Supreme Court Gives Obamacare Opponents Biggest Legal Victory Yet

Moments ago the US Supreme Court – the same Supreme Court which two years ago upheld Obamacare but as a tax, something the administration has since sternly denied – dealt Obamacare its biggest legal blow to date, and alternatively handing Obamacare opponents their largest court victory yet, when in a 5-4 vote SCOTUS ruled that business owners can object on religious grounds to a provision of President Barack Obama’s healthcare law that requires closely held private companies to provide health insurance that covers birth control. 

As Reuters notes, the justices ruled for the first time that for-profit companies can make claims under a 1993 federal law called the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA). One of the two cases was brought by arts-and-crafts retailer Hobby Lobby Stores Ltd, which is owned and operated by David and Barbara Green and their children, who are evangelical Christians. The other case was brought by Norman and Elizabeth Hahn, Mennonites who own Conestoga Wood Specialties Corp in Pennsylvania.  The justices said that such companies can seek an exemption from the so-called birth control mandate. The decision, which applies only to companies owned by a small number of individuals, means employees of those companies will have to obtain certain forms of birth control from other sources.

As expected, the Supreme Court, which is nothing but a gaggle of political activists, voted along ideological lines. As Reuters reports, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg wrote a dissenting opinion on behalf of the liberal wing of the court.

“In a decision of startling breadth, the court holds that commercial enterprises, including corporations, along with partnerships and sole proprietorships, can opt out of any law … they judge incompatible with their sincerely held religious beliefs,” she wrote.

Americans, clearly having nothing better to worry about, promptly made their way to the SCOTUS building:

Hundreds of demonstrators on both side of one of the most contentious cases of the Supreme Court term converged on the court building, wearing costumes, chanting and carrying signs. Some demonstrators chanted, “Keep your boardroom out of my bedroom” and “Separate church and state, women must decide their fate.” Signs carried by demonstrators offered contrasting views: “Obamacare – religious liberty First Amendment outlawed,” “I am the pro-life generation,” and “Birth control not my boss’s business.” One man dressed up as a copy of the Bible, brandishing a sign saying, “Use me not for your bigotry.”

But while the impact on US healthcare from this ruling will be modest, the real consequence will be in Washington, where as Politico writes, “So much for the Obamacare comeback.”

Just when the health care law seemed to be in a better place, with a big finish to the enrollment season and the early embarrassments fading into the background, the Supreme Court handed Obamacare’s opponents their biggest legal victory yet.

 

The contraception coverage mandate isn’t central to the law, the way the individual mandate is. By letting some closely held employers — like family-owned businesses — opt out of the coverage if they have religious objections, the justices haven’t blown a hole in the law that unravels its ability to cover millions of Americans. They didn’t even overturn the contraception coverage rule itself. They just carved out an exemption for some employers from one benefit, one that wasn’t even spelled out when the law was passed.

 

But politically, that doesn’t matter.

What matters is that the Supreme Court has ruled that the Obama administration overreached on one of the most sensitive cultural controversies in modern politics. And in doing so, the justices have given the Affordable Care Act one more setback that it didn’t need heading into the mid-term elections.

 

“This will remind people why they don’t like the ACA to begin with,” said Republican pollster Kellyanne Conway. “People do not believe that a president, no matter what party they’re from, should be overbearing or intrusive into their religious practices.”

 

Republican ad maker Brad Todd put it bluntly: “Anytime Obamacare is in the news, it’s a good thing for Republicans.”

 

The ruling also allows Republicans to say that Obama and his law have violated one of the most respected constitutional protections: freedom of religion.

 

“They’ve overreached, and they’ve overreached in an area that’s very sacred,” said Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of the Susan B. Anthony List.

That’s great. However, it presupposes that Americans still care about such trivial items as freedom (of any kind). And, of course, the Constitution. Both are up for debate.




