which
have pointed out by people smarter than me:
1) David Green may “believe” that emergency
contraception is an “abortion-causing” drug, but Princeton University has done research that shows otherwise.
2) Hobby Lobby isn’t paying for emergency
contraception. Hobby Lobby is paying for insurance. How Hobby Lobby’s employees
and its employees’ doctors choose to use that insurance is entirely up to them.
Hobby Lobby has no business getting between its employees and its employees’ doctors.
Hobby Lobby is an employer. Not a parent. Or a church.
3)The idea that the family that owns Hobby Lobby
is so morally outraged about abortion is laughable. The vast majority
of Hobby Lobby’s inventory comes from China, a country where abortion is government mandate. (China often denies this, but China denies pretty much
everything.) And y’know. Being that China by-and-large isn’t a Christian
nation, obviously David Green’s god doesn’t give a rat’s ass about the number
of abortions the Chinese perform. Heck, Green’s god is probably happy that a
few less Chinese will let the ‘Mericans catch up in the breeding race.
For Kansas to put even a symbolic dog in this fight (and it is one ugly
muthafuckin’ dawg) is insulting. It is insulting to me as a Kansan and as a
woman. I have chosen to not shop at Hobby Lobby for about a year now. For my
state—a state where my ancestors settled five generations ago in order to
escape religious persecution—to dare speak on my behalf about a matter so
repugnant to me is a real slap in the face. Talk about infringing on rights.
Also, doesn’t the Kansas AG have more important things to worry about? Like, I
dunno … CRIME IN KANSAS?
Now someone might think that it’s not a big deal for Hobby
Lobby to want to opt-out of paying for emergency contraception. According to
Drugs.com, the Plan B pill costs approximately 50 bucks. (Notice at the bottom
of this screenshot that Plan B cannot be ordered by ladies in Oklahoma. It’s
not illegal there, but they have to show ID to buy it.)
Fifty bucks? You might think. Fifty bucks to prevent an
unwanted pregnancy ain’t that much. But according to glassdoor.com, the average
salary of a cashier at Hobby is only $8.88 per hour:
That means a Hobby Lobby cashier has to work 5.63 hours in
order to pay for a one-time use of Plan B. That’s probably about equal to what
a Hobby Lobby cashier would spend on food for the week.
The Kansas AG office writes:
Americans may form a corporation for profit and at the same
time adhere to religious principles in their business operation. This is true
whether it is the [plaintiffs in this case] operating their businesses based on
their Christian principles, a Jewish-owned deli that does not sell non-kosher
foods, or a Muslim-owned financial brokerage that will not lend money for
interest. The idea is as American as apple pie.
Oh, Derek. Notice that in the plethora of examples you’ve
given (two), it’s about what the business sells. Not how it treats its
employees. Sure, I’m allowed to open a business selling riding crops and
chastity belts. Under the ACA, I am not allowed to tell my employees that they
must pay for their Viagra out of their own pockets because I think erections
are icky. Just like I’m not allowed to discriminate against hiring anyone based
on their gender, race, religion, sexual orientation, height, weight, etc. Similarly, if I am an employer who worships the Flying Spaghetti
Monster, I am not allowed to tell my employees that they must consume meatballs
on Thursdays.
Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt is married with two
daughters. One would hope that he would ask for his daughters to be treated the
same under their insurance coverage, and at work, as he has been.
Thanks to my friend Jake Vail for the awesome title!



Great article, Amber. I agree. I would also like to point out that 99% of Christians who agree with Hobby Lobby have never stopped to consider how they would like it if their, say, Jehovah's Witness employer wanted to deny coverage for an organ transplant, citing their religious convictions; which is exactly what will be allowed if Hobby Lobby prevails. Wake up America...Christianity isn't the only religion that is practiced here. You can't ask the government to defend your religious freedom, but not your Muslim or Jehovah's Witness neighbor...it just doesn't work like that.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Crystal! I agree with your sentiments entirely!
ReplyDelete