CBS Evening News Finally Covers 'Firestorm' Between Catholic Church and Obama
After 19 days of controversy, CBS Evening News on Tuesday finally got around to covering the growing dispute between the Obama administration, who wants to impose a mandate for sterilizations and birth control on religious institutions, and the Catholic Church and its allies, who see it as a violation of religious liberty. All of the Big Three networks' evening newscasts on Tuesday covered the issue.
On Wednesday morning, CBS This Morning was actually the only network morning show that devoted a segment to the "hot-button issue," as anchor Gayle King labeled it. NBC's Today show gave a mere news brief on the "uproar" over the new federal policy, while ABC's Good Morning America ignored it.
Evening News anchor Scott Pelley teased the report from correspondent Wyatt Andrews by asking, "Can a Catholic college be forced to provide employees with birth control coverage?" Pelley then introduced Andrews's report by noting how "the Obama administration said the new health care law requires religious hospitals, colleges, and other institutions to include contraceptive coverage in their insurance plans. That set off a firestorm among many Catholics."
However, the CBS journalist decided to lead his report by highlighting how many young Catholics dissent from their church's teaching, that contraception is "intrinsically evil":
ANDREWS: For the students at Catholic University in Washington, there's no escaping the conflict over contraception. Their church says contraception is a sin against God, but it's a sin most frequently committed.
JACQUELINE SUPPRESSI, CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY STUDENT: I live with eight girls, and I know that seven of the eight all take contraception.
ANDREWS: Jacqueline Suppressi says she respects the Church's teaching, but still wants birth control covered in her health insurance.
SUPPRESSI: It is a good way to prevent unwanted pregnancies, and I think that they should, I think that health care should provide it.
Andrews did follow the two clips from the pro-ObamaCare mandate college student with three clips from opponents - Republican presidential candidates Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney, and Catholic University of America president John Garvey, who, as the correspondent pointed out, "calls that mandate an assault on the faith." But the on-air personality then concluded his report by touting a dubious figure from the pro-abortion Guttmacher Institute without attribution, and by serving as a stenographer for the Obama administration and its talking points:
ANDREWS: Most health care plans in America already cover contraception, and, according to surveys, most Catholic women- 98 percent- already use contraception. But the administration, worried about the Catholic vote, has signaled that enforcement of this rule may not be very strict. In fact, Scott, most charities already have an extra year to comply.
On ABC's World News, anchor Diane Sawyer introduced a report on the controversy by trumpeting the "fiery debate...about women, contraception, and a White House order that has the Catholic Church up in arms. ABC's Jake Tapper takes us inside the culture war tonight." Tapper also played soundbites from Garvey, Gingrich, and Romney, as well as GOP presidential candidate Rick Santorum (who, like Gingrich, is a Catholic). In addition to this, the correspondent added clips from White House spokesman Jay Carney, and a more balanced look at the debate on Catholic University's campus, with two unidentified students in favor of the mandate, and two against it.
NBC's Kristen Welker filed a report on Tuesday's Nightly News, which focused more on the debate in Congress over the HHS mandate. Welker included soundbites from Senators Mitch McConnell and Roy Blunt, who were both critical of the policy; and Senator Barbara Boxer and Obama strategist David Axelrod, who defended it.
The following morning, CBS This Morning brought on former President George W. Bush speech writer Michael Gerson and CBS contributor Father Edward Beck to discuss the controversial issue. Gerson noted the underlining philosophical issue in the dispute between the federal government and the Catholic Church, while Father Beck highlighted how the issue goes beyond oral contraceptives:
ROSE: Michael, why do you think this is an ideological wrecking ball?
GERSON: Well, you know, it represents, in a lot of ways, an important political philosophic debate. Not a debate about contraception- it's how you view liberalism. I mean, classical liberalism, in our past, was the protection of individuals and groups and their rights not to reflect the majority views. Modern liberalism, in this sense, seems to be the imposition of liberal values on institutions that are regarded as backwards. I think that that's the opposite of pluralism and it's- you know, provoked an understandable and natural reaction among- not just Catholics, but I think Protestants and others, who care about religious liberty.
HILL: Father Beck, in reality, this is something that's already being dealt with. There are 28 states which require organizations to offer prescription coverage that would cover contraception and only eight of those would exempt Catholic hospitals and universities. So based on how it's played out there, how do you believe it should play out nationally?
FATHER EDWARD BECK, CBS THIS MORNING RELIGIOUS & FAITH CONTRIBUTOR: But in those states, there have been conscience clauses, where those universities- those hospitals can get around it.
HILL: Is that enough then? Would that be a compromise that would work?
BECK: I think if there was a conscience clause put into this- yes- and that they could be exempt- it definitely would work. Something that's not getting discussed, however, is this Plan B, the morning-after pill. Catholics who are coming to me are saying- well, Father, is this abortion, though? So you- 'cause you have a fertilized egg. It's also going to have to cover that. It's being called this contraception controversy, but really, this is- after conception, some are saying- and less is getting spoken about that. But that is really getting the ire of Catholics up.
A February 3, 2012 study from the MRC documented the severe imbalance in the Big Three networks' coverage of the dispute between the Komen foundation and Planned Parenthood, versus their coverage of the controversy between the Obama administration and the Catholic Church. As of Monday morning, ABC, CBS, and NBC ran 20 reports on Komen, versus only 3 on the ObamaCare mandate. NBC Nightly News lifted its two-week blackout on the mandate on Monday evening.
