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It sounds weirdly blasphemous when you put it like that. “We take responsibility for this product not being delivered in useable condition.” I wonder if your warranty should be issued by the Church…
I guess the warrant is for your body, with your mind/soul is the intended owner, but that raises all sorts of philosophical questions.
Except that it covers your mind, assuming coverage would also include psych/mental health stuff, which it reasonably should inasmuch as we're not going full Szasz-pilled. The blasphemy disappears inasmuch as you stop thinking of a warranty as coming from the manufacturer, and moreso assuring the consumer a roughly median experience.
The more concerning part to me is that warranties always restrict uses. Your factory warranty on your car won't pay out for damage that results from racing. Your consumer warranty on your washer-dryer set won't pay out if you open a laundromat.
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Interestingly, the Knights of Columbus looked into offering health insurance for its members but couldn't find a good enough loophole on paying for abortifacients. This has been told to me personally by high ranking members and I'm really not sure what the relevant law(well, I guess section of the ACA) was, but that is how the Church would offer a warranty on genetic conditions, at least in the US.
I've always been curious: would refusal to pay for birth control or plan B etc actually make the plan cheaper, or more expensive?
For a single man, almost certainly cheaper. For a family, the major confound is that the knights of Columbus would expel a member who admitted to using birth control. Even if there's probably some cheating, a KofC healthplan would be covering lots of childbirths anyways.
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