Of the sons of Issachar, men who understood the times, with knowledge of what Israel should do, their chiefs were two hundred; and all their kinsmen were at their command — 1 Chronicles 12:32
Let’s celebrate the milestone by driving the Catholic Church out of its mission of caring for the sick and the poor by forcing them to either do something that is anathema to their theology or forcing them to abandon their hospital and charity work:
Liberals are crowing about what they see as a huge victory for them — and they are right — because this victory comes at the expense of religious liberty.
Welcome to the Obama 2012 reelection plan: ignore and marginalize people of faith, pander to the far-left’s sexual-political priorities.
Today, in a huge victory for women’s health, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announced that most employers will be required to cover contraception in their health plans, along with other preventive services, with no cost-sharing such as co-pays or deductibles. This means that after years of trying to get birth control covered to the same extent that health plans cover Viagra, our country will finally have nearly universal coverage of contraception.
Opponents of contraception had lobbied hard for a broad exemption that would have allowed any religiously-affiliated employer to opt out of providing such coverage. Fortunately, the Obama administration rejected that push and decided to maintain the narrow religious exemption that it initially proposed. Only houses of worship and other religious nonprofits that primarily employ and serve people of the same faith will be exempt. Religiously-affiliated employers who do not qualify for the exemption and are not currently offering contraceptive coverage may apply for transitional relief for a one-year period to give them time to determine how to comply with the rule.
Liberals always complain when the Church acts in the public square, tossing out the red herring “separation of church and state!”
But they are perfectly happy to have the state compel the church to do what they want the church (and people of faith) to do.
More from me soon, but there you have it.
UPDATE: Michael Sean Winters, who I have deeply disagreed with in the past, posts his reaction to the news — calling it much more than a disaster:
One sentence in the statement from HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius stands out: “The administration remains fully committed to its partnerships with faith-based organizations, which promote healthy communities and serve the common good.”
What can those words “fully committed” possibly mean? They have punched Sr. Carol Keehan and Fr. Jenkins and many other Catholics who have taken shots for this Administration in the nose. They have jumped over the First Amendment to coerce religious organizations to do something we find morally objectionable. They have given people who loved the Affordable Care Act reason for pause, great pause. They have given the Republicans a huge battering ram with which to beat swing voting Catholics over the head.
I say “they,” but the full responsibility for this decision rests with the President. NCR has learned that the President called Cardinal-designate Timothy Dolan, president of the U.S. bishops’ conference, this morning to tell him the news. Wouldn’t you have liked to be on an extension to listen in on that conversation. The president looked Dolan in the eye in November and said he would be pleased with his decision. I am guessing that Dolan is not pleased. He is not alone.
Winters is right that this decision is a huge blow to liberal Catholics who have tried to cover for Obama. But Winters is wrong that the President’s decision comes as any sort of surprise. Of course Obama would throw his liberal Catholics supporters under the bus to please his leftist secular supporters. Obama’s wedding with liberal Catholics has always been one of convenience and he just filed the divorce papers. I therefore find it hard to sympathize with liberal Catholics who are shocked by this decision, because I’ve been warning for years that their relationship with Obama was bound to end in heartbreak.
I do, however, respect Winters for being right to stand up for religious liberty and criticize a President he supported as a candidate. For that I applaud him and I hope that more liberal Catholics acknowledge how foolish they have been to support Obama’s anti-Catholic policies. I urge them to join me and other Catholics in common cause to begin to address this deplorable state of affairs.
UPDATE 2: Cardinal-designate Timothy Dolan, in a video posted (on the right side) of the USCCB website, calls on Catholics to contact the Administration and demand they rescind this anti-religious liberty, anti-first amendment mandate. Read the full press release just sent out by the USCCB here.
UPDATE 3: Grace-Marie Turner writes at NRO’s The Corner blog:
This is another assault on the Constitution and the First Amendment’s guarantee of religious liberty. The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) called the federal regulation an “unprecedented threat to individual and institutional religious freedom.”
The Obamacare regulation gives faith-based institutions, like Catholic universities and hospitals, the choice of violating the fundamental tenets of their faith by covering the federally mandated coverage in their employee health plans, or of dropping health insurance for their employees — in which case they would be fined for violating the employer mandate.
…As I told Kathryn Lopez for a recent article, there is a war on religion from the Left, and it is very dangerous to the institutions that make our civil society function.
The Catholic Church historically has been a vital part of the safety net — providing aid for the poor, care for the sick, shelter and food for the homeless, and care for mothers in need, as a few examples.
