Tuesday, June 9, 2009

WHEN “PRO-LIFE” MEANS PRO DEATH

By (O)CT(O)PUS

The title of this post is borrowed from an article originally written in 1998 by Mary Lou Greenberg , who reports on assaults by pro-life extremists. She describes this bomb attack on the All Women Health Care clinic in Birmingham Alabama that killed a security guard and severely injured a nurse:
“As I held in my hand the sharp slivers of glass that were now the only remains of the shattered windows, my eye was drawn to a metal object in the debris. It was a nail, a small, sharp spike two inches long (…) Just as this anti-personnel bomb at the clinic was intended to rip apart bodies, so too was it meant to penetrate people's minds and emotions with a chilling message: If you provide abortions, if you work at clinics or go to them as clients, you will be a target!”
This court case, Fargo Women's Health Organization v. Lambs of Christ, tells another aspect of the story. Established in 1981, the clinic offered routine gynecological services including first trimester abortions. For years, anti-abortion protestors held peaceful demonstrations in the vicinity of the clinic but conditions changed in 1991 when protestors stormed the clinic and occupied the building.

In the ensuing months, demonstrators jostled patients at the front door, struck and pushed escorts, confronted patients in the parking lot, vandalized cars, and blocked public roadway access. As a result, the clinic was effectively blockaded, preventing patients and staff from entering or leaving the building. Protestors called these blockades "rescues" and vowed to close the clinic outright.

Away from the clinic, the situation turned nastier when protestors followed staffers to their homes, to stores, even to the airport. For five months, protesters stalked a doctor at her home. Before dawn, “as many as 30 protesters” gathered on the front lawn, shouted, honked car horns, and blocked the driveway to prevent the doctor and her family from leaving. Protestors vandalized the doctor’s property and picketed the school where her daughter attended. Other staffers were similarly harassed; a car full of protestors stalked the daughter of a clinic volunteer.

Similar incidents spawned more litigation. In another noteworthy case, Bray V. Alexandria Women's Health Clinic, several abortion clinics sued in District Court. In hindering women as a class from seeking an abortion, they argued, anti-abortion protesters had violated their equal protection rights. Although a District Court ruled in favor of the clinics, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the ruling in a 5 to 4 decision that defied logic:
Opposition to abortion cannot reasonably be presumed to reflect gender-based intent, Justice Scalia wrote [my bold], because there are common and respectable reasons for opposing abortion other than a derogatory view of women.
In other words, a protestor’s right to free speech trumps a woman’s right to free and unfettered access to reproductive health services.  In Planned Parenthood Shasta-Diablo v. Williams, Joshua Wilson describes the "ideological dilemma" when two legal concepts come into conflict forcing both sides of the argument to decide which rights deserve priority over others. For pro-choice liberals, the strategy is to protect abortion rights by limiting disruptive demonstrations near reproductive health facilities. For pro-life conservatives, their strategy is the reverse: To obstruct access to abortions by expanding their traditionally narrow views regarding freedom of expression and freedom of assembly. Depending upon on the issue, it seems, civil liberties are in the eyes of the beholder.

On January 13, 1993, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Bray V. Alexandria Women's Health Clinic.  Two months later, on March 10, 1993 to be exact, Dr. David Gunn was murdered by an anti-abortion extremist in Pensacola Florida :
David Gunn, 47, was shot three times in the back after he got out of his car at the Pensacola Women's Medical Services clinic, according to Pensacola police (…)

Last summer in Montgomery, Ala., an old-fashioned "wanted" poster of Gunn was distributed at a rally for Operation Rescue leader Randall Terry, AP said. The poster included a picture of Gunn, his home phone number and other identifying information.
Eight months later, on August 19, 1993, a pro-life extremist shot Dr. George Tiller in both arms. It was the first attempt on his life and the first of many threats throughout his career. Not only did Dr. Tiller survive the attack, he returned to the clinic the next day to administer to his patients.

In response to a pattern of arson, bombings, murder, and intimidation at abortion clinics, the U.S. Congress passed the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act (FACE) on May 26, 1994. More than a dozen states followed suit by imposing buffer zones around clinics and homes, prohibiting threats to personnel, banning telephone harassment, and imposing noise regulations. On March 17, 1997, the case of Planned Parenthood Shasta-Diablo v. Williams reached the U.S. Supreme Court. This time, the Justices voted 6-3 to uphold the buffer zones.

Despite legislative initiatives to date to stop the violence, there have been:





These are not the actions of a mere handful of lone extremists within the pro-life movement. These statistics imply the existence of a pervasive and organized network of accomplices working underground and nationwide. Scott Roeder, the man charged with the murder of Dr. George Tiller, agrees. From his jail cell last week, Roeder said: "I know there are many other similar events planned around the country as long as abortion remains legal ..."

Meanwhile, what about our vaunted rights of free speech and free assembly? How can we claim these civil liberties as hallmarks of freedom when thousands of reproductive health professionals and their clients are forced to endure bullying, harassment, intimidation, and threats of personal injury every day? Which is worse: The threat of international terrorism from abroad, or the threat of pro-life terrorism at home that can strike at any moment.

