1:36 pm - 02/23/2012
Washington — Georgetown University law student Sandra Fluke was given her chance to talk to Congress Thursday, even though lawmakers were on a break and just a few Democratic allies were there to cheer her on.
But what a difference a week makes.
Last Thursday the Republican-controlled House Oversight and Government Reform Committee rejected Democrats' request that Fluke testify on the Obama administration's policy requiring that employees of religion-affiliated institutions have access to health insurance that covers birth control.
This week she received almost rock-star treatment as the lone witness at an unofficial Democratic-sponsored hearing. While the rest of the Capitol was mostly empty, Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi, three other Democrats and dozens of mainly young women supporters crowded into a House office building room to applaud Fluke as she spoke of the importance of reproductive health care to women.
Prominently displayed by Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., was a photo of five religious leaders, all men and all appearing at the invitation of the Republican majority, testifying last week with Fluke visible in the background, sitting in the visitors' section.
Democrats pounced on that image of a hearing discussing contraceptive rights being dominated by men while the one person Democrats had asked to appear on the witness stand, a woman, was turned away. Pelosi, D-Calif., said they had since heard from 300,000 people urging that women's voices be heard on the issue.
"We almost ought to thank the chairman for the lack of judgment he had," in denying a seat to Fluke, Pelosi said.
Committee chairman Darrell Issa, R-Calif., had said at last week's hearing that the panel's focus was on whether the administration policy was a violation of religious freedom. He said at the time that Fluke, invited by Democrats in her capacity as former head of Georgetown Law Students for Reproductive Justice, was not qualified to speak on the religious rights question.
"I'm an American woman who uses contraceptives," Fluke said, when asked Thursday by Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., about her qualifications to speak on the issue.
The Health and Human Services Department ruled earlier this year that, under the new health care law, religious-affiliated institutions such as hospitals and universities must include free birth control coverage in their employee health plans.
That raised a storm of protests from Catholic leaders and other groups that disapprove of contraception on religious grounds. Two weeks ago President Barack Obama modified that policy so that insurance companies, and not the organization affiliated with a church, would pay for birth control coverage.
The religious leaders at last week's hearing said that Obama's concession was too little. Republicans in the House and Senate are pushing legislation to let insurance plans opt out of any mandate on contraception coverage if they have moral objections.
Fluke, a third-year law student, said that Georgetown Law, a Jesuit institution, does not provide contraception coverage in its student health plan and that contraception can cost a woman more than $3,000 during law school. She spoke of a friend who had an ovary removed because the insurance company wouldn't cover the prescription birth control she needed to stop the growth of cysts.
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Fluke was interviewed right after on MSNBC, they asked basically if it was the student's fault that they chose to attend a religious university that opposes birth control. She didn't blink and stated(to the best of my memory) "I chose the university that was the best for my education. Women should not have to choose between education and healthcare." Rock on. How horrible is congress that she had to speak during a break when everyone was gone.
But what a difference a week makes.
Last Thursday the Republican-controlled House Oversight and Government Reform Committee rejected Democrats' request that Fluke testify on the Obama administration's policy requiring that employees of religion-affiliated institutions have access to health insurance that covers birth control.
This week she received almost rock-star treatment as the lone witness at an unofficial Democratic-sponsored hearing. While the rest of the Capitol was mostly empty, Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi, three other Democrats and dozens of mainly young women supporters crowded into a House office building room to applaud Fluke as she spoke of the importance of reproductive health care to women.
Prominently displayed by Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., was a photo of five religious leaders, all men and all appearing at the invitation of the Republican majority, testifying last week with Fluke visible in the background, sitting in the visitors' section.
Democrats pounced on that image of a hearing discussing contraceptive rights being dominated by men while the one person Democrats had asked to appear on the witness stand, a woman, was turned away. Pelosi, D-Calif., said they had since heard from 300,000 people urging that women's voices be heard on the issue.
"We almost ought to thank the chairman for the lack of judgment he had," in denying a seat to Fluke, Pelosi said.
Committee chairman Darrell Issa, R-Calif., had said at last week's hearing that the panel's focus was on whether the administration policy was a violation of religious freedom. He said at the time that Fluke, invited by Democrats in her capacity as former head of Georgetown Law Students for Reproductive Justice, was not qualified to speak on the religious rights question.
"I'm an American woman who uses contraceptives," Fluke said, when asked Thursday by Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., about her qualifications to speak on the issue.
The Health and Human Services Department ruled earlier this year that, under the new health care law, religious-affiliated institutions such as hospitals and universities must include free birth control coverage in their employee health plans.