The health-care law threatens to tear gaping holes in that safety net by forcing Catholic health plans to cover contraception, by denying funds to Catholic adoption agencies, and ultimately by forcing taxpayers — including Catholics — to fund abortion.
This is dangerous to the very fabric of our society. It’s a crucial reason why the whole health law, with its centralized control over health-care decisions, must not stand.
For the record, I am not a Catholic. I believe that life begins at conception, rather than being present in the male “seed,” and I do not have any issues with birth control that merely prevent a birth rather than actually killing a child (such as RU 486 – which also can kill the mother).
But the Catholic Church has consistently held over the centuries that any form of birth control is tantamount to abortion.
Barack Obama, I have said over and over again, is a genuinely evil man. This is God damn America and it will continue to be God damn America until the American people wise up and utterly reject him.
This is Barack Obama’s version of Sophie’s Choice: He is trying for force the Catholic Church to either begin performing what it considers murder or to stop helping the poor and the sick.
How on earth is it going to help society to drive the Catholic Church out of helping people???
Obama doesn’t give a damn about the sick and the poor; in fact, he hopes there will be more sick and poor desperate people who must come groveling to him and bow down to his toxic agenda.
This is the most cynical form of naked partisan politik I have ever seen: Obama wants to destroy all forms of health care that he can’t directly control so that there will be nothing left but his precious ObamaCare.
Rep. John Shimkus (R-IL) pins down HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius on one of the most controversial budget tricks in ObamaCare — the $500 billion cut in Medicare that supposedly goes for both cost control and to fund other parts of the program. Medicare’s own actuary blew the whistle on this sleight of hand in August of last year, which makes this admission by Sebelius a no-brainer:
In her first appearance before the House Energy and Commerce Health Subcommittee since the health-care law passed, Kathleen Sebelius responded to a line of questioning by Republican Rep. John Shimkus of Illinois about whether $500 billion in Medicare cuts were used to sustain the program or pay for the law.
“There is an issue here on the budget because your own actuary has said you can’t double-count,” said Shimkus. “You can’t count — they’re attacking Medicare on the CR when their bill, your law, cut $500 billion from Medicare.”
He continued: “Then you’re also using the same $500 billion to what? Say your funding health care. Your own actuary says you can’t do both. […] What’s the $500 billion in cuts for? Preserving Medicare or funding the health-care law?
Sebelius’ reply? “Both.”
The actuary’s report made this crystal clear last summer:
Bad though all of this is, none of it is actually the worst gimmick in the official report’s advertised improvement in Medicare solvency. That involves the double-counting of Medicare savings. Earlier this year, Congress passed a health care bill containing various new Medicare taxes and constraints on program expenditures. Such savings are assumed in the official report to extend the solvency of Medicare. But Congress chose instead to spend the savings on a new health care entitlement.
The Medicare actuary wrote a memorandum on April 22 of this year calling attention to this “double-counting.” “In practice,” he stated, “the improved Part A financing cannot simultaneously be used to finance other Federal outlays (such as the coverage expansions under the PPACA) and to extend the trust fund, despite the appearance of this result from the respective accounting conventions.”
In other words, money can only be used once. Since the Medicare savings is being spent elsewhere on expanded health care coverage, it is not really being employed to extend Medicare solvency. To claim an improvement in Medicare financing is to mislead about the effects of recent legislation.
Even apart from the double counting, the actuary had little faith in ObamaCare’s ability to deliver the savings claimed by Sebelius in this clip, also noted last summer:
“(T)he financial projections shown in this report for Medicare do not represent a reasonable expectation for actual program operations in either the short range. . . or the long range. . . . I encourage readers to review the ‘illustrative alternative’ projections that are based on more sustainable assumptions for physician and other Medicare price updates.”
These remarkable words are found, in all places, in the “Statement of Actuarial Opinion” in the back of the 2010 annual Medicare Trustees’ Report.
It is difficult to overstate how unusual this development is. The normal process with the annual Trustees’ Reports is for the Trustees to develop and publish the best available projections for the future finances of Social Security and Medicare. The respective Social Security and Medicare actuaries then sign a pro forma blessing of those projections, which is tacked to the back of the report when released to the public.
This year, the Medicare Chief Actuary clearly did not feel he could in good conscience sign such a declaration.
The admission here should prompt the House to demand a new financial accounting of ObamaCare from the CBO in the context of current data, rather than with the rosy scenarios painted by Democrats that ignored both the “doc fix” they later pushed through Congress and the results of this double-counting.
