Watch Tim Walz Make a Fool Out of Himself Again
These Democrat States Are Declaring War on ICE
Putin Ally Threatens Nuclear War Against Europe If This Happens
This Doctor Mailed Abortion Pills to Louisiana. Now This Democrat Governor Is Protecting...
No More Taxes Until the Fraud Stops
CNN Guest Tries Accusing ICE of Nazi Recruitment Tactics, Makes a Fool of...
Germany Finally Admits Trump Was Right About Energy
New York's Mamdani Doubles Down on Race-Based Government Policy
Left-Wing Mobs in Minneapolis Now Stopping Cars and Interrogating Civilians
'A Viable Option:' Calls for Trump to Invoke the Insurrection Act in Minnesota...
‘They Are Killing Their Own Children’: Iranian Commander’s Daughter Speaks Out Amid Nation...
Trump Threatens to Tariff Countries Opposing His Effort to Control Greenland
Pentagon Leaker Charged for Possessing Classified Documents on the Venezuela Raid
Venezuelan Opposition Leader Gifts President Trump Her Nobel Peace Prize
Fraud and the ‘Fundamental Transformation’ of America
Tipsheet

Cyndi Lauper Pens Op-Ed Blasting Hobby Lobby Decision

Cyndi Lauper, known for iconic songs such as “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun” and “Time After Time,” has decided to join the Hobby Lobby debate. Writing for The Daily Beast, the 1980s pop singer criticized the Supreme Court’s recent decision to grant the Christian owners of Hobby Lobby an exemption from Obamacare’s contraception mandate in a clever article entitled, "Girls Just Want to Have Birth Control." Like so many other feminists, Lauper could care less about the business owners' religious freedom, insisting the justices’ decision will turn the women’s rights movement back about 60 years:

Advertisement

I’d like to think we’ve come a long way since then, but this week’s decision from the Supreme Court sends the clear message that too many employers and Supreme Court Justices still regard women as second-class citizens.

With one ruling handed down this week, five men in black robes decided that we should return to policies of the 1950s and ask our bosses’ permission to receive basic preventive health care. These are five men who have never had to worry about how they’d pay for birth control, deal with an unplanned pregnancy, or face going to work with crippling migraines and premenstrual pain.

She then goes on to write an ode to birth control, claiming contraceptives help women through school, career and families.

Her op-ed wouldn’t be complete without directing readers to Planned Parenthood and encouraging them to join the dissent. Speaking of the pro-abortion giant, it tweeted more propaganda today:

Advertisement

The claim that women need birth control to be successful is not empowering, it’s insulting. By the way, who said Cyndi Lauper is an expert on public policy?

I never thought I’d say this, but I think I prefer her singing.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement