Anti-Choicers Pour Millions Into "Abortion" Misinformation Campaigns
Monday 11 October 2010
by: Amanda Marcotte | RH Reality Check | News Analysis

(Photo: AnyaLogic)
The number one mistake anyone can make when dealing with anti-choice activists is to take them at their word. Believing that they’re in this strictly because abortion itself offends them, and seeking ways to reduce access to abortion? Reproductive rights activists would be the first in line to tell you that’s never going to work. And if you stick around and listen to reproductive rights activists dispensing advice, the second thing we’d tell you is that people who enjoy going to clinics to yell at patients live for opportunities to harass people, and you’d be much better off avoiding them in the first place. If anti-abortion House Democrats had actually listened to this advice, they wouldn’t be facing the situation they’re in now.
Politico is reporting that a cadre of anti-choice groups, led by the misnamed Susan B. Anthony List, have taken to dumping millions of dollars into advertisements and a bus tour opposing anti-choice House Democrats who voted for health care reform after restrictions were attached that dramatically reduced women’s access to insurance coverage for abortion. Naturally, said Democrats are feeling betrayed. Politico quoted Rep. Kathy Delkamper, an anti-abortion Democrat who voted for the health care reform bill:
“It’s been extremely frustrating at times,” Dahlkemper told POLITICO. “All along, I have donated. I have marched. I have been an unmarried pregnant woman who chose life. I have lived this. Now I’m 52, and in the last six months, all of a sudden, people are questioning who I am.”
I imagine that it’s doubly frustrating because the anti-abortion Democrats gave the anti-choice movement what they said they wanted: a federal rule that makes it impossible for a single red cent of taxpayer money to go towards elective abortion. They even did them one better, by getting an executive order that will make it likely that insurance companies that currently offer abortion coverage will simply drop it. They gave the anti-choice movement what they said they wanted, and the anti-choice movement is still crying foul! It turned out they were always against the health care reform bill in its entirety, and abortion was simply a cover story to give moral weight to their opposition to universal health care. And, as Politico demonstrated, folks like Charmaine Yoest have no problem lying about abortion and health care reform, if it suits their goal of resisting health care reform:
“That being said, the fact that [the] Democratic Party advanced the biggest expansion of abortion with health care is something they have to answer for.”
How does drastically cutting off women’s access to insurance coverage for abortion constitute “the biggest expansion of abortion”? Answer: it doesn’t. But it’s politically useful to say so if you’re hijacking people’s anxieties about abortion to oppose health care reform.
A cynic might suggest the anti-choice movement is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Republican party, but I would actually say that partisanship isn’t the issue in this case. What anti-abortion Democrats have failed to do is understand the cardinal rule when dealing with the anti-choice movement: It’s never about abortion. It’s about sex and it’s about reinforcing their belief about women’s roles. But it’s never really about abortion. Opposing abortion rights is simply their best weapon in achieving their larger goals.
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Health care reform may have reduced women’s access to abortion, but social conservatives still have reasons to believe that the new health care system will run against their goals of punishing women for sexual choices they don’t like and keeping women dependent on men.
That the first concern---that expanded access to health care will allow women to have sex with fewer negative consequences---is somewhat true. On one hand, women won’t have insurance funding for abortion. But on the other hand, health care reform has the potential to greatly improve women’s access to contraception, STD testing and treatment, general gynecological care, and the HPV vaccine. (And the herpes vaccine, when it’s released.) So when you hear anti-choicers complain about “abortion” being covered, even though it’s not covered, it isn’t a leap to realize that by “abortion” they mean “prevention of cervical cancer and unintended pregnancy." It’s just less politically popular to run to the press and complain that this health care reform bill will mean fewer deaths from cervical cancer.
The second concern is a bit more of a logical leap, but nonetheless still an article of faith for social conservatives: that a social safety net undermines the patriarchy by making it easier for women to leave bad marriages. Phyllis Schlafly outlined this argument at a Michigan fundraiser, saying, “And this is because when you kick your husband out, you've got to have Big Brother Government to be your provider.” And there is some truth to this. When women don’t have to rely on their husbands for food, shelter, and health care, then those husbands lose a lot of leverage.
But you can see why anti-choice groups realize that it’s a bad idea to argue in public that they oppose a bill that would allow an abused wife to walk away from her husband without losing her insurance. Thus, that gets swept into the catch-all scare term “abortion” as well.
Anti-abortion Democrats made the mistake of thinking that anti-choice activists use the term “abortion” to mean “terminating a pregnancy”, and that mistake is coming back to haunt them. Hopefully, in the future, they will start to see that anti-choice groups use “abortion” as a catch-all term to condemn any choices women make that give them more power to control their own lives. And if you doubt that, I recommend reading this story about Senators Coburn and DeMint are blocking a women’s history museum because of “abortion.” The fact that there is nothing about abortion or reproductive rights in general is irrelevant to this argument. Under the new right wing definition of “abortion”, it’s millennia of male dominance that is being aborted, and it is this abortion more than any actual medical abortion that they object to.
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Comments
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Time to Reframe: Them as
Tue, 10/12/