11 comments:

  1. I have spent a good part of my life defending the right for women to have control over their bodies. It is a tiresome, neverending debate, but then someone like my dear friend, 8pus does a post like this and reminds me that not all men are hopelessly boorish pigs.
    The freedom of speech demands responsibility from those who take advantage of it.
    While I do not support the anti-abortionists' agenda, I do support their right to assemble, scream and yell, carry signs and froth at the mouth if they so desire.
    What I do not support is their interference in the lives of others who are engaged in LEGAL activities. I do not support their constant harrassment of working people who are caring for others and making a living.
    I certainly do not support the taking of a life in the name of God, babies or whatever other symbol of their irrationality they choose to name.
    I think women and clinics have been doubly victimized, first by the nuts trying to kill them and second by law enforcement and government officials who should be protecting them.
    When Sarah Palin expoused upon how she "chose" to have her son and how her daughter, Bristol "chose" to have her baby, the sad irony was not lost on me, but I guess it must have been on many others.

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  2. How people can become so tied to ideology that they are consumed with hate, hate, hate to the point that they actively disrupt the lives of others is beyond me. Picketing the school of a doctor's daughter?! That is reprehensible (obviously the other things are too - killing in particular - but to target a child only tangentially related to the issue is truly skin-crawling).

    I've often wondered what these lunatics would find to rampage about if abortion weren't legal. That sort of treacherous mindset can't be appeased.

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  3. "I certainly do not support the taking of a life in the name of God,"

    All of them would cut a swath through the law to get at the Devil they invented for the purpose, but as Thomas More said in that play:

    "oh, but when the last law was down and the devil turned around on you, where would you hide, Roper, the laws all being flat? This country's planted thick with laws from coast to coast, man's laws, not God's. And if you cut them down, and you're just the man to do it, do you really think you
    could stand upright in the winds that would blow then? Yes, I'd give the devil the benefit of law for my own safety's sake."

    But then More was sane and a Christian. The same can't be said for these "right to life terrorists."

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  4. There has never been a shortage of persons willing to send someone else to the gallows, off to war or to the mortician in defense of their own beliefs.

    If only they could be convinced that suicide makes a stronger statement, the rest of us might feel a lot safer.

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  5. As long as they don't take others along with them on their escape to heaven.

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  6. Anti-Abortion Group Interested In Buying George Tiller's Clinic:

    "Operation Rescue President Troy Newman said he would love to make an offer for the property and that his group had discussed the idea.

    Newman's group bought another former abortion clinic in Wichita in 2006 for its headquarters. Newman said Operation Rescue could use more space.
    "

    This would be especially galling ... more space to expand their terrorist operations. Dr. Tiller's facility should be reopened as a reproductive health clinic and serve as a monument to the courageous work he did.

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  7. While I do not support the anti-abortionists' agenda, I do support their right to assemble, scream and yell, carry signs and froth at the mouth if they so desire.

    Rocky: I support their right to assemble; however the frothing at the mouth and screaming is where I draw the line, especially when it’s done in front of homes or schools. These people are wackos and while they have the right to their opinion, there needs to be some discretion. But I used the term wacko, so they have no sense or discretion. They are driven by their misguided belief; which in this case is LIFE, but they will commit murder. I am bewildered. Kill the doctor to save the baby. WHAT!? Those of us with a wit of sense can’t comprehend this nonsense.


    Octo: A very well written and thought out post. As you pointed out, many of these clinics also provide services to women, not just abortions. To have these clinics targeted is extremely dangerous to all of society.

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  8. That alone is too much for some of these Christians. Information about birth control is beyond their tolerance as well.

    It should be said that many late term abortions are used to abort non-viable foetuses, some that would only survive for a while on life support, some that have no brains or only rudimentary brains - and many that would not survive birth. Most importantly, some are done to save the pregnant woman's life.

    I wonder how many of these righteous rabble have ever watched a woman die in childbirth or seen some of the horrible mistakes nature makes.

    But it's not about saving lives - not a bit. It's about saving souls and what happens to the hydrocephalic infant, the microcephalic infant if he can be delivered at all without killing his mother, is of no concern once he's had the opportunity to be saved of his original sin by sprinkling magic water on it. It's cruel, misinformed, stupid religious madness and it's nothing else.

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  9. Fogg, I don't think it's even about saving souls. I think the real aim is to stoke their own deluded sense of self-importance.
    If this was about women's health or children's lives, these nuts would be doing something meaningful and constructive, such as mentoring at risk females and fostering abandoned children.

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  10. I think the real aim is to stoke their own deluded sense of self-importance.

    Rocky: They don’t even have THAT. They are a bunch of sheeple who can’t think for themselves. They don’t really know what they are doing, but they do it anyway. It’s like a cult. It’s sad, really, because there are so many people today who don’t think; don’t have a purpose and just follow others because they don’t have lives of their own and want to belong. People complain about kids and gangs; well we have plenty of adults who fit this category, except these “gangs” are blowing up clinics.

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  11. I think that's a good point. When one is a miserable failure one looks for something to hang on to - even if it's only that you're white, and if being white means you're oppressed by minorities and Jews, why then you're almost a hero. If you're the savior of unborn eggs, why then you are a hero.

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