You can either set this half trillion dollars aside to reduce the national debt, or you can spend it on another entitlement program. You cannot possibly do both. Unless you’re a Democrat. Then you can take a dollar and buy your favorite candy bar, and simultaneously take that very same dollar and put it in your piggy bank. Because you are just that divorced from reality.
At this point, America will probably fiscally implode and go the way of the Dodo bird as it is. But if ObamaCare manages to survive the fact that it is a blatantly unconstitutional powergrab and is fully implemeted, this country is truly doomed.
The 2,733 pages of the bill are basically an “outline” of the program, and knowledgeable people expect that when all is said and done, the rules and regulations will be over 200,000 pages.
Did you know that this new law will create 159 NEW boards, commissions, and other government bureaucracies? Do you know of ANY government administration that is efficient? Is there any reason to believe these new bureaus will be any more caring or competent than the ones we already have? (The actual bill — all 2,490 pages of it — can be viewed here: H.R. 3590)
Grant program for consumer assistance offices (Section 1002, p. 37)
Grant program for states to monitor premium increases (Section 1003, p. 42)
Committee to review administrative simplification standards (Section 1104, p. 71)
Demonstration program for state wellness programs (Section 1201, p. 93)
Grant program to establish state Exchanges (Section 1311(a), p. 130)
State American Health Benefit Exchanges (Section 1311(b), p. 131)
Exchange grants to establish consumer navigator programs (Section 1311(i), p. 150)
Grant program for state cooperatives (Section 1322, p. 169)
Advisory board for state cooperatives (Section 1322(b)(3), p. 173)
Private purchasing council for state cooperatives (Section 1322(d), p. 177)
State basic health plan programs (Section 1331, p. 201)
State-based reinsurance program (Section 1341, p. 226)
Program of risk corridors for individual and small group markets (Section 1342, p. 233)
Program to determine eligibility for Exchange participation (Section 1411, p. 267)
Program for advance determination of tax credit eligibility (Section 1412, p. 288)
Grant program to implement health IT enrollment standards (Section 1561, p. 370)
Federal Coordinated Health Care Office for dual eligible beneficiaries (Section 2602, p. 512)
Medicaid quality measurement program (Section 2701, p. 518)
Medicaid health home program for people with chronic conditions, and grants for planning same (Section 2703, p. 524)
Medicaid demonstration project to evaluate bundled payments (Section 2704, p. 532)
Medicaid demonstration project for global payment system (Section 2705, p. 536)
Medicaid demonstration project for accountable care organizations (Section 2706, p. 538)
Medicaid demonstration project for emergency psychiatric care (Section 2707, p. 540)
Grant program for delivery of services to individuals with postpartum depression (Section 2952(b), p. 591)
State allotments for grants to promote personal responsibility education programs (Section 2953, p. 596)
Medicare value-based purchasing program (Section 3001(a), p. 613)
Medicare value-based purchasing demonstration program for critical access hospitals (Section 3001(b), p. 637)
Medicare value-based purchasing program for skilled nursing facilities (Section 3006(a), p. 666)
Medicare value-based purchasing program for home health agencies (Section 3006(b), p. 668)
Interagency Working Group on Health Care Quality (Section 3012, p. 688)
Grant program to develop health care quality measures (Section 3013, p. 693)
Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (Section 3021, p. 712)
Medicare shared savings program (Section 3022, p. 728)
Medicare pilot program on payment bundling (Section 3023, p. 739)
Independence at home medical practice demonstration program (Section 3024, p. 752)
Program for use of patient safety organizations to reduce hospital readmission rates (Section 3025(b), p. 775)
Community-based care transitions program (Section 3026, p. 776)
Demonstration project for payment of complex diagnostic laboratory tests (Section 3113, p. 800)
Medicare hospice concurrent care demonstration project (Section 3140, p. 850)
Independent Payment Advisory Board (Section 3403, p. 982)
Consumer Advisory Council for Independent Payment Advisory Board (Section 3403, p. 1027)
Grant program for technical assistance to providers implementing health quality practices (Section 3501, p. 1043)
Grant program to establish interdisciplinary health teams (Section 3502, p. 1048)
Grant program to implement medication therapy management (Section 3503, p. 1055)
Grant program to support emergency care pilot programs (Section 3504, p. 1061)
Grant program to promote universal access to trauma services (Section 3505(b), p. 1081)
Grant program to develop and promote shared decision-making aids (Section 3506, p. 1088)
