Pro-Abortionists
Have "Lost Control of the
Narrative"
Part One of Three
By Dave Andrusko
Part Two and
Part Three carefully pick
apart the tissue of pro-abortion
lies surrounding the Senate
health care bill. Send your
comments on any or all three
parts to
daveandrusko@gmail.com. Have
a great weekend!
The headline on the "Newsweek
Web Exclusive" was "Outing
Abortion, From Town Halls to
Twitter." The subhead does an
unusually deft job of
summarizing Sarah Kliff's
argument: "A Florida woman
tweeting her abortion is trying
to take the shame out of the
procedure. It's a high-tech
twist on an evolving mission,
one that's had limited success."
Kliff's jumping off point is
what we discussed Monday: a
woman who was tweeting while her
unborn child was being
chemically annihilated by RU486.
Having ingested the powerful
abortifacient, Angie Jackson
then posted a You Tube of
herself as her unborn child
died. Why?
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Angie Jackson, from her
You Tube entry |
"I'm live tweeting my abortion
on Twitter," she said, "not for
some publicity stunt or for
attention or to justify this to
myself, I am at peace with my
decision. I'm doing this to
demystify abortion. I'm doing
this so that other women know,
'Hey, it's not nearly as
terrifying as I had myself
worked up thinking it was. It's
just not that bad.' …I hope
everybody on You Tube has a
great and godless day. Peace." (www.nrlc.org/News_and_Views/March10/nv030110.html.)
Kliff's point is that this
one-upmanship (my description)
is nothing new. The Twitter part
might be "novel," but not the
"mission."
"In the nearly four decades
since Roe v. Wade, in magazines
and blogs, in tweets and T
shirts, thousands of women have
publicly told some form of their
abortion story," she writes.
"Media vary but the motivation
is generally the same: make
abortion less shameful and
secret."
But, darn it, no such luck.
Abortion is still "stigmatized,"
and, worse yet, "pro-choice
organizations lost control of
the narrative." They actually
gave it away (to women who
regret their abortions) by
"ignoring the conversation about
abortion, even if it was a
difficult one to approach."
But, just so we're clear here,
it's not that the idea of
broadcasting to the world that
you disposed of your own unborn
child is a bad one. The
"problem" is there weren't
enough of these stories, or,
more specifically, they were
"disconnected."
Thus Kliff can assure the reader
that "Changing the stereotypes
that come with abortion, and the
stigma they engender, is not
necessarily impossible." What's
needed is "a larger, more
complex discussion."
Okay, let's think about this in
a complex way. Why do so many
women who have abortions either
verbally express their profound
regret or acknowledge that
second hand by refusing to
discuss what happened--or by "distanc[ing]
themselves from others who have
had the same experience"?
If we believe this web
exclusive, it's because
generally abortion "does not
define a woman's identity nor
engender community formation."
Pardon? "[W]hen you make an
abortion decision, it's probably
not going to define you, so
there's less motivation to
advocate for that right,"
according to Kate Cosby, who,
were are told, is "a researcher
at University of California--San
Francisco who focuses on the
stigma and emotions involved in
abortion."
But the explanation is far
different and--if I dare say
so--much simpler than that. As
anyone who has ever worked at a
woman helping center/crisis
pregnancy center will tell you,
most women consider/complete an
abortion out of sense of sheer
desperation. Too often they have
been abandoned by the men in
their lives or are on the
receiving end of incredible
pressure to abort. When the
"woman" is, in fact, a girl, she
really needs a helping hand and
expressions of support. Without
that, it is easy to see why they
believe abortion is their "only
option."
But having taken their child's
life under those circumstances,
why would they be cheerleaders
for "choice"?
Pro-abortionists and their
colleagues in the media
subscribe to the theory if you
drown the public in abortion
stories, people will either
become desensitized to the ugly
brutality of abortion or become
resigned to it as somehow
"normal." You would think the
undeniable pro-life shift in
public opinion--not to mention
the very negative response to
PPFA's tasteless "I had an
abortion" Tee-shirt
campaign--might have taught them
something. But in fact they draw
the opposite conclusion.
The abortion set, never a slave
to taste, discretion, or the
cruelty of abortion, will never
run out of new and imaginative
ways to try to persuade the
public that aborting/not
aborting is no different than
choosing Coke over Pepsi. But
there is no more chance of that
than Barack Obama telling the
truth about abortion and health
care "reform."
Please send your comments to
daveandrusko@gmail.com.
They are most appreciated.
Part Two
Part Three |