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100 Years Ago Today: “Keep Calm And Buy Stocks – World War I Is Priced In”

The more things change, the more they stay the same. Amid the growing geopolitical powder keg of 2014, the deafening roar of BIS-deniers proclaiming that everything bad is priced-in and nothing good is priced-in dominates the mainstream media. This is nothing new… as no less than The Financial Times proclaims on June 30th 1914 that “stock markets have been scarcely affected by the assassination of the heir to the Austrian throne… there’s no evidence that stock holders took fright” as it’s priced in (or contained?). It seems things didn’t quite work out as ‘priced-in’.

 

 

h/t @FT

Things were not quite as priced in as ‘they’ thought…




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Liberals Are as “Obedient” to Authority as Conservatives

AuthorityIt is a truism among academics that political
conservatives like to be ordered around. A new study, “Political
Conservatives’ Affinity for Obedience to Authority is Loyal, Not
Blind
,” by published by researchers from the University of
Winnipeg in the journal Personality and Social Psychology
Bulletin
looks more deeply at how “obedience” works among
conservative and liberals. One confounding problem they discover
with prior research is that when researchers simply ask people
about how to respond to “authorities,” research subjects typically
infer “authority” means “conservative authority.”

To get around this problem, the researchers ask subjects sorted
along the typical two-axis political spectrum how they feel about
being obedient to specific authorities. Guess what? It turns out
that conservatives think that people should obey conservative
authorities, e.g., religious leaders and traditions, whereas
liberals think that people should obey liberal authorities, e.g.
civil rights leaders and environmentalists. Shocking, no?

The study concludes:

The findings suggest that obedience itself is not ideologically
divisive. Counter to the intuition that obedience itself is a mode
of conduct that conservatives preferentially champion, these data
suggest that liberals and conservatives have the same sentiments
about obedience. Conservatives only favor obedience when they
perceive the authority to be a conservative. Liberals also favor
obedience when the authority shares their ideology…

…the Occupy Wall Street movement justified ignoring police and
court orders on the grounds of justice, democracy, and protection
of individual rights. Conservative groups such as the U.S. Tea
Party and the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood too have challenged
authorities. Both liberals and conservatives have the moral
psychology for flaunting the orders of authorities. Preference for
obedience is contextually bound; both liberals and conservatives
call for rebellion when the authorities are from the “other
team.”

By the way, some
earlier research
finds that …

…libertarians appear to live in a world where traditional
moral concerns (e.g., altruism, respect for authority) are not
assigned much importance.

In addition, recent research suggests that
libertarians are smarter
than both liberals and
conservatives.

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Supreme Court: You Can’t Call Homecare Workers Public Employees and Force Unions on Them

Pam Harris, plaintiff in the case, cares for her son, Joshua.Before ruling on the Hobby
Lobby contraception case, which is probably all you’re hearing
about right now, the Supreme Court also released a decision on
Harris v. Quinn, an important case on public union
membership.

In a narrow, partisan, 5-4 ruling, the court determined that
Illinois cannot simply declare that home health care workers are
public employees on the basis of them receiving government health
funding and then force them to pay for union representation. Though
this is a blow for unions, the impact is much less than it could
have been. The majority did not rule that public employees, as a
whole, could not be forced to pay dues to unions to represent them,
even if they didn’t want to belong to the union. Rather, the court
ruled that these previous precedents did not extend to home care
workers, who are privately employed, regardless of any government
subsidies.

Justice Samuel Alito wrote the decision and was joined by
justices John Roberts, Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy and Clarence
Thomas. He takes several paragraphs pointing out that these home
workers are hired and paid for by private citizens, not the state
of Illinois, and that the petitioners in the case were providing
care for family members. They sued, arguing that forcing them to
pay union dues was a violation of their First Amendment. In
discussing the case, the court had to analyze precedents from

Abood v. Detroit Board of Education
. This decision
authorized for authorized public sector unions to draw fees from
workers even if they didn’t want to be members of the union, just
as previous precedents had allowed so for the private sector. The
justification is that doing so preserves labor peace (conflict
resulting from multiple bargaining units for the same groups of
employees) and avoiding “free riders” (employees getting the
benefits from collective bargaining without contributing to the
union).

But Alito describes all the many, many ways these home
healthcare workers are not state employees. They are not given
access to state employee benefits and are not protected or covered
by laws that target state employees. Alito writes, “The Illinois
Legislature has taken pains to specify that personal assistants are
public employees for one purpose only: collective bargaining.”
Alito notes that because of this odd classification, a union can’t
actually represent these workers in cases where, for example, a
home worker is fired for specious reasons. The ruling also noted
that the “labor peace” argument didn’t apply here, as these
homecare workers were hired individually to work in homes and thus
labor peace was not an issue or potential conflict.

In conclusion, the majority ruled not to extend the
Abood decision in this situation: “If we accepted
Illinois’ argu­ment, we would approve an unprecedented violation of
the bedrock principle that, except perhaps in the rarest of
circumstances, no person in this country may be compelled to
subsidize speech by a third party that he or she does not wish to
support. The First Amendment prohibits the collection of an agency
fee from personal assistants in the Rehabilitation Program who do
not want to join or support the union.”

While this is a limited decision, it does extend outside of
Illinois. It is not the only state who has forced homecare workers
to pay union fees. And while the court didn’t address the larger
issues of forcing unionization (and union dues) on public
employees, the majority opinion in several places express concerns
and suggests flaws with the Abood precedent. The justices
weren’t willing to push further on this case, but the way Alito
talks about the Abood case could be seen as a signal that
the conservative justices, at least, may be interested in looking
deeper into union law.

Justice Elena Kagan wrote the dissenting opinion, arguing that
the state’s unionization of healthcare employees falls well within
the Abood precedent and claims that the workers have
“joint employers” of their customer and the state. The more liberal
justices do not appear to be wanting to rethink the Abood
decision anytime soon.

Read the full ruling here
(pdf). Some previous analysis of the case is
here
. More about the plaintiff
here
.

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The USD Is Tumbling; Near 2 Month Lows

Equities have flip-flopped this morning, giving up the new normal opening-squeeze higher gains as USDJPY fades. Bonds are rallying. But it is the USD Index that is the most notable this morning as it tumbles back towards 2-month lows in a hurry… This is the biggest 2-day plunge in 3 months.

 

 

Pushing the USD to 2-month lows…

 

 

Charts: Bloomberg




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Every Child in Scotland to Be Supervised by State-Appointed Busybody

Scottish childImagine
the very worst home a child could grow up in: No food in the
fridge, parents strung out on drugs, the children covered with
scabs and beaten regularly. You would want someone to step in and
save the kids.

And then there’s Scotland.

Scotland wants to treat all families as potentially abusive and
appoint a “named person” (that is, a guardian) as soon as the child
is born and up through age 18 to oversee the parenting. This
“shadow parent” would be empowered by the government under the
Children and Young People (Scotland) Act, which will take effect in
2016.

As Josie Appleton, founder of the U.K.’s Manifesto Club, writes
in SpikedOnline:

It is based on the idea that a person who has
been named by the state, touched on the shoulder, has
a superior authority and insight to others. Those who have been
‘named’ are seen as better qualified to ‘safeguard’ the wellbeing
of a whole nation’s children. Therefore, concern for children’s
wellbeing becomes a state-appointed position.

…This is a new kind of parenting-by-surveillance.

The day-to-day role of a named person is to follow ‘reports’
about a child, to keep an eye on their files. They will have rights
to see private medical reports, and to request information about
that child from other agencies (there is a legal ‘duty to help
named person’)…. The other aspect of a named person’s role is to
propose ‘interventions’. They will have a role in drawing up a
‘child’s plan’ if a child is found to have a ‘wellbeing need’: this
plan will outline the ‘targeted intervention which requires to be
provided… in relation to the child’.

