This is an excellent article on the Gosnell Abortion Clinic trial that most news outlets aren't covering.
It's worth asking why such a horrific crime is being largely ignored?
The answer is obvious: The media is overwhelmingly liberal and not even pretending anymore and one of the most basic "rights" of the left is the right to abortion.
This particular case is so devastatingly ugly that it would make even the most ardent supporters at least reconsider their views on abortion.
If Newtown should spark a national debate about gun control and whether guns should even be allowed in private hands, why shouldn't this case spark a national debate about abortion?
Try this little experiment:
Go to the central courtyard of your favorite local college at lunch time.
A.) Announce that you intend to have an abortion the next day.
B.) Announce that you intend to euthanize a puppy the next day.
See which one gets a more heated and potentially violent responses.
The story on Gosnell will turn your stomach but it's worth reading.
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WPost reporter explains her personal Gosnell blackout
April 12, 2013 By mollie 19 Comments
I’ve been writing about media coverage of abortion for many years. And so have many others. If you haven’t read David Shaw’s “Abortion Bias Seeps Into The News,” published in the Los Angeles Times back in 1990, you should. That report also explains why we cover the topic here at GetReligion.
But the thing is that I’m getting kind of sick of pointing out egregious bias only to see things not just remain bad but get worse. Just think, in the last year, we saw the media drop any pretense of objectivity and bully the Susan G. Komen Foundation into funding Planned Parenthood. And then we had how many months of coverage focused on someone calling a birth control activist a bad name? And who can forget every pro-life person in the country being asked to respond to Todd Akin’s stupid remarks about rape?
So our abortion-drenched media would certainly want to cover what is arguably the country’s most horrific serial murder trial of abortion doctor Kermit Gosnell, right? Well, far from the front-page, top of the news, daily update coverage you rightfully would expect, it’s been downplayed. Majorly downplayed.
Inspired by Kirsten Powers’ USA Today column yesterday, I decided to start asking journalists about their personal involvement in the Gosnell cover-up.
I began by asking the AP’s national social issues reporter why he hadn’t been tweeting to AP coverage of the Gosnell trial. I had to ask a few times and then … there it was … finally …. a tweet on the Gosnell trial. Then he told me that the AP was covering the trial (which I knew, as I’ve critiqued it here). I reminded him that I was wondering why he hadn’t been tweeting to coverage of Gosnell. I asked him to correct me if I was wrong about his lack of tweets. He didn’t.
Then I decided, since tmatt has me reading the Washington Post every day, to look at how the paper’s health policy reporter was covering Gosnell. I have critiqued many of her stories on the Susan G. Komen Foundation (she wrote quite a bit about that) and the Sandra Fluke controversy (she wrote quite a bit about that) and the Todd Akin controversy (you know where this is going). In fact, a site search for that reporter — who is named Sarah Kliff — and stories Akin and Fluke and Komen — yields more than 80 hits. Guess how many stories she’s done on this abortionist’s mass murder trial.
Did you guess zero? You’d be right.
So I asked her about it. Here’s her response:
Hi Molly – I cover policy for the Washington Post, not local crime, hence why I wrote about all the policy issues you mention.
Yes. She really, really, really said that. As Robert VerBruggen dryly responded:
Makes sense. Similarly, national gun-policy people do not cover local crime in places like Aurora or Newtown.
So when a private foundation privately decides to stop giving money to the country’s largest abortion provider, that is somehow a policy issue deserving of three dozen breathless hits. When a yahoo political candidate says something stupid about rape, that is a policy issue of such import that we got another three dozen hits about it from this reporter. It was so important that journalists found it fitting to ask every pro-lifer in their path to discuss it. And when someone says something mean to a birth control activist, that’s good for months of puffy profiles.
But gosh darn it, can you think of any policy implications to this, uh, “local crime” story? And that’s all it is. Just like a bunch of other local stories the Washington Postalso refuses to cover — local crimes such as the killing of Trayvon Martin and the killing of Matthew Shepard and the killing of students at an elementary school in Connecticut. Did the Washington Post even think of covering those local crime stories? No! Oh wait, they did? Like, all the time? Hmm. That’s weird. But did they cover them in terms of policy implications? Asking politicians for their views and such? Oh they did that, too? Hmm. So weird. Oh, and Sarah Kliff herself wrote one of those stories? Well, gosh, I’m so confused.
