H
hasikelee
Guest
Tom, can you explain to me the particulars of this right of obtaining a non-medically necessary hormonal replacement, one that can be obtained almost anywhere nowadays, and why this right is assumed higher than the right of the pharmacist?That isn’t a problem, it’s precisely the point. If this man is not willing to fill the prescriptions of every customer then he has no place working as a pharmacist.
And do any of those passes given to the religious at your work harmful to others? Does a woman miss an important pill that she took the time and effort to have prescribed to her because one of your coworkers doesn’t believe in it?
Stop putting this on the level of having off for Christmas or receiving a non-pork company lunch. It’s directly interfering in the rights of others and their doctors.
As for the original article, it sounds to me as if much information is missing. We have drive-through pp’s over here that dispense just about any kind of contraceptive thingamajig, and abortive ones, too. Probably the assistant worker was overzealous and got all emotional. Probably the woman figured this was her paycheck for who knows how long and instead of writing him off as rude or being religious, she decided to escalate it. They were meant for each other.