Last week Sandra Fluke, a student at Georgetown
University Law Center, went to Congress looking for a handout. She wants
free birth-control pills, and she wants the federal government to make
her Catholic school give them to her.
I'm a graduate of Georgetown Law and former chief counsel of the
House Subcommittee on the Constitution. Based on her testimony, I wonder
how much Ms. Fluke really knows about the university or the
Constitution.
As a law student 20 years ago, I
wasn't confronted by crucifixes in the classroom or, in truth, with any
religious imagery anywhere. In that respect the law school has a
different "feel" than the university. The law school chapel was an
unadorned, multipurpose room in the basement used for Mass when it
wasn't used for Gilbert and Sullivan Society rehearsals and club
meetings. Among the clubs while I was there, the Gay and Lesbian
Alliance was particularly vigorous.
I was not Catholic when I attended
Georgetown Law, but I certainly knew the university was. So did Ms.
Fluke. She told the Washington Post that she chose Georgetown knowing
specifically that the school did not cover drugs that run contrary to
Catholic teaching in its student health plans. During her law school
years she was a president of "Students for Reproductive Justice" and
made it her mission to get the school to give up one of the last
remnants of its Catholicism. Ms. Fluke is not the "everywoman" portrayed
in the media.
Georgetown Law School has flung wide its doors to the secular world.
It will tolerate and accommodate all manner of clubs and activities that
run contrary to fundamental Catholic beliefs. But it is not inclined to
pay for or provide them. And it has the right to do so—to say "this far
and no further."
Getty Images
Sandra Fluke, a third-year law
student at Georgetown University, testifies during a hearing before the
House Democratic Steering and Policy Committee on February 23.
When congressional committee counsels
plan hearings, they look for two kinds of witnesses: "experts" and
"victims." The experts are typically lawyers or law professors who can
explain the constitutional authority for the new law and its legal
impact, and the victims illustrate why the law is needed.
At the hearing of the House Democratic Steering and Policy Committee
chaired by Nancy Pelosi, Sandra Fluke testified as a victim. Having to
buy your own contraception is a burden, she said. She testified that all
around her at Georgetown she could see the faces of students who were
suffering because of Georgetown's refusal to abandon its Catholic
principles.
Exactly what does the face of a law student who must buy her own
birth-control pills look like? Did I see them all around me and just not
know it? Do male law students who must buy their own condoms have the
same look? Perhaps Ms. Fluke should have brought photos to Congress to
illustrate her point.
In her testimony, Ms. Fluke claimed that, "Without insurance
coverage, contraception, as you know, can cost a woman over $3,000
during law school." That's $1,000 per year. But an employee at a Target
pharmacy near the university told the Weekly Standard last week that one
month's worth of generic oral contraceptives is $9 per month. "That's
the price without insurance," the employee said. (It's also $9 per month
at Wal-Mart.)
What about Rush Limbaugh? I won't
defend his use of epithets (for which he's apologized), but I understand
his larger point. At issue isn't inhalers for asthmatics or insulin for
diabetics. Contraception isn't like other kinds of "health care." Yes,
birth-control pills can be prescribed to address medical problems,
though that's relatively rare and the Catholic Church has no quarrel
with their use in this circumstance. And the university's insurance
covers prescriptions in these cases.
Still, Ms. Fluke is not mollified. Why? Because at the end of the day this is not about coverage of a medical condition.
Ms. Fluke's crusade for reproductive
justice is simply a demand that a Catholic institution pay for drugs
that make it possible for her to have sex without getting pregnant. It's
nothing grander or nobler than that. Georgetown's refusal to do so does
not mean she has to have less sex, only that she has to take financial
responsibility for it herself.
Should Ms. Fluke give up a cup or two of coffee at Starbucks each
month to pay for her birth control, or should Georgetown give up its
religion? Even a first-year law student should know where the
Constitution comes down on that.
Ms. Ruse, senior fellow for legal studies at the Family Research Council, received her J.D. from Georgetown Law in 1989.
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