Northwest Voices | Letters to the Editor
Welcome to The Seattle Times' online letters to the editor, a sampling of readers' opinions. Join the conversation by commenting on these letters or send your own letter of up to 200 words opinion@seattletimes.com.
Health mandate to include birth control
This is a great step forward for the health of all women
The Obama administration recently ruled that health insurance plans must include contraception among the preventive services available to women without deductibles or co-pays under the new health-care law [“Contraception mandate outrages religious groups,” Health, seattletimes.com, Feb. 3].
This decision does not force doctors to prescribe contraception, or a woman to use it. Instead, it makes contraception affordable for many women who otherwise would not be able to afford it. As a nurse, I know this is a great step forward for the health of all women.
Despite the fact that 98 percent of Catholic women use contraception, some in the religious community are demanding that the current exemption for churches and religious organizations be expanded to include colleges, hospitals and social service agencies. This would be a disastrous decision for women’s health.
This issue goes to the heart of the personal-health decisions a woman makes with her doctor and care team, not her employer. As a Catholic, my grandmother died giving birth to her eighth child in so many years, and my mother had 10 pregnancies within less than 12 years. With birth control, their pregnancies could have been spaced so as to minimize the extreme physical, emotional, financial and psychological toll placed upon our family.
As a nurse, I know the decision not to expand the exception was the right one — as a matter of public health, respect for individual conscience and simple fairness to Washington women and their families.
This politicalizing from the pulpit, however, is one of the reasons why I struggle with my Catholic faith.
— Mary McNaughton, registered nurse, Everett
This is a threat to our fundamental freedoms
The recent news about the Health and Human Services mandate gives one something to, shall we say, pause over. I find this move very interesting. For those of us who are disturbed by this mandate, the issue is not simply abortion; it is that our government, while arguing that it is defending a woman’s right to choose, this mandate is going to deny that same right of conscience to those of us, men and women, who believe that all life is sacred, from conception to natural death..
The government, according to our founding documents, lacks the legitimacy, or the power to do what is being threatened by the Health and Human Services Mandate. It does not have the competency to do so.
The disagreement between us in this matter is about much more than just the life issues. We disagree on fundamental Constitutional, democratic principles. The right of conscience applies to all moral, political and social justice issues, not just the life issues. That is why this is, and will continue to be, a legitimate debate, not a forgone conclusion.
This is not just a mandate, it is a mortal threat to fundamental freedoms. You give government this kind of power and you no longer live in a democracy.
— Daniel J. Doyle, Edmonds
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