Grant program to support implementation of shared decision-making (Section 3506, p. 1091)
Grant program to integrate quality improvement in clinical education (Section 3508, p. 1095)
Health and Human Services Coordinating Committee on Women’s Health (Section 3509(a), p. 1098)
Centers for Disease Control Office of Women’s Health (Section 3509(b), p. 1102)
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Office of Women’s Health (Section 3509(e), p. 1105)
Health Resources and Services Administration Office of Women’s Health (Section 3509(f), p. 1106)
Food and Drug Administration Office of Women’s Health (Section 3509(g), p. 1109)
National Prevention, Health Promotion, and Public Health Council (Section 4001, p. 1114)
Advisory Group on Prevention, Health Promotion, and Integrative and Public Health (Section 4001(f), p. 1117)
Prevention and Public Health Fund (Section 4002, p. 1121)
Community Preventive Services Task Force (Section 4003(b), p. 1126)
Grant program to support school-based health centers (Section 4101, p. 1135)
Grant program to promote research-based dental caries disease management (Section 4102, p. 1147)
Grant program for States to prevent chronic disease in Medicaid beneficiaries (Section 4108, p. 1174)
Community transformation grants (Section 4201, p. 1182)
Grant program to provide public health interventions (Section 4202, p. 1188)
Demonstration program of grants to improve child immunization rates (Section 4204(b), p. 1200)
Pilot program for risk-factor assessments provided through community health centers (Section 4206, p. 1215)
Grant program to increase epidemiology and laboratory capacity (Section 4304, p. 1233)
Interagency Pain Research Coordinating Committee (Section 4305, p. 1238)
National Health Care Workforce Commission (Section 5101, p. 1256)
Grant program to plan health care workforce development activities (Section 5102(c), p. 1275)
Grant program to implement health care workforce development activities (Section 5102(d), p. 1279)
Pediatric specialty loan repayment program (Section 5203, p. 1295)
Public Health Workforce Loan Repayment Program (Section 5204, p. 1300)
Allied Health Loan Forgiveness Program (Section 5205, p. 1305)
Grant program to provide mid-career training for health professionals (Section 5206, p. 1307)
Grant program to fund nurse-managed health clinics (Section 5208, p. 1310)
Grant program to support primary care training programs (Section 5301, p. 1315)
Grant program to fund training for direct care workers (Section 5302, p. 1322)
Grant program to develop dental training programs (Section 5303, p. 1325)
Demonstration program to increase access to dental health care in underserved communities (Section 5304, p. 1331)
Grant program to promote geriatric education centers (Section 5305, p. 1334)
Grant program to promote health professionals entering geriatrics (Section 5305, p. 1339)
Grant program to promote training in mental and behavioral health (Section 5306, p. 1344)
Grant program to promote nurse retention programs (Section 5309, p. 1354)
Student loan forgiveness for nursing school faculty (Section 5311(b), p. 1360)
Grant program to promote positive health behaviors and outcomes (Section 5313, p. 1364)
Public Health Sciences Track for medical students (Section 5315, p. 1372)
Primary Care Extension Program to educate providers (Section 5405, p. 1404)
Grant program for demonstration projects to address health workforce shortage needs (Section 5507, p. 1442)
Grant program for demonstration projects to develop training programs for home health aides (Section 5507, p. 1447)
Grant program to establish new primary care residency programs (Section 5508(a), p. 1458)
Program of payments to teaching health centers that sponsor medical residency training (Section 5508(c), p. 1462)
Graduate nurse education demonstration program (Section 5509, p. 1472)
Grant program to establish demonstration projects for community-based mental health settings (Section 5604, p. 1486)
Commission on Key National Indicators (Section 5605, p. 1489)
Quality assurance and performance improvement program for skilled nursing facilities (Section 6102, p. 1554)
Special focus facility program for skilled nursing facilities (Section 6103(a)(3), p. 1561)
Special focus facility program for nursing facilities (Section 6103(b)(3), p. 1568)
National independent monitor pilot program for skilled nursing facilities and nursing facilities (Section 6112, p. 1589)
Demonstration projects for nursing facilities involved in the culture change movement (Section 6114, p. 1597)
Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (Section 6301, p. 1619)
Standing methodology committee for Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (Section 6301, p. 1629)
Board of Governors for Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (Section 6301, p. 1638)
Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Trust Fund (Section 6301(e), p. 1656)
