Technoviking said:
Sure, why not? I mean, people also cheat on their taxes too, so why bother? I mean, people are just going to cheat anyway...
There's a reason Revenue Canada doesn't chase tax cheats except big fish. It's not worth it. They came after me for a full accounting of moving expenses last year, presumably thinking I'd claimed an excessive amount and they'd get more money out of me. I don't know how much civil service time was wasted, but it turned out that I'd estimated some costs conservatively, and when pushed to be detailed, they owed me a couple hundred bucks.
Technoviking said:
And why maintain speed limits? I mean, people are going to speed anyway....
Similarly, cops don't chase people doing a couple of km/h over the limit.
Technoviking said:
So, let me get this straight, your argument is that "people are going to do it anyway, so why bother?" The only nonsense here is your illogical argument structure. And I suspect that not "all" doctors will make up whatever excuse to fit the bill. Sure, some will, I'm not living in some fantasy world. And having a 15 year old hormonal daughter, and having been a teenage boy myself, I'm fairly confident that I'm not going to stop her from "doing it". That doesn't mean I'm going to throw up my hands, buy her a motel room, pay for the rubbers, and even drive over her boyfriend for her.
My argument is that most people use birth control in some form, and most people see that it's beneficial to society to see that it's readily available - that is - covered by insurance. Before I deployed, we shifted around my health insurance benefits from work to save me paying premiums for something I didn't need and wasn't using. In the interval, I had to pick up a month's supply of pills for my wife. $50 or so without coverage. They're something like $4 normally. To someone who's living paycheque to paycheque - or students - or whomever, that's a big expense potentially. So yes, I'd expect that most doctors, realizing that the benefit is substantial would facilitate getting them covered, but the more logical position is to just make sure they're covered, which insurers have no problem with because the cost is negligible in comparison to the alternative.
I don't have a daughter, so I can't speak from first hand experience, but if I did, I'd absolutely make sure she was on the pill if that was her choice, and had access to condoms etc, because that's far better than the alternative. And I'd be quite happy if my insurance covered it. I won't presume to speak for you, but if you want to shell out lots more money on account of principle, well, that is your choice. I'd rather accept that humans will do what humans will do, and it's better to be open about it. When it comes to insurance coverage, I'd just rather say "hey, you know what, people use this stuff, and there's a societal benefit to it, so maybe we don't start making a production about it." I suspect a majority of American voters would feel the same way - as well as Canadians.