And what policies could possibly be under discussion with this Gosnell trial? Other than, you know, abortion clinic hiring practices? And enforcement of sanitary conditions? And laws on abortion practices that extend to killing live infants by beheading them? And the killing of their mothers? And state or federal oversight of clinics with records of botched abortions? And pain medication practices? And how to handle the racist practices of some clinics? And how big of a problem this is (don’t tell anyone but another clinic nearby to Gosnell was shut down this week over similar sanitation concerns)? And disposal of babies’ bodies? And discussion of whether it’s cool to snip baby’s spines after they’re born? And how often are abortion clinics inspected anyway? What are the results of inspections? When emergency rooms take in victims of botched abortions, do they report that? How did this clinic go 17 years without an inspection? Gosh, I just can’t think of a single health policy angle here. Can you?
I mean, God forbid we go big and actually discuss abortion policy in general — something Kliff is usually quite keen to do. (Here’s her 2010 piece for Newsweekheadlined Remember Roe!)
Kliff is hearing from her readers now — mostly I know about this since literally hundreds of them are copying me on their responses. To put it quite mildly, they find her justification attempt stunning, disingenuous, callous, laughable and far, far worse. The most charitable response was this one from Billy Valentine:
so who at @washingtonpost SHOULD be covering Gosnell if not you?
She hasn’t responded. It seemed obvious to me that the reporter at the Washington Post who writes so prolifically and passionately about abortion rights would cover this story. She says, however unconvincingly, that a major abortion story suddenly isn’t her beat. OK. Fine. So who at the Washington Post should be covering this major story with national implications? Let me know and I’ll ask them about it.
Journalists aren’t exactly coming to her defense either. In the words of Andrew Kirell:
Yeahhhh, so I’m pro-choice, but this Gosnell story is awful. And oh boy does it look bad for reporters normally on the health/abortion beat.
The Gosnell blackout was working brilliantly for months here. And if this didn’t happen to be the most shocking trial of the century, I think reporters such as Kliff could have gotten away with it. They’d say they couldn’t imagine it being a health policy story. And then they wouldn’t cover it. So no politicians would weigh in. And it wouldn’t become a health policy story. It may be circular logic, but it’s quite effective.
See, the way you get Presidents and others to talk about uninteresting little local crime stories is that you ask them to.
I offered this one up to Kliff earlier but I’ll share it widely:
President Obama worked against the Born-Alive Infants Protection Act back in the Illinois Senate. He said he thought it was unnecessary and that he was worried it would undermine Roe. How has the Gosnell case affected his thinking on protections for children such as the ones Gosnell is accused of killing?
Variations of that would work on any and all pro-choice politicians, particularly the ones that share Obama’s extreme views on this topic. Remember how reporters asked every pro-life individual in America (or so it seemed back in October) to respond to Todd Akin’s remarks on rape? Go ahead and ask just a few prominent pro-choice activists and pols for their take on Gosnell. And try to ask some tough questions. No, like real questions.
In my next post, I’ll tell you how it went when I looked at Politico‘s Gosnell coverage and Atlantic.com’s — it’s also pretty interesting.
The picture above, for what it’s worth, is of the reserved media seats at the Gosnell trial. It was taken by JD Mullane, a news writer and columnist for the Bucks County Courier Times, The Intel and the Burlington County (NJ) Times. He says:
Sat through a full day of testimony at the Kermitt Gosnell trial today. It is beyond the most morbid Hollywood horror. It will change you.
I was surprised by the picture and asked “really?” He responded “Local press was there, Inky, PhillyMag, NBC10 blogger. Court staff told me nobody else has shown up.”
You have given me pause pirate. I have always considered myself a Pro-Choice woman (be nice, no one is throwing anything at you) but your experiment is scary.
ReplyDelete"Go to the central courtyard of your favorite local college at lunch time.
A.) Announce that you intend to have an abortion the next day.
B.) Announce that you intend to euthanize a puppy the next day."
The reaction I am sure we all expect is very disturbing. I do not know if my mind will be completely changed on the subject, but I know that I am now horrified by our societies collective complacency to the act. It is often the smallest statements that have the biggest impact. Thank you for opening my own internal dialog.
That's by far the nicest thing you could've said - thank you.
ReplyDeleteI made somebody think ,))
I'm going to mark this day on the calendar.
I actually changed the original post quite a bit b/c it sounded pretty ugly/preachy/pedantic/etc. So glad it had the intended effect - pause and consider.
Thanks for writing in!
What happened to the post you wrote about hallucination's? Quite an Existentialist theme!
ReplyDeleteYou're up awful early to be contemplating existentialism.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure if I'll repost.
It felt a little blogorific - overly confessional without having much of a point.
Still working on it though.
Thanks for writing in!
Um, just for the record the second anonymous was not written by the first anonymous. (and I don't wake up at 5am on a Sunday, yikes)
ReplyDeleteBut now I'm curious.......hallucinations?
