YMMV = Your Mileage May Vary.
Ok then.
To me this is a paradox. If you can’t force them to convert, then you shouldn’t be able to force them to act as if they have converted.
We are not forcing them to act as if they have converted, we are preventing them from forcing us to act like we’ve converted to secularism.
This only applies to abortion. Not contraception per se. That is, while there are forms of contraception that are unquestionably abortifacient (IUDs) others might be (the Pill) other clearly are not (condoms, sterilization). There can be no “life trumps freedom” case made for these last two, and Medical science is on the fence about the pill.
Catholics, you should be included in this because you call yourself Catholic, believe that the use of the pill with a contraceptive mentality is the same thing as killing a conceived child. You are deny the child that has or would have developed without intervention their right to life. Both are intrinsic evils with the same end (artificial prevention of life) and therefor both fall under the same header.
Here is where we part company, radically. You appear to only want to give “freedom of religion” to religions that you personally approve of. the Purpose of the First Amendment, was not just to curb the poser of Anglicans, but to crub the power of Puritans as well, with a generous dash of horrification (if that’s a word) at the excesses of the Inquisition. In effect, you demand that the 75%+ of this country which does not adhere to the Catholic religion should be legally compelled to act in accordance with its moral precepts on certain issues that you (and the Bishops) will decide upon.
Again, I disagree. Vehemently.
I only used Anglicans as an example because Anglican domination was more prominent at the time. The same rules were to apply to all religions, that they cannot force conversion or demand that other people follow them. As stated, that is not what we are doing. The employees are free to seek coverage elsewhere, even while maintaining their job. If the government were arguing that an employee MUST take part in their company’s Insurance plan it -MIGHT- be a different story, but they are not, and the employee is not obligated to.
And, to be perfectly honest, yes, I do think the rest of the world should follow Catholic moral law. As a Catholic, you should to. Since we represent the truth of Christ’s revelations and the fullness of God’s Covenant, it would be best for the souls of the world if they did.
A couple other things. The “Horrors” of the inquest are hugely over-exaggerated, and have been for a long time; and we are not FORCING anyone to follow our moral code., they are trying to force us to follow theirs. We’re not denying them access to contraceptive medications, we’re denying paying for it. If they want to sully their souls then it should be on their dime, not ours; and since an employer does pay a portion of the costs of an insurance plan for their employee then no, we shouldn’t have to provide it.
If the employee was willing to pay for 100% of their own plan then there wouldn’t be a problem (at least not a moral one for the employer) because the employer would not have anything to do with it; but they are not paying for 100% of their coverage, and therefore should not be afforded complete autonomy at the expense of the employer.
I believe that you are trying to rationalize, and I think you should talk to a priest about 0why- you are trying to rationalize it and uphold American ideals over the laws of God.