“Religious Freedom” and the Conservative Quest for Absolute Truth
The religious right is using the contraception controversy to shore up the walls of an ideological fortress.
By Ira Chernus
February 21, 2012
When the Obama administration declared that employees of Catholic institutions must have contraception covered in their health plans (before the presidents deft backtracking compromise), one group of religious Americans stood firmly opposed to Obamas original position.
No, it wasnt Catholics. Despite the bishops howls of protest, poll after poll showed Catholics supporting the administrations new rule. The opposition came from white evangelical Protestants, who stood against Obama by a whopping margin of 56 to 38.
Protestants take a stronger stand than Catholics against birth control? Curious, to say the least.
Rachel Maddow explains it by suggesting that birth control isnt really the issue here. Its just another convenient excuselike controversies over Planned Parenthood and the morning-after pillfor conservatives to tar Obama as the commander-in-chief of a war on religion. The right has picked a fight on this issue, says Maddow, because religiosity is a convenient partisan cudgel to use against Democrats in an election year.
http://www.religiondispatches.org/archive/sexandgender/5689/%E2%80%9Creligious_freedom%E2%80%9D_and_the_conservative_quest_for_absolute_truth