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Friday, January 11, 2013

Virginia's AG Cuccinelli says protesting Obamacare is enough to protest and risk going to jail over.

Let me see, Wisconsinites protesting a wild and reckless authoritarian Republican takeover of our state while repealing worker rights was an outrageous tantrum, with threats of union thuggery, arrests and an amazing waste of taxpayer money providing security.

Yet it’s noble to commit these same acts if you’re a Republican. Kinda thought they had a different set of rules.
Newsmax: Virginia’s attorney general Ken Cuccinelli said in an interview Thursday that defying the “tyranny” that is the contraception mandate in Obamacare is important enough to protest and risk going to jail over.

Cuccinelli went on to say that the requirement for health insurers to cover most forms of contraceptives for their customers is an attack on the Roman Catholic Church, which demands civil disobedience. 

The suggestion that citizens break the law because they consider it to be an attack on their religious beliefs — Cuccinelli is Catholic, and has said as much — outraged not only pro-choice advocates, but Democrats as well. "For Virginia's chief legal officer to suggest that citizens break the law is not only reckless, it's dangerous," Democratic state Sen. Mark Herring told Fox News.

1 comment:

  1. Here's the law, its being misapplied, thats the crime.

    One Hundred Eleventh Congress
    of the
    United States of America
    AT THE SECOND SESSION
    Begun and held at the City of Washington on Tuesday,
    the fifth day of January, two thousand and ten
    An Act
    Entitled The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.
    Public law 111-148
    SEC. 1555 @42 U.S.C. 18115. FREEDOM NOT TO PARTICIPATE IN FEDERAL
    HEALTH INSURANCE PROGRAMS.
    No individual, company, business, nonprofit entity, or health
    insurance issuer offering group or individual health insurance coverage
    shall be required to participate in any Federal health insurance
    program created under this Act (or any amendments made
    by this Act), or in any Federal health insurance program expanded
    by this Act (or any such amendments), and there shall be no
    penalty or fine imposed upon any such issuer for choosing not
    to participate in such programs.

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