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Reports

What Rhetoric Won’t Cure

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Posted on Jun 4, 2009

By Marie Cocco

    The murder of Dr. George Tiller cannot be smoothed over with a speech. This is the lesson the Obama administration must learn from it.

    Since Tiller was gunned down—at Sunday morning church services—the administration has correctly offered increased law enforcement protection to the hundreds of abortion clinics and doctors who have, for years, been targets of violence and vandalism, and whose patients are routinely harassed and intimidated. This necessary measure is only temporary.

    As most of the public surely knows, the abortion wars have become a permanent and ugly part of American political discourse.

    That Tiller performed late-term abortions—a legal medical procedure in Kansas and across the country—is given as an excuse for the intensity of the hatred that was directed at him. But in truth, the clinic blockades, the verbal harassment and threats, and the angry demonizing of women are carried out on a broad, national scale by anti-abortion demonstrators who say they are not extremists.

    Their particular form of hatred is not directed solely at women who seek a late-term abortion or at the handful of doctors who perform them. It is aimed at anyone who dares to enter the offices of a reproductive health facility for any reason. That includes teenagers in need of birth control or treatment for a sexually transmitted disease and, yes, women seeking prenatal care to ensure a healthy baby at the end of a full-term pregnancy.

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    It does not matter to the demonstrators that women come in all shapes, sizes and colors—and have all manner of reproductive health needs. It matters only that these activists believe the women somehow are complicit in abortion, which to the demonstrators means they are complicit in murder.

    This is how it has been for much of the past three decades, despite the pleas of politicians who, like President Obama, seek “common ground” and call ever so earnestly for a respectful debate. Inevitably, these politicians say that one answer to the abortion problem is to reduce the need for them—that is, to reduce the appalling number of unplanned pregnancies in the United States. “So let us work together to reduce the number of women seeking abortions,” Obama said during his commencement speech at Notre Dame University last month. “Let’s reduce unintended pregnancies.’‘

    The phrase has taken on the triteness of “have a nice day.”

    Nearly two decades ago, Bill Clinton said he believed abortion should be “safe, legal and rare.” The “rare” part was supposed to come from greater support for birth control and better sex education for young people.

    Here is how the anti-abortion movement and its supporters in Congress responded: They carried out a campaign, which continues to this day, to curtail women’s access to birth control and severely limit teenagers’ access to comprehensive sex education.

    Working first through the Republicans who took over Congress in the mid-1990s and then through the Bush administration, they blocked access to emergency contraception, birth-control pills that are taken after unprotected sex. They continue to promote state legislation and a movement among anti-abortion pharmacists to allow druggists to refuse to fill birth-control prescriptions. They wish to expand the current “conscience clause” allowing medical professionals who have ethical objections to abortion to cover birth control and abortion referrals for rape victims who might be pregnant. They spent billions on abstinence-only sex education that has been proved, time and again, to be ineffective at keeping teenagers from having sex.

    When the original House version of the economic stimulus bill included a bureaucratic change to make it easier for state Medicaid programs to offer family planning services to poor women, Republicans caused such a fuss that Obama prevailed upon Democratic congressional leaders to remove it. His gesture won not a single Republican vote for the stimulus package in the House.

    “The common ground is family planning,” says Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y. Yet Maloney has spent much of the past decade in the forefront of congressional efforts to push back the right-wing assault on family planning.

    It is time to stop hoping that somehow, through pleasing rhetoric or even genuine efforts to build bridges, those who oppose allowing women to control their reproductive lives can be persuaded to some other view. Continuing the pretense on this point isn’t naive. It’s cynical.

    Marie Cocco’s e-mail address is mariecocco(at)washpost.com.

    © 2009, Washington Post Writers Group


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By TheROBOT, June 7, 2009 at 10:10 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

What about the recruiters who were gunned down? Where’s the media in all of this? Their abortion hero gets gunned down and it’s a week long blitz of how great he was at the abortion struggle and not a peep about a couple of people who choose to serve a cause more sane than the abortion issue.

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By Jim Yell, June 7, 2009 at 6:40 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

One thing that should give everyone chills is once Drug Stores and medical people can refuse to treat and care for patients because they disagree with some aspect of their life styles, we will see that all this talk about the “value of life” is just so much more lies.

The real issue are people and groups who want to control “every breath you take”. Most of these people also support wars and military. Don’t look now—-they don’t want you to.

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By thebeerdoctor, June 6, 2009 at 11:17 am #

When it comes to abortion, I think Ross Perot said it best: “When all the dust is settled, it is a woman’s choice.”

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By SINGLE PAYER, June 5, 2009 at 11:43 pm #

REF: THE BEER DOCTOR


None for me, thank you. No wise woman or slave. There is a reason for all the stories of Sirens and the likes of Ester in ancient history.

I finally realized that when Tim Geithner talks about giving some banks a “haircut” he meant like Deliah and Sampson. Males seem to exist to serve as host for some woman, somewhere. Those with high testosterone do not stand a chance. It is very addictive and deadly.

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By Hawkeye, June 4, 2009 at 9:46 pm #

REF: Cathy


Looks like you are right. We are beaten down and cannot break “their” stranglehold. I can only hope for mercy, mercy long enough to escape. I only think about my escape these days. The ongoing loading up on bailouts and deficit spending has already lead to massive defaults, foreclosures, elimination of millions of jobs. It simple cannot do anything but move forward according to “their” plan, not my plan.

Where is that brave new world we can run to? For the Early Americans, well, it was that wild, untamed land called America. Is this only possible for the young, strong risktakers who refuse to accept “their” plan for an Orwellian world like “1984?”

Face it Cathy, the revolution is over and freedom loving people have lost to the power elite. The “haves” just need so much labor, labor is labor, that is why the borders are open, that is why there are no alien immigrants and that is why the jobs have gone overseas.

Connect the dots, follow the money and see the obvious. Either you are amongst the “Haves” or you are one of the very, very expendible “Have Nots.”

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By Cathy, June 4, 2009 at 12:05 pm #

Thank you, Big B.  I could not have said it better.  That’s why I tune him out now.  I can get the salient bits—or the alarming parts—on Maddow, Countdown, The Daily Show and The Colbert Report.  I love the speeches where they show him back to back with Bush, spewing out Bush’s rhetoric but just making it sound prettier.

His speeches in Europe were no different, and these latest ones in the Middle East, from what I’ve read, more the same. 

Will we ever get meaningful, real action to back up the words?  I fear we won’t, or we’ll get action that is nothing what we Americans wanted or bargained for.  See health care.

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By Big B, June 4, 2009 at 10:39 am #

This is why I never listen to Barry’s speak. I only read the transscipt. And if you do this you will find that Barry never says anything of substance, never presents any solutions. He speaks only in generalities and empty platitudes, in short, Barry is a lawyer. And an expert in the art of talking alot, and saying nothing.

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By thebeerdoctor, June 4, 2009 at 9:09 am #

“You were born a woman, not a slave.”
Laura Nyro

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