That raised a storm of protests from Catholic leaders and other groups that disapprove of contraception on religious grounds. Two weeks ago President Barack Obama modified that policy so that insurance companies, and not the organization affiliated with a church, would pay for birth control coverage.
The religious leaders at last week's hearing said that Obama's concession was too little. Republicans in the House and Senate are pushing legislation to let insurance plans opt out of any mandate on contraception coverage if they have moral objections.
Fluke, a third-year law student, said that Georgetown Law, a Jesuit institution, does not provide contraception coverage in its student health plan and that contraception can cost a woman more than $3,000 during law school. She spoke of a friend who had an ovary removed because the insurance company wouldn't cover the prescription birth control she needed to stop the growth of cysts.
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source
Fluke was interviewed right after on MSNBC, they asked basically if it was the student's fault that they chose to attend a religious university that opposes birth control. She didn't blink and stated(to the best of my memory) "I chose the university that was the best for my education. Women should not have to choose between education and healthcare." Rock on. How horrible is congress that she had to speak during a break when everyone was gone.
OMG that is so not okay!
Also, I got an email today from Nancy Pelosi that the GOP let her testify, but refused to allow it to be recorded.
Today, Democrats held a hearing on women’s health with Sandra Fluke, the Georgetown law student that Republicans refused to let testify last week at an all male birth control coverage panel.
In yet another appalling move, Republicans refused to let Congressional cameras in to tape Sandra’s testimony today.
There are just days left before the February FEC reporting deadline, the first since Republicans held their disgraceful women’s health hearing.
The Republican War on Women must come to an end.
We must send a loud and clear message to Republicans that we are standing strong and united. Join the fight:
http://dccc.org/Stop-the-War-On-Wom
Thank you,
Nancy Pelosi
I didn't include the sections requesting money.
OMG that is so not okay!
That is fucked up. Even when it has nothing to do with shameful acts of sexual contact, it is still ok that women suffer because they don't really matter. PCOS sufferers are have HIGHLY increased dangers in pregnancy and infertility so they really can't be expected to have ten babies and stay in the kitchen anyways.
I'm totally making "Get out of my ovaries" icons.
WOW
Thankfully, I managed to change my lifestyle so I no longer need medication to control the cysts because fucking a this shit is expensive.
I just feel like it's really strange that it's only liberal women who are really putting up any sort of fight about this. Surely there are Republican women who use BC for methods other than contraception, or just don't want to be a parent (either right now or in the future).
It's so sad.
And, I'm sure there are unmarried Republican women who are sexually active too. I mean, I know some. :/
Those married Republican women should know that, even if their husbands don't.
I guess I sounded less cynical than I meant to be--I just get this impression that a good deal of the women legislators voting for this stuff are either always party line, or they view contraception as something other women use... or that they could do without it if they had to. The truth is probably something stranger, though.
It's just been a particularly bad couple of months in regards to religious conservatives of my acquaintance. One very close friend was off of birth control thanks to a doctor's recommendation that she 'couldn't possibly get pregnant' while being treated for something else, and now has a baby as a result--and she's applauding our alma mater college for 'taking a stand' against having to provide contraception for their employees. I KNOW she used contraception, and that she's upset that her doctor was wrong, but she still wants to take that choice away to some extent, and it just mystifies me.
I can't begin to understand.
I've been on one form of birth control medication or another since I was 16, mainly to treat painful periods, menstruation-related anaemia, and endometriosis. I was taking the combined pill up until a year ago, at which time I switched to the Depo injection on my doctor's advice - this essentially stopped my periods. Completely. As an asexual and someone who can't have kids even if I were sexual, the contraceptive effects are of no consequence to me whatsoever. What is of consequence is that I'm not spending one week in every four needing two and three times the amount of pain medication, or having to crawl or stumble to the bathroom.
I wouldn't wish how I used to feel every month on my worst enemy - in so much pain I couldn't stand up straight, feeling constantly weak, fatigued and nauseous - but I would like to see how some of these men who think it is their place to decide how every uterus of every woman should be run would feel if they had to deal with the above every fourth week for a year.
She spoke of a friend who had an ovary removed because the insurance company wouldn't cover the prescription birth control she needed to stop the growth of cysts.
Fucking disgusting. *shakes head*
Fuck 'em.
Exactly. They want to give insurance companies the opt-out option for "religious freedoms". Meaning it would be VERY easy for any insurance company to say they aren't covering it, therefore depriving many people of the medication who can't afford it otherwise. Obviously they have nothing better to do with their time... other than take money from insurance lobbyists.