The best contraception is an IUD: Why I love having a coil
Felicity Morse: "
It also strikes me as bizarre that the coil or IUDs intrauterine devices would be lumped together with morning-after-pills. I use one, and having swallowed, slipped and stuck my way through most other forms of contraception, can recommend the coil. I’ve found them to be one of the most effective, symptomless and after the initial insertion, hassle-free, forms of contraception."
http://blogs.artvoice.com/avdaily/2014/07/01/hobby-lobby-the-corporation-cult-creeping-theocracy/
Hobby Lobby: The Corporation Cult & Creeping Theocracy
Hobby Lobby, however, is not a person and is not exercising a religion. It is a corporate entity – a legal fiction – that sells picture frames and scrapbooking supplies. It’s not a “small business”, because this craft store chain has 15,000 employees and over 550 stores nationwide. It’s a closely held corporation, meaning it has corporate status but its shares are not publicly traded. Its fictional corporate “personhood” enables Hobby Lobby to operate and enter into contracts while limiting shareholder liability. The owners of Hobby Lobby’s shares are all evangelical Christians, and they make much of that on the company’s website.
http://blogs.artvoice.com/avdaily/2014/07/01/hobby-lobby-the-corporation-cult-creeping-theocracy/
Your Boss and Your Womb: A Weird Marriage of Plutocracy and Theocracy
The Greens are less vague, stating simply that they are against abortion, and contrary to medical and legal definitions, they misidentify two types of I.U.D.s and two types of emergency contraception pills, such as those commonly prescribed for rape victims, as abortifacients. I.U.D.s are an old school technology that prevents sperm cells from reaching and fertilizing eggs. Technically, abstinence does the same thing, but without the fun and passion of sex, or the ire of religious fundamentalists.
http://artvoice.com/issues/v13n27/getting_a_grip#.U7Zf-T8JCpw.google_plusone_share
David Green’s idea of Christian principles apparently includes making medical decisions for his employees. What about the important beliefs of the employees? Some of them might want to use the morning-after pill in the event of a sexual assault. Others could choose to use the forbidden IUDs not as contraception, but to treat other medical conditions such as heavy periods, chronic pelvic pain, anemia and endometreosis. For those women, their actions are perfectly moral.
http://www.mycentraljersey.com/story/opinion/editorials/2014/07/03/hobby-lobby/12189891/
Tellingly, mainstream media coverage, overall, wasn’t much better than Fox News. This was how they didn’t get it right: “Dozens of companies, including Hobby Lobby, claim religious objections to covering some or all contraceptives. The methods and devices at issue before the Supreme Court were those the plaintiffs say can work after conception.” In fact,
the latest research suggests that IUDs and Plan B actually don’t work after conception. But even if they do, it’s important to remember that the scientific consensus clearly says that preventing a fertilized egg from implanting is not an abortion.
http://www.thenation.com/blog/180520/hobby-lobby-climate-change-how-media-enables-right-wings-politicization-science#
The majority of sexually active of women use contraception. The pill has the highest percentage of use, even above the male condom — which you don't need a prescription for. Even though birth control is more expensive and harder to access, four out of five women have used it. That should tell you prescribed contraception offers health benefits that condoms do not.
One of the biggest blows to women's health and reproductive freedom that came out of this ruling was how contraceptive use and family planning have been isolated from the rest of health care. Birth control has obtained a surreal status as "not just a health issue" or perhaps "a health issue that the pubic gets to weigh in on." Despite the fact that fertility and pregnancy are elements of an individual woman's health, the methods used to manage them are open to public debate and highly controversial.
http://www.nashvillescene.com/pitw/archives/2014/07/03/on-hobby-lobby-religious-freedom-and-sexism-in-health-care