No, the issue is whether a company can dictate the owner's religious beliefs to his employees.
You are correct. It's just Lynah being Lynah. Anything to do with religion he gets all bent about.What case is that? I thought that the ruling today was whether the owners of closely-held companies had the right not to be forced to act against their religious beliefs? There is nothing in that case at all about the owners of a company dictating anything to his employees, nothing at all. The owner of the company even agreed to pay for contraceptives for his employees. What is so objectionable about that?
Most states will say you vote on it. Same way you decide other corporate action.How does a corporation have religious beliefs?
First, the decision only applies to closely held corporations, not behemoths like GM.I think people tend to blow the impact of these court cases way out of proportion, but what essentually has now happened is every instance of an employer raising a religious exemption just became a court case. Keeps the SCOTUS busy I suppose, but this has also maginalized the mostly Southern part of the country from everywhere else as companies providing contraception has strong support amongst voters. Not sure how you run nationally on an anti-contraception platform (which supporting this decision will be viewed as).
How does a corporation have religious beliefs? Inquiring minds want to know!
Most states will say you vote on it. Same way you decide other corporate action.
Well, you might start by actually reading what was written!
In a very narrowly-limiting ruling, the OWNERS of CLOSELY-HELD companies had their First Amendment right affirmed today: the government cannot compel the OWNERS of a CLOSELY-HELD COMPANY to act contrary to their religious beliefs.
Nothing whatsoever to do with "corporations" at all in that sentence, Mr. Inquiring Mind.
Well, you might start by actually reading what was written!
In a very narrowly-limiting ruling, the OWNERS of CLOSELY-HELD companies had their First Amendment right affirmed today: the government cannot compel the OWNERS of a CLOSELY-HELD COMPANY to act contrary to their religious beliefs.
Nothing whatsoever to do with "corporations" at all in that sentence, Mr. Inquiring Mind.
If there was any chance this decision moved us closer to just a single payer system, I'd say it was a great decision.Hobby Lobby is a corporation. A closely held one, but a corporation nonetheless. Hence the "Inc." in its name.
Kennedy's concurrence should give you pause. He essentially says single payer could be less restrictive than the current system. He pretty much implies that the government will be providing contraception to women working for hobby lobby just as it does for religious non-profits, which is why hobby lobby won today. If it couldn't, hobby lobby would've lost his vote and the case because there would be no less restrictive means of accomplishing the government's compelling interest in women's health.
So congratulations, your taxes will now be covering birth control for thousands of women. I'm sure you're thrilled to be subsidizing Hobby Lobby due to it's owner's religion.