Therefore, in substance, the role of the named person is not
actually to supplant the family, to state-raise children, but
rather to insert a surveying, coercive authority – a spy – in the
midst of every family.

This idea grows out of the conviction that Free-Range Kids
(my bookblog, and
movement), exists to extinguish: That all children are in danger at
all times, and hence need constant oversight. Sometimes it’s the
police arresting
a dad for letting his kids play outside
, sometimes it’s
the police
arresting a mom for letting her children walk to the pizza
shop
, and sometimes it’s even the local library reporting a mom
who let her kids, 12 and 15, walk
home without coats on a night the authorities deemed too
cold
.

True danger lies in the notion that the state should decide if
you are parenting your kids correctly. The care of your own
children is not up to you.

For more stories like this one, check out Lenore
Skenazy’s Free-Range
Kids
 blog.

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Ex-Im Bank: Crony Capitalists on the Defensive

Target practice.It’s

increasingly plausible
 that Congress will refuse to
reauthorize the Export-Import Bank, one of the nation’s most
notorious
spigots
for corporate welfare. Killing it would put only a
small dent in the corporate state, but it’ll still be a real dent—a
genuine victory in the battle against business subsidies.

Even if we end up losing this, it’s fun to see the K Street
crowd on the defensive, with figures from
Bill Clinton
to
Rick Perry
rushing to defend the program. The fact that

many Republicans
have not just joined but are
suddenly leading
the anti-bank chorus has the lobbyists
flummoxed. (I especially enjoyed seeing the former head of the
National Association of Manufacturers
suggest
today that “Conservatives in Congress can find other
ways to express their ideology.” Go get a hobby, boys!)

Does this struggle reflect a deeper strain of public cynicism
about state-corporate cooperation? Maybe. Here’s an
intriguing Rasmussen
poll
from April:

A new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds
that 32% of American Adults believe the United States has a system
of free market capitalism, while just as many (31%) say it is a
system of crony capitalism. Slightly more (37%) are not sure what
kind of capitalist system America has.

Sentiments like that have potentially combustible
consequences.

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Laundering Illegal Money? There’s Ultraluxury New York Real Estate For That

For decades, if one wanted to launder a few million (or billion) without paying taxes and attracting undue government attention, the proper venue were bank accounts in Geneva, Zurich or Bern. However, following recent events when courtesy of Barack Obama’s tax “transparency” (if nowhere else) initiative, Swiss bank secrecy no longer exists, the world’s uber-wealthy were stuck with a quandary: “where do we park our trillions in illicit cash without attracting the attention of tax and government authorities?

Two years ago we revealed the answer, when we wrote “This is why the NAR will never be prosecuted for facilitating money laundering“:

… a foreigner who may or may not have engaged in massive criminal activity and/or dealt with Iran, Afghanistan, or any other bogeyman du jour at some point in their past, and is using US real estate merely as a money-laundering front perhaps? Sadly, we will never know. Why? As explained before, it is all thanks to the National Association of Realtors – those wonderful people who bring you the existing home sales update every month (with a documented upward bias every single time) – which just so happens is the only organization that actively lobbied for and received an exemption from AML regulation compliance. In other words, unlike HSBC, the NAR is untouchable, even if it were to sell a triplex to Ahmedinejad on West 57th street.

 

As a reminder, here is where the NAR stands on the issue of its most generous clients possibly being some of the worst criminal known to man, courtesy of Elanus Capital:

Many of you reading this will undoubtedly have spent time in an international bank and been forced to sit through countless hours of “know your client” and AML training. Fascinating to note that the National Association of Realtors lobbied for and received a waiver from such regulation. That’s right, realtors actually went to the U.S. government and said: we want to be able to help foreign business oligarchs and other nefarious business people launder money through the real estate markets of the United States – and prevailed.