Elder Justice Coordinating Council (Section 6703, p. 1773)
Advisory Board on Elder Abuse, Neglect, and Exploitation (Section 6703, p. 1776)
Grant program to create elder abuse forensic centers (Section 6703, p. 1783)
Grant program to promote continuing education for long-term care staffers (Section 6703, p. 1787)
Grant program to improve management practices and training (Section 6703, p. 1788)
Grant program to subsidize costs of electronic health records (Section 6703, p. 1791)
Grant program to promote adult protective services (Section 6703, p. 1796)
Grant program to conduct elder abuse detection and prevention (Section 6703, p. 1798)
Grant program to support long-term care ombudsmen (Section 6703, p. 1800)
National Training Institute for long-term care surveyors (Section 6703, p. 1806)
Grant program to fund State surveys of long-term care residences (Section 6703, p. 1809)
CLASS Independence Fund (Section 8002, p. 1926)
CLASS Independence Fund Board of Trustees (Section 8002, p. 1927)
CLASS Independence Advisory Council (Section 8002, p. 1931)
Personal Care Attendants Workforce Advisory Panel (Section 8002(c), p. 1938)
Multi-state health plans offered by Office of Personnel Management (Section 10104(p), p. 2086)
Advisory board for multi-state health plans (Section 10104(p), p. 2094)
Pregnancy Assistance Fund (Section 10212, p. 2164)
Value-based purchasing program for ambulatory surgical centers (Section 10301, p. 2176)
Demonstration project for payment adjustments to home health services (Section 10315, p. 2200)
Pilot program for care of individuals in environmental emergency declaration areas (Section 10323, p. 2223)
Grant program to screen at-risk individuals for environmental health conditions (Section 10323(b), p. 2231)
Pilot programs to implement value-based purchasing (Section 10326, p. 2242)
Grant program to support community-based collaborative care networks (Section 10333, p. 2265)
Centers for Disease Control Office of Minority Health (Section 10334, p. 2272)
Health Resources and Services Administration Office of Minority Health (Section 10334, p. 2272)
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration Office of Minority Health (Section 10334, p. 2272)
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Office of Minority Health (Section 10334, p. 2272)
Food and Drug Administration Office of Minority Health (Section 10334, p. 2272)
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Office of Minority Health (Section 10334, p. 2272)
Grant program to promote small business wellness programs (Section 10408, p. 2285)
Cures Acceleration Network (Section 10409, p. 2289)
Cures Acceleration Network Review Board (Section 10409, p. 2291)
Grant program for Cures Acceleration Network (Section 10409, p. 2297)
Grant program to promote centers of excellence for depression (Section 10410, p. 2304)
Advisory committee for young women’s breast health awareness education campaign (Section 10413, p. 2322)
Grant program to provide assistance to provide information to young women with breast cancer (Section 10413, p. 2326)
Interagency Access to Health Care in Alaska Task Force (Section 10501, p. 2329)
Grant program to train nurse practitioners as primary care providers (Section 10501(e), p. 2332)
Grant program for community-based diabetes prevention (Section 10501(g), p. 2337)
Grant program for providers who treat a high percentage of medically underserved populations (Section 10501(k), p. 2343)
Grant program to recruit students to practice in underserved communities (Section 10501(l), p. 2344)
Community Health Center Fund (Section 10503, p. 2355)
Demonstration project to provide access to health care for the uninsured at reduced fees (Section 10504, p. 2357)
Demonstration program to explore alternatives to tort litigation (Section 10607, p. 2369)
Indian Health demonstration program for chronic shortages of health professionals (S. 1790, Section 112, p. 24)*
Office of Indian Men’s Health (S. 1790, Section 136, p. 71)*
Indian Country modular component facilities demonstration program (S. 1790, Section 146, p. 108)*
Indian mobile health stations demonstration program (S. 1790, Section 147, p. 111)*
Office of Direct Service Tribes (S. 1790, Section 172, p. 151)*
Indian Health Service mental health technician training program (S. 1790, Section 181, p. 173)*
Indian Health Service program for treatment of child sexual abuse victims (S. 1790, Section 181, p. 192)*
Indian Health Service program for treatment of domestic violence and sexual abuse (S. 1790, Section 181, p. 194)*
Indian youth telemental health demonstration project (S. 1790, Section 181, p. 204)*
Indian youth life skills demonstration project (S. 1790, Section 181, p. 220)*
Indian Health Service Director of HIV/AIDS Prevention and Treatment (S. 1790, Section 199B, p. 258)*
*Section 10221, page 2173 of H.R. 3590 deems that S. 1790 shall be deemed as passed with certain amendments.