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Truth
is powerful and inbodies those who seek it with an open mind. |
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NEWS
MEDIA, OTHERS SWALLOWED ABORTION LIE HOOK, LINE AND
SINKER |
Source:
By Mike Royko |
- When
I started this job a few decades ago, a veteran columnist
at the next desk offered advice. One rule was: "Never
write about a subject when you're mad. Wait until you
calm down." Sensible words, and I usually try to follow
them. But on this day, there weren't nearly enough hours
left until my deadline for me to calm down about a whopper
of a lie that a public figure named Ron Fitzsimmons
has finally admitted telling. Fitzsimmons runs the National
Coalition of Abortion Providers. And he says his conscience
has nagged him into admitting "lying through my teeth"
when he made public statements in 1995 that the controversial
"partial birth abortion" was rarely used. And that it
was used only when a woman's life was in danger or the
fetus was already severely damaged. You probably remember
the big debate on this issue. Those against this late-term
procedure wanted it outlawed because they said it killed
healthy, normal fetuses that were well into full development.
And the procedure is barbaric, they said. The fetus
is partially delivered feet first, then a device is
used to suck its brain out to collapse the head. Fitzsimmons
now admits that most such abortions are done on women
who are healthy and fetuses that are healthy, but not
because the woman is in danger or the fetus is unhealthy.
The abortion is performed for the same reason as other
abortions: The woman wants it. Fitzsimmons says he and
others lied because the truth might have hurt the cause
of abortion rights. They were right. If it hadn't been
for those lies, eagerly accepted and passed along as
gospel by the printed press and broadcast news, President
Clinton would not have dared veto a bill that outlawed
the procedure. And Congress wouldn't have buckled and
failed to override his veto. That's what is so infuriating:
the silence of those in the medical field who knew it
was a lie but failed to thunderously refute it. And
the willingness of the press to accept the lie and pass
it along as fact. If more sheep are cloned, don't be
surprised if some come out looking like modern journalists.
A few physicians spoke up. Two wrote a piece for the
op-ed page of The Wall Street Journal that shredded
the line peddled by people like Fitzsimmons. But they
were ignored, probably because the Journal's opinion
sections are viewed by the rest of journalism as hopelessly
conservative. The press swallowed the lies like worms
by a bass because the lies fit so neatly into what is
sometimes referred to as a "world view" that is shared
by those in the mainstream news media. Part of that
view seems to be that anyone who questions the need
for the vast number of abortions performed each year
is some kind of right-wing, bomb-tossing, gun-toting
religious nut. So when those who present themselves
as social progressives say that only women who face
death and fetuses who face life as vegetables are involved
in partial birth abortions, the press is comforted and
lets it go at that. Heaven forbid that the newsroom
should offend any of the "don't tell me what to do with
my body" crowd. It isn't the first big lie that the
media have bought and resold. Some years ago, gay organizations
and public health people launched an intense "We're
All at Risk" campaign. This meant that we were all equally
vulnerable to the threat of AIDS. Common sense and existing
evidence said otherwise: If you didn't have anal intercourse
with a man or borrow a needle from a dopehead, what
put you at risk? But those who launched the propaganda
campaign later admitted that they believed the fear
would create sympathy for gays and spur increased spending
on AIDS research. Eventually, a few skeptical reporters
shot holes in the campaign. But not until others who
questioned it had been labeled bigots and homophobes.
One journalist who wrote a book on the subject lost
his newspaper job, and his book, despite impressive
hardcover sales, couldn't attract a paperback publisher.
It was politically correct censorship. More recently,
there was the media hysteria over the burning of black
churches. Remember? Night riders were thought to be
galloping all over the country, burning black churches.
A massive racist conspiracy, possibly inspired by the
oratory of political conservatives like Pat Buchanan.
Clinton, concerned frown and all, visited churches and
recalled similar evil arsons in Arkansas when he was
a youth--memories that turned out to be pure fiction.
Proposals were made to use federal funds to rebuild
churches. Rich do-gooders kicked in money to organizations
that made the most victimization noise. Turned out it
was more smoke than fire. After the nation's press spread
the arson story, calmer heads took a closer look. Most
of the fires weren't arson. No conspiracy. Black arsonists
as well as white arsonists were arrested, proving that
a nut is a nut, regardless of color. It was as if no
one in an American newsroom knew that an old wooden
rural church can actually have bad wiring. Not when
Jesse Jackson is dishing out hot quotes about the second
coming of the Ku Klux Klan. Now we have Fitzsimmons
blowing the whistle on himself. His conscience? Or was
it that the truth was going to come out anyway? Maybe
from people such as the anti-abortion physician who
will be the subject of Friday's column. |
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