Court Sides With Obama Administration Against Mennonite-owned Firm
Siding with the Obama administration, the United States Court of
Appeals for the Third Circuit has refused to issue an injunction against
the HHS mandate in a lawsuit filed by Conestoga Wood Specialties Corp.
and its Mennonite owners. In its 2-1 decision, the appeals court ruled
that the lawsuit had little chance of success.
The firm, which makes cabinets and employs 950, faces fines of $95,000
per day if it is not purchase insurance that covers contraception,
sterilizations, and abortifacients, which the firm’s owners believe are
“sinful and immoral.”
“For-profit corporate entities, unlike religious non-profit
organizations, do not — and cannot — legally claim a right to exercise
or establish a corporate religion under the First Amendment,” wrote
Judge Leonard Garth, a 91-year-old Nixon appointee. Judge Garth was
joined in the 2-1 decision by Judge Marjorie Rendell, a Clinton
appointee who until recently was wife of the governor of Pennsylvania.
In his dissenting opinion, Judge Kent Jordan, an appointee of the first President Bush, wrote:
The government does not contend that the regulations
at issue are anything less than anathema to the Hahns because of those
deeply held religious beliefs. Nor does it take issue with the Hahns’
assertion that, unless they submit to the offending regulations,
Conestoga will be fined on a scale that will rapidly destroy the
business and the 950 jobs that go with it. Finally, the government does
not argue that the choice being pressed upon Conestoga and the Hahns –
namely, to pay for what those parties view as life-destroying drugs and
procedures or to watch their business be destroyed by government fines –
is somehow merely theoretical …
The harm threatened here is
great … If government action presents such a threat, it is no answer to
cite, as the government does, a litany of laudatory things that the
government may also be doing at the same time. The government is at
pains to point out, for example, that the “preventive health services
provisions [of the ACA] require coverage of an array of recommended
services including immunizations, blood pressure screening, mammograms,
cervical cancer screening, and cholesterol screening.”
The
question posed by the Hahns and Conestoga, however, is not whether
mammograms or screening for high cholesterol or cervical cancer are
valuable health services. The question is not even whether the
abortifacient drugs and sterilization procedures that they view as
life-destroying and therefore impossible to support can rightly be
viewed by other people as praiseworthy. The Hahns and Conestoga pose a
very different and precise question: they turn to their government and
ask, can you rightly make us pay for something poisonous to our
religious beliefs or face the destruction of our business. It evidently
matters not one whit to them how healthful the banquet they are told to
buy may otherwise be, if the menu contains a toxic item too. “There’s
just one fatal dish,” is non-responsive to their point, which is that
their religious liberty is directly threatened by the government’s
edict.
Obama keeps saying he is for the working man; however, he seems to be destroying small businesses in our country with his edicts forcing people with religious convictions to choose between their beliefs and their businesses.
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