Anyway, you're welcome and I truly mean it. I do feel that we have lost sight of actually listening to one another. Just because I sit on one side of the fence does not mean that the person on the other side of the fence is stupid or wrong or crazy; it just means they sit over there.
So where do you stand on gun control? (oh she's done it now) ;)
TB
Yeah - that "I know everything attitude and the other guys is stupid" doesn't get anyone very far and it's not good rhetoric/argumentation (although I've far to go on that)
ReplyDeleteAs for guns, while I don't particularly like them I don't want them banned. I wouldn't think it would be a good thing if only the police have them - there are just too many bad guys out there.
In places like Chicago, where guns are banned, the homicide rate is out of control and average citizens can't defend themselves.
I've had the unpleasant experience of being held up at gun point twice and I'm certainly not anxious to go for three but I'm (I think) a pragmatist on this - I want the bad guys stopped - preferably once and for all.
In the U.S. the genie is out of the bottle so to speak, so unless you're willing to authorize a house by house search and seizure for weapons I don't see how you would ever keep the wrong people from getting guns.
I'm not sure what's changed in this country. I went to a very rural high school in the late '80's and better than half the guys I knew would throw their guns in their cars to go hunting before or after class. There was never a problem.
I guess neither side has a win/win for me: I'm not in love with guns but I don't trust or even want "government" to protect me.
I'll repost the "hallucinations" in a minute.
Thanks again for writing - nice to see actual civilians are reading this nonsense ,))
hmmm, you replied to my rhetorical question ;), nice. It's good though, proves my point, if you dismiss someone based on one aspect you miss the whole picture. We have a very similar stance on gun control. I too grew up in a rural area and when my great uncle discovered that at the ripe old age of 7 I had never shot a rifle well.........lets just say my Mom got a proper tongue lashing about how to raise a child and I got to shoot a stop sign at the end of a dirt road! (honestly, it scarred the s$%t out of me).
ReplyDeleteSo the actual purpose of my continuing this insane dialog with a computer........your hallucination post.......very intense. I am so sorry about your Dad, to lose someone that important so young................
It also seems that you have had a rough few weeks. I don't know you from Adam but the universe has showered some pretty amazing gifts on me in the past few days. I feel the need to be grateful and reach back in whatever medium possible (I mean you did cause me to take a good hard look at when I believe creation begins, that deserves something). Lay off the ambian, long walks on cool nights and warm milk do help with insomnia. If warm milk turns your stomach, pour a nice glass of Woodford Reserve (or whatever libation you prefer) and play this...........it always helps me. "There will be an answer......"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vHgZCrAoqKk
TB
PS I pride myself on tolerance and NOT judging a book by its cover however, if you don't like The Beatles there is something wrong with you! ;) (yes, thats a winky face but I am serious)
PSS You have also ignited a bit of a writing bug....I think going to go get me one of these bloggy things and blather my own insane thoughts to the world. Thanks again pirate!!
How dare you!:!
ReplyDelete"IF I like the Beatles?"
Ruuuuude!!!
I saw the Circue show in Vegas - "Love" - so great.
Seriously, you don't get to be a fan of "music" if you dont like the Beatles.
Those are the rules.
Every time I go shooting I have the same uneasiness holding the gun - it's that ugly realization that are you holding the potential to end someone's life.
That being said, you can have a lot of fun with .22, some empty cans, a case of beer, and some good friends.
Thanks for reading along.
I'm still not sure about that post - I had "more that I wanted to get across somehow.
Not sure.
Lookie there - I'm makin' folks think and act.
I don't want to brag but I'm kind of a big deal
"the source of the trouble" might be proud
Set your bloggy thing up and start writing. I'll put a linky thing on the bloggy thing here.
And yes I would be glad to allow you the honor of buying me a beer.
You're welcome ,))
Good Morning,
ReplyDeleteOk so a few things.........BRAIN CANCER!!! Did I miss that? Thats some heavy stuff. I hope you are ok now.
2) Highland Tap/Family Dog..........I think we may be neighbors!
3) I am a southern lady of a certain age.........I don't buy men drinks, they buy me drinks ;)
TB
The blog is up and apparently I am huge in Malaysia!!!
Check your follows (wow that sounds creepy)
Yes ma'am to all 3.
DeleteI did have a version of brain cancer.
Clival Chordoma. Diagnosed Nov. 2005
Been officially in remission for 5 years.
I do live in VaHi - on Glen Arden Way close to North Highland.
Be glad to be the man and buy you a drink.
P.S. met some OTP friends at Dogwood today.
what a gorgeious day for it