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Gwen
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So here is the question...

 

Why does Hobby Lobby refuse to provide the Mirena IUD and the Paragard IUD as well as the morning after pills under their insurance?

 

From The Atlantic magazine (http://theatln.tc/V7MKLL):

 

"This case centers around specific religious objections to contraceptives that prevent an egg from implanting in a woman’s uterus, which plaintiffs believe are tantamount to abortion. Out of the 20 Food and Drug Adminstration-approved birth control methods, the two companies involved in the case—Hobby Lobby and Conestoga Wood—object to four: two kinds of emergency contraceptive or “morning after” pills, and two types of intrauterine devices, or IUDs."

 

So, that brings up an interesting question.  Does birth control that prevents a fertizlied egg from implanting and growing equate to abortion, or does the breath of life happen somewhere down the road?

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