Family Planning - Republican advice to America's women: stop having sex
Economic Policy | Republicans
by Alan Bisbort | February 5, 2009 - 11:00am 
Last week, the Republicans rose up on their hind legs and stood, as one 
unanimous bloc, against affordable contraception for the nation's women. That's 
a sizeable group of potential voters for the GOP to permanently alienate, but 
far be it from me to offer any advice to a drowning party other than: toss it 
an anvil.

Specifically, Republicans objected to a provision in the federal stimulus bill 
that would have exempted states from the need to get time- and 
resource-consuming waivers for covering family planning under Medicaid. (The 
provision would not cover abortion, an entirely different issue.) Affordable 
contraception is a mainstream issue ignored during the dark years of GOP 
majority rule, and this sensible provision would have also saved taxpayers' 
money by preventing unwanted pregnancies and the burdens on dwindling social 
services that they portend. For every public dollar spent to provide family 
planning services, notes Planned Parenthood, states save $402 the following 
year in Medicaid funds — money that can be put to use on other pressing needs.

Women who need access to birth control but can't afford it out of pocket are, 
as it now stands, often out of luck. That's because the GOP has some warped 
notion about what constitutes proper sex protocol. Deep down, perhaps, they'd 
rather women not have sex at all or, if these "loose women" insist on having 
sex, they be forced to face the consequences on their own. However, in the real 
world where the rest of us live, support for affordable contraception is so 
overwhelming that opposing it is a "fringe" position.

And yet, instead of tossing these fringe-huggers an anvil, the Democrats tossed 
them a lifeline by removing the provision from the bill. Presumably, Democrats 
hoped they could get some votes via John McCain's mythical "reaching across the 
aisle." Alas, when it was time to vote on the stimulus bill — minus the 
Medicaid provision — the Republicans voted unanimously against it. What did the 
Democrats gain by placating a fringe group while alienating the vast majority 
of Americans? Absolutely nothing.

Memo to Democrats: Bipartisanship is a Joe Lieberman pipedream. Use the anvil 
next time.

As if on cue, another story unfolded last week that seemed to mirror the one 
above. That is, a California woman gave birth to octuplets. This was, at first, 
treated as a gee whiz, Ripley's-Believe-It-or-Not event. Eight kids. Wow. Who, 
other than Aldous Huxley, would have thought such assembly-line procreation was 
possible?

However, as the story gathered legs, a backlash ensued. To wit: the mother was 
unmarried and already had six children, all of whom were conceived by in vitro 
fertilization. Despite the fact that she had no husband and no means of support 
other than her extended family and the state's social services safety net, as 
tattered as it already is, fertility doctors implanted eight embryos inside 
her. This was, at best, a case of medical irresponsibility and, at worst, a 
blow to fertility medicine in general.

Why? Because the expensive and medically intensive birth of octuplets raises 
legitimate questions about the ethics of fertility medicine. It also calls into 
question the state's own laws. California law mandates that fertility 
treatments be covered by health insurance providers (Connecticut and 
Massachusetts have similar mandates). Thus, the costs of the octuplets' care 
will ultimately be passed along to other health care consumers in the form of 
higher premiums. According to the woman's distraught mother — the octuplets' 
grandmother, on whom the care of the eight children will largely fall — her 
daughter "has been obsessed with having children since she was a teenager."

Right, and I've been obsessed with Julie Christie since I was a teenager, but I 
still have to content myself with watching my DVD of McCabe and Mrs. Miller.


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