Bogus caricatures, flat-out misinformation, and
bias-by-omission have
recently plagued the Los Angeles Times when addressing the issue of
abortion. For example:
1. A
Tuesday, May 22, 2007, front-page piece by Stephanie Simon (whose work we've addressed
before here,
here,
here, and
here) tackles the fact
that the number of abortion doctors in the United States is dwindling.
Misinformed stereotypes and misleading information riddle the article. For example:
a. Simon paints an overly grisly portrait of abortion in the years
before Roe v. Wade (emphasis mine):
[Medical student Megan] Lederer, 30, can't relate to the images
that drew an older generation of physicians into abortion work. She
can barely picture it when they talk about life before legal
abortion: the blood-spattered apartments, the women
racked with infection from stabbing sticks into their wombs.
"Blood-splattered apartments"? "Women racked with infection from
stabbing sticks (??) into their wombs"? Sure - it's easy
to find anecdotal evidence of sad and tragic episodes like this, but
what's the truth about illegal abortion before Roe v. Wade?
According to CDC figures, in 1972, the last full year before the Roe v.
Wade decision, 39 women died from illegal abortions (source).
As tragic as each death is, this is hardly the national bloodbath that
Simon suggests. (It's also a far cry from the "5,000 to 10,000 deaths a
year" that the abortion industry once lied about. (Read more about that
here.)) Meanwhile, 35 years later, women continue to die from
legal abortions.
Life
Dynamics has compiled a list of 347 women who have been
verified to have been killed by legal abortion; the list is called
"Blackmun's Wall." (For other stories, see
this,
this,
and this.)
By the way, the number of deaths from legal abortions nowadays is
almost impossible to tabulate, as many abortions occur in "nonreporting
states" (source,
see page 5) and abortion-related deaths often go unreported (see
this important report.) (For even more on this, read the book
Lime 5, by Mark Crutcher.)
b. Simon also adds (emphasis mine):
Extreme violence is always a threat. A Texas man was
indicted this month on charges of planting a bomb filled with nails
outside an abortion clinic in Austin. The National Abortion
Federation is so fearful of attack that officials don't announce the
dates of the annual conference, much less the location.
But the violence has subsided greatly since the mid-1990s, when
seven doctors and clinic workers in the U.S. and Canada were
killed and dozens of clinics were targeted with bombings, arsons and
acid attacks. Doctors today are more likely to face pickets and
pray-ins.
First of all, notice a blatant contradiction. Simon first says that
"Extreme violence is always a threat." Then in the next paragraph she
writes, "Doctors today are more likely to face pickets and pray-ins."
Which is it, Stephanie?
Is "extreme violence" really "always" a threat? Any violence
against abortionists is reprehensible; but what is the truth?
Here are the facts: Even the National Abortion Federation's own web site
acknowledges that there have been exactly ZERO murders of
abortion providers so far in the 21st century, and the last murder was
in 1998 (nine years ago). The last attempted murder was in
2000 (link
(pdf)). In addition, the seven murders that Simon cites are the total
number of murders that have occurred since Roe v. Wade passed in
1973! There were zero murders of abortion providers
between 1973 and 1993 (Source:
On Message by Mark Crutcher) (See also
NAF's site.)
The bottom line: "The image of abortion workers having to dodge a hail
of automatic weapon fire just to get from their car to the clinic door
is utter nonsense," writes
Mark Crutcher.
(Crutcher also notes that in the years 1993 and 1994, the worst period
of violence in pro-life history
in which five abortionists and clinic workers were killed, more
farmers and twice as many hairdressers were
murdered on the job (On
Message).)
+_+_+_+_+_+_+
2. A
particularly offensive opinion piece by Dan Neil (Sun. 5/6/07) (he
usually writes about cars) is about how Dan and his wife aborted
two boys (partly because they "run a higher risk of autism") in
a "selective reduction." (Read reaction to Neil's awful piece
here,
here, and
here.) Neil wrote (emphasis mine),
The physician who performed our reduction asked that her name not
be used, for fear that she might be terrorized by some gun-toting
antiabortion extremist.
As we've already shown above, the caricature of the "gun-toting
antiabortion extremist" is an extremely gross and unfair
exaggeration.
+_+_+_+_+_+_+
3. A
May 7, 2007, article addressed the Supreme Court's April
partial-birth abortion decision. In citing a UCLA doctor, the article
said the upheld federal law "probably refers to a procedure
called 'intact dilation and extraction,' or intact D&X" (emphasis mine).
"Probably"?? Why "probably"? Did anyone at the Times actually
read
the Supreme Court decision? In the very first paragraph, the
case explicitly states that the debated procedure "is herein referred to
as 'intact D&E.'" In addition, a few paragraphs later in Justice
Kennedy's opinion, the jurist clearly explains that the procedure "has
been referred to as 'intact D&E,' 'dilation and extraction' (D&X), and
'intact D&X'."
In other words, there should be no "probably." What we have is a case of
sloppy journalism by the Times.
+_+_+_+_+_+_+
4. The Times' bias in addressing the abortion issue is especially
egregious for not only what it reports but for what it does not
report. As we wrote last
week, the Times has failed to publish a single syllable about a
major scandal at Planned Parenthood Los Angeles. A Planned Parenthood
clinic worker
was caught on videotape advising a woman she thought to be
underage to conceal a statutory rape.
"[J]ust figure out a birth date that works. And I don’t know anything,"
said the clinic worker. Illegal activity, maybe?
It goes without saying that if this had been a Republican or a
Catholic priest caught on the tape, the Times would be sure to
report it - in BIG letters on their front page. But since Planned
Parenthood is the culprit, the story is completely and utterly
ignored.
Virulent bias at the Los Angeles Times? Absolutely.