I don’t have any opinion about whether your health insurance plan should cover the cost of birth control or whether it should let you get the stuff with no co-pays.
If that’s important to you, then you ought to choose a provider who offers it (assuming it’s popular enough for someone to offer it). If it’s not important to you or if you’re opposed to birth control, you should choose a provider that doesn’t offer it — since the lack of that cost to the provider will lower your premium.
Simple, right? It’s the market making choices about what people value and are willing to pay for.
But that’s not the way it is when the coercive state is involved. The latest example came today when the Obama administration announced that starting in just under 18 months, insurance companies will be required to cover birth control. Further, the companies won’t be allowed to charge a co-pay. Even if it’s unprofitable, companies will be paying for birth control for any customer who wants it.
Little remains in me of the person I was when I married for lifetime
When you make your life choices, you also pick the consequences
Moral principle: What you do with your money is your business
Intellectual honesty mostly dead — but few partisans even care
If your own life is all messed up, lecture others about fixing theirs
If you’ve gotten on the wrong bus, nothing changes until you get off
For all my life, I’ve hidden anger in order to be ‘perfect’ to others
Best time to raise dragon-slayers is when dragons are everywhere