- Matthew Balan's blog
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Comments
The media is trying to change the issue
Submitted by Radical1979 on Wed, 02/08/2012 - 8:59pm.
It's not weather or not Catholic women use birth control. Catholics, like the rest of humanity, are sinners. This doesn't mean we throw out the laws we don't obey, we simply need to try harder. This is about the government telling a religion it must support something that goes against the religion.
Wrong.
Submitted by ArrowSmith on Thu, 02/09/2012 - 2:26am.
The faster people get away from religion the better. Once freed from the shackles of old-time religion, people are freed up to use their reasoning skills to figure out how to live their lives according to the principles of logic. People will have sex and it's important to make sure it's safe and they get abortion if needed to control overpopulation.
Tell us more, Arrowsmith;---
Submitted by matthewdean on Thu, 02/09/2012 - 3:39am.
or should we just read the book by Sinclair Lewis.
Your post is quite reminiscent of the high minded verbiage used by Lewis in his letter to the Nobel people when he declined to accept the Pulitzer Prize, in 1926 - awarded him for the eponymous novel.
Liberals, having freed themselves of and from religion, are quite desirous that all others do the same.
A liberal, thus "freed up", uses his or her "reasoning skills" to lay out for others how they should
prostrate themselves before the altar of liberalismconduct their lives successfully.Any 'ism' that holds up abortion as a sacrament is repulsive; as are it's proponents.
MD
Wrong.
Submitted by The Vet on Thu, 02/09/2012 - 3:53am.
It is not up to you to tell people to abandon their religious beliefs. No one is telling you to abandon your athiest beliefs. So stop acting like a little fascist and leave people alone. Especially people doing no harm to you.
On Rome and Country
Submitted by Henry Clay on Wed, 02/08/2012 - 9:33pm.
I can only play for a little while tonight friends. My new favorite TV program, Revenge is on tonight; and I would hate to miss it. I will let a far more eloquent man make my point.
ULSTER 1912
by RUDYARD KIPLING
The dark eleventh hour
Draws on and sees us sold
To every evil power
We fought against of old.
Rebellion, rapine hate
Oppression, wrong and greed
Are loosed to rule our fate,
By England's act and deed.
The Faith in which we stand,
The laws we made and guard,
Our honour, lives, and land
Are given for reward
To Murder done by night,
To Treason taught by day,
To folly, sloth, and spite,
And we are thrust away.
The blood our fathers spilt,
Our love, our toils, our pains,
Are counted us for guilt,
And only bind our chains.
Before an Empire's eyes
The traitor claims his price.
What need of further lies?
We are the sacrifice.
We asked no more than leave
To reap where we had sown,
Through good and ill to cleave
To our own flag and throne.
Now England's shot and steel
Beneath that flag must show
How loyal hearts should kneel
To England's oldest foe.
We know the war prepared
On every peaceful home,
We know the hells declared
For such as serve not Rome --
The terror, threats, and dread
In market, hearth, and field --
We know, when all is said,
We perish if we yield.
Believe, we dare not boast,
Believe, we do not fear --
We stand to pay the cost
In all that men hold dear.
What answer from the North?
One Law, one Land, one Throne.
If England drive us forth
We shall not fall alone
Though I admire Kipling's works, Hank, ---
Submitted by matthewdean on Wed, 02/08/2012 - 11:04pm.
you are still a putz.
I will admit, though, that you are starting to take on the characteristics of a zombie.
MD
The Liberal War on the Constitution and Christianity
Submitted by berlet98 on Thu, 02/09/2012 - 2:26am.
The Liberal War on the Constitution and Religion
The battle launched by Barack Hussein Obama’s administration’s insistence that Catholic institutions violate their collective consciences and church law on artificial birth control has less to do with contraception than with liberal disdain for America’s Constitution.
The ongoing uproar over contraception simply reinforces the disdain shown when our alleged “constitutional scholar” president arrogantly complained to Matt Lauer that Congress was impeding his insatiable lust for power and autocratic rule by performing checks and balances on the executive branch and by his earlier declaration that he would, unconstitutionally, bypass the legislative branch to accomplish his goals.
The president was recently joined by an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court in his public contempt for the US Constitution.
Arch-liberal Ruth Bader Ginsburg appeared on Egyptian television, praised other national constitutions, but said of ours, “I would not look to the U.S. Constitution if I were drafting a constitution in the year 2012.” As a member of SCOTUS, Ginsburg is charged with interpreting that 225 year old document yet doesn’t consider it worthy of emulation.
As a reminder to the constitutional scholar . . .
(Read more at http://www.genelalor.com/blog1/?p=12673.)
CBS and its reporting on Obama-care invasiveness
Submitted by Steve Cakouros on Thu, 02/09/2012 - 3:21pm.
Obama owns the major networks. He has them in his Liberal pocket. Does anyone doubt that?
The silence of CBS on the contraception issue speaks volumes.
CBS has since the days of Howard K. Smith and Edwin R. Murrow done the bidding of the Left.
Murrow belonged to a Communist front organization. As for Smith, he was pink if not red.
Overall CBS is a disgrace. I give this network failing marks.