 

Here’s their official position:

 

“NAR supports continued efforts to combat money laundering and the financing of terrorism through the regulation of entities using a risk-based analysis. Any risk-based assessment would likely find very little risk of money laundering involving real estate agents or brokers. Regulations that would require real estate agents and brokers to adopt anti-money laundering programs may prove to be burdensome and unnecessary given the existing ML/TF regulations that already apply to United States financial institutions.”

 

Hat’s off to the NAR – that is some serious doublespeak. My translation: We’ll support you as long as we don’t have to support you.

If after skimming the above, readers are still confused what the reason is for the luxury segment of the US housing market continuing to rise in price even as all other segments of the quadruplicate US housing market as explained here languish, we suggest rereading it as many times as necessary.

Indeed, the scheme was all the more attractive to Obama because in one fell swoop, the US president crushed Switzerland as the venue to park hot capital, and instead gave a green light to “deposit” said illegal funds in US ultra-luxury real estate, in the process pushing up real estate prices, if only at the high end, much higher, and giving the population the false impression that the housing market has not only stabilized (it hasn’t) but is improving. Case in point: the latest just released NAR pending home sales data, about which even the NAR’s always cheerful Larry Yun had the following caveat:

“The flourishing stock market the last few years has propelled sales in the higher price brackets, while sales for homes under $250,000 are 10 percent behind last year’s pace…. Solid income growth and a slight easing in underwriting standards are needed to encourage first-time buyer participation, especially as renting becomes less affordable.”

Odd how the NAR had nothing to say about foreigners abusing the NAR’s exemption from anti-money laundering provisions. Which, incidentally, is the only reason why there is still any bid in US housing, which as we have shown before, is entirely at the ultra high end.

 

Today, we can finally end any debate on the topic of just where the world’s illegal money comes to roost. The answer: ultra-luxury real estate, primarily in New York, courtesy of a report in New York magazine that catches up with what we first said in the summer of 2012, and which is titled, appropriately enough: “Stash Pad.”

Below are some excerpts:

Extreme wealth demands extremely elaborate wealth management, and anyone who has a few million in spare cash will probably already have an entrée to the cloistered world of private banking. An anonymous high-net-worth client of Credit Suisse, who spoke to U.S. Senate investigators after taking advantage of an amnesty for tax cheats, described the process by which he would manage his funds when visiting Zurich. A remote-controlled elevator would take him to a bare meeting room where he and his private banker would discuss his money; all printed account statements would be destroyed after the visit.

 

The theatrical secrecy is designed to build personal trust between such bankers and their clients, which is especially vital when the goal of the transactions is to conceal assets from the prying eyes of rivals, vengeful spouses, or tax collectors. Moving the money itself is a relatively simple matter: A wire or a suitcase can convey cash from China to Singapore, or from Russia to an EU member state like Latvia, and once the funds have made it to a “white list” country, they can usually move onward without triggering alarms. Concealing the true ownership of a property or a bank account is trickier. That’s where the private bankers, wealth advisers, and lawyers earn their exorbitant fees.

 

Behind a New York City deed, there may be a Delaware LLC, which may be managed by a shell company in the British Virgin Islands, which may be owned by a trust in the Isle of Man, which may have a bank account in Liechtenstein managed by the private banker in Geneva. The true owner behind the structure might be known only to the banker. “It will be in some file, but not necessarily a computer file,” says Markus Meinzer, a senior analyst at the nonprofit Tax Justice Network. “It could be a black book.” If an investor wants to sell the property, he doesn’t have to transfer the deed—an act that would create a public paper trail. He can just shift ownership of the holding company.

 

Recently, scrutiny from the United States has punctured some of the traditional secrecy of Swiss banks. But that has just pushed clients to boutique advisory firms, often run by the same personnel. “Banks like working with those firms,” Meinzer says, “because they are then legally in the clear, without the risk of going to prison.” As international blacklisting has pushed some offshore locales toward greater legal compliance, new havens have arisen. New Zealand trusts offer similar secrecy to those of the Caymans, without the stigma.

