Lumping Pro-Lifers In With
"Rightwing Extremism"
Part One of Two
By Dave Andrusko
Editor's note.
Part Two
reviews Bernie Goldberg's delightful book on how
the mainstream media covered Obama. Please send
your comments on either or both parts to
daveandrusko@gmail.com.
If you're a veteran of this
the grassiest of grassroots movements, you know
that part of the drill for the Pro-Life Movement
is to be linked to whomever it is a given
commentator is using to try to pigeonhole and
marginalize us. You can't just be opposed to the
wanton slaughter of defenseless unborn babies.
You have to be in cahoots with [fill in the
blank]. This recurrence is as predictable as
swallows returning to Capistrano.
That does not mean there is an
ounce of truth to it. It does mean that smear
tactics are a perennial hazard that we face.
My email box is filled with
links to the recently published Department of
Homeland Security (DHS) report on "Rightwing
Extremism" which, in an evidence-free footnote,
included pro-lifers.
When you read something this
stupid you are tempted either to overreact or
ignore it altogether. Let me try a
middle-of-the-road approach.
Just a few words about the
overall report produced by DHS's Office of
Intelligence and Analysis. The full title is
"Rightwing Extremism: Current Economic and
Political Climate Fueling Resurgence in
Radicalization and Recruitment."
I skimmed the report the first
time through, then read it closely a second
time. And then, just to be sure I wasn't missing
something, I read it a third time. I needn't
have put in that much time. One page into the
nine-page report and a fourth-grader could have
figured out that the authors had come with a
pre-determined conclusion.
Its reasoning is painfully,
embarrassingly shoddy and supportive evidence of
actual threats non-existent. It's entirely
speculative--about what might happen if "x" or
"y" comes to pass. A conversation over the water
cooler carries as much weight and would be much
more balanced.
So how did the report arrive
at the conclusion that rightwing extremism "may
include groups and individuals that are
dedicated to a single issue, such as opposition
to abortion or immigration"? Let's back up a
second to see how we got swept in.
The report bifurcates
"rightwing extremism" into hate groups and those
that are "mainly anti-government."
Do pro-lifers hate "particular
religious, racial, or ethnic groups"? Of course
not, and there is not a shred of evidence in the
report that suggests we do. In fact, it is the
Abortion Industry that targets minority
communities.
How about "antigovernment"?
Coursing through the veins of every pro-lifer is
an abiding faith in the capacity of government
to change. That's why we are active in all 50
state legislatures and in the halls of Congress.
I guess even the dim-witted
authors of "Rightwing Extremism" grasped that we
fit neither of these categories. So they just
lumped us in by employing the all-purpose "may"
word. Again, not a word to explain why
pro-lifers should be tarred with the extremist
brush.
From the earliest days of the
Obamamania phenomenon, the "mainstream media"
has let us know in unsubtle and unmistakable
ways that it is close to un-American to
criticize what he proposes or what he stands
for. We have never allowed that to stop us from
opposing the policies of any man who carries
water for the Abortion Establishment with both
arms. Nor will we.
I don't do paranoia. But I do
believe that "eternal vigilance is the price of
liberty."
Part Two |