Have you ever been
to Hobby Lobby? I haven't, but they have made news in the two years with their
staunch refusal to provide health insurance to their employees that provided
coverage for birth control while citing their freedom of religious conscience.
I did a brief Google search for articles about this debate and came across this
gem from what Rush Limbaugh calls the “Huffing and Puffington Post.” (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/01/28/hobby-lobby-birth-control-lawsuit_n_4680163.html).
Nineteen Democratic Senators (no surprise they are Democrats), including Patty
Murray (D-Washington) filed an amicus brief in support of the contraception
mandate under the Affordable Care Act. Hobby Lobby argues that forcing them to
provide contraception coverage violates their religious freedom to oppose such
things. While reading this article, one blurb immediately caught my eye.
“Allowing a woman’s boss to call the shots about her access
to birth control should be inconceivable to all Americans in this day and age,
and takes us back to a place in history when women had no voice or choice,”
according to the prepared remarks provided to Yahoo that Murray has planned.
If you follow this
logic, then if I decided to have sex, I must insist that my employer provide paid
access to condoms. However, I have always felt that engaging in intercourse is
a choice, and one must therefore bear the cost of such a choice. This paragraph
stunningly uses the slippery slope fallacy to suggest denial of contraception will
lead down the path to women’s servitude. Yet, one does not lead logically to
the other. Am I to believe a woman’s freedom hinges so tightly on this alone
that the whole thing can come crashing down so easily?
Where one fallacy
exists, another is bound to surface, or at least hide nearby to muddy the waters
of intellectual discussion. Actually this blurb reminds me of typical liberal intellectual
falsity that presumes the existence of some “right” to something without
arguing such a right exists. This was
highlighted in Thomas Sowell's book The
Vision of the Anointed. Sowell
says “One of the most remarkable – and popular – ways of seeming to argue
without actually producing any arguments is to say that some individual or
group has a ‘right’ to something that you want them to have.” Doing this merely
focuses on the beneficiary and ignores those whose time and resources have been
preempted, he says. We can see that in the above blurb. Some women want their
contraception paid for, have decided it is a right, and then preempted the
choices that others wish to make with their own freedom and money. The same can
be said to a “right” to health care, affordable housing, or any other things
declared to be rights today. If these people are not given what they want, they
presume, falsely, that all of their freedom will be taken away.
Yet, there can be
no constitutional argument for such a right and neither can there be a moral or
religious one. On what does such a proclamation rest then? Like many liberal
arguments, it rests on nothing. Hobby Lobby may have to acquiesce in the end
because of the force of Obamacare’s mandates, but in the end the force of the
law is the only thing that can compel such a mandate. Logic certainly can’t.