 

It’s a sophisticated, well-oiled system that rarely requires crude subterfuge. Though U.S. authorities track all transfers over $10,000, a wire into a real-estate lawyer’s escrow account should look perfectly routine. “A lot of times, I don’t even know where my clients are from,” says the lawyer Bruce Cohen. “But I know that certain countries are very careful about the money that leaves their country.”

 

There is nothing illegal—at least from the destination nation’s perspective—about sending money from an anonymous offshore bank account to purchase property in America. On the contrary, it’s an everyday occurrence. That is precisely why experts say that property investment is a favored route for money laundering, a crime that depends on the outward appearance of legitimacy. The laundering process typically happens in stages: Illegal cash enters the world financial system somewhere and is funneled into a maze of accounts and shell companies, a process called “layering.” Finally, at the other end, funds are integrated into a seemingly respectable investment—like a luxury condo.

 

Secretive corporate structuring is a key element in the process. Earlier this year, an international team led by Shima Baradaran, a law professor at the University of Utah, published an ingenious study of its mechanics. The academics sent emails to more than 7,000 firms around the world that offer incorporation services, posing as a variety of characters, like a politically connected Uzbek or a Lebanese representative of an Islamic charity. “We purposely made it as shady as possible,” Baradaran says.

 

The experiment’s results confounded conventional presumptions. It turned out that offshore locales like the Caymans were the most stringent about complying with international anti-money-laundering standards. It was easier to set up an untraceable shell company in the U.S. than in any country other than Kenya. The study found firms in business-friendly states like Delaware and Nevada were particularly “abysmal.”

 

No federal authority, not even the IRS, keeps track of the actual “beneficial” owners behind LLCs, and the more lenient states don’t even require much record-keeping by the firms that handle incorporation. Many of the service providers Baradaran’s team approached asked for no identity documentation and were willing to set up LLCs in even the most suspicious scenarios. Most surprisingly, Baradaran found that the suggestion of foreign corruption actually increased the likelihood that a provider would agree to do business. “It’s really a race to the bottom,” Baradaran says.

 

Lawyers, brokers, and other service providers fall into a category that money-laundering experts refer to as “gatekeepers.” An international organization formed to combat such financial crime has called for gatekeepers to be required to report suspicious activity, and some nations, like Great Britain, have placed disclosure requirements on attorneys. But no such regulation exists in the United States, and while financial institutions are tightly monitored under the 2001 USA Patriot Act, parties to property transactions have been given a specific exemption. “It’s a big hole,” says Louise I. Shelley, director of the Terrorism, Transnational Crime and Corruption Center at George Mason University.

 

In 2010, Senator Carl Levin released the results of an investigation into the role of U.S. property in foreign corruption, highlighting cases like that of the son of the dictator of Equatorial Guinea, who bought a $30 million Malibu mansion. New York real estate often figures in such scandals. Ukrainian politician Yulia Tymoshenko has filed a civil lawsuit claiming a crony of the country’s ousted president moved tainted money into New York development projects, while her opponents claim, in turn, that she laundered money through the city’s real estate. In 2012, federal prosecutors seized a Trump Park Avenue apartment from the son of a Philippine general who had been convicted of taking bribes. A $1.6 million condo in the Onyx Chelsea, belonging to a former Taiwanese prime minister, was seized after it was tied to a corruption scandal.

 

Such cases are rare and laborious, however. “You have to prove the nexus between the corruption and the property itself,” says Jaikumar Ramaswamy, chief of the Justice Department’s Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering division. “Sometimes judges are skeptical: ‘Why are we are going after some foreign guy who did something in a foreign country?’ ”

That’s funny: because why is Obama and Eric Holder going after BNP, Barclays and HSBC for precisely the same reason? The answer is simple: America is desperate for New York to become the money-laundering capital of the New Normal. In fact, this has already happened, not only that but it has the full blessing of everyone in charge.

As for the bottom line:

The best—though still fuzzy—global estimates say as much as $1.5 trillion in criminal proceeds is laundered each year. The United Nations figures that as little as one-fifth of one percent of that is ever recovered. Levin has proposed legislation to extend the Patriot Act’s regulations to real-estate closings and to require disclosure from LLCs, but the bill has gone nowhere. Real-estate attorneys say such rules would violate their legal privilege, and brokers insist the marketplace already provides an incentive to keep transactions clean. “No building wants to have people who have made illegal money,” says Mark Reznik, a broker at A&I Broadway Realty, a firm that primarily serves Russian-speakers. Reznik says he provides a “prescreening” service for developers. “They want to have some kind of filter,” he says. “Like somebody said, Karl Marx or whatever, if the capitalist is going to see a triple return, he’s going to close his eyes. But we are trying not to deal with scumbags.”

Karl Marx did not say that but all those Americans who make money legally and who are trying to buy a place in New York, or any other of the cities targeted by foreign oligarchs and who say “I am priced out of the market by criminals allowed to bid up real estate to the moon”, well… sorry, you are out of luck. Thank America’s corruption which starts at the bottom and stretches to the very top.




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U.K.’s Sperm Supply Dries Up Following Anti-Anonymity Rule for Donors

U.K. laws denying anonymity to sperm donors seem
to have resulted in a “major sperm
shortage
,” according to the British Fertility Society (BFS).
Now some clinics are importing sperm from the U.S. and Denmark to
keep up with demand.

The right to anonymity was stripped from British sperm donors in
2005. At the time, only about one tenth of donated sperm samples at
U.K. clinics came from abroad. Now, figures from the
country’s Human
Fertilisation and Embryology Authority
show that foreign sperm
makes up a quarter of all samples. 

Am I the only one surprised—but a little bit delighted—that an
international sperm trade exists? I’m also curious whether American
or Danish DNA will prove to be more popular with Brits
(bets?). 

In other semen news this week: Women using in-vitro
fertilization seem to fare slightly better with older sperm donors
(40 and over) than those in their 20s, according to research being
presented at the Annual Meeting of the European Society of Human
Reproduction and Embryology Tuesday. “Current UK guidelines suggest
men should not be accepted as donors over the age of 40,”
according to
The Daily Mail, “but experts say it may
be time for a re-think to ease the growing shortage of sperm
donors.” 

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Supreme Court Rules Against Obamacare’s Contraceptive Mandate in Hobby Lobby Case

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 5-4 today that the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act violated federal law by placing
a substantial burden on the exercise of religion when it required
“closely-held” private corporations such as Hobby Lobby Stores,
Inc. to cover certain forms of birth control in their employee
health plans.

Writing for the majority, Justice Samuel Alito held that this
provision of the health care law, as applied to Hobby Lobby, ran
afoul of the terms of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA),
a 1993 law signed by President Bill Clinton which says the
government may not “substantially burden a person’s exercise of
religion,” unless it has a “compelling” justification and has used
“the least restrictive means” available.

“Under RFRA, a Government action that imposes a substantial
burden on religious exercise must serve a compelling government
interest, and we assume that the HHS regulations satisfy this
requirement. But in order for the HHS mandate to be sustained,”
Alito continued, “it must also constitute the least restrictive
means of serving that interest, and the mandate plainly fails that
test. There are other ways in which Congress or HHS could equally
ensure that every woman has cost-free access to the particular
contraceptives at issue here and, indeed, to all FDA-approved
contraceptives.”

Writing in dissent, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg charged the
majority with issuing “a decision of startling breadth.” In her
view, “the Court holds that commercial enterprises, including
corporations…can opt out of any law (saving only tax laws) they
judge incompatible with their sincerely held religious
beliefs.”

The Court’s opinion in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores,
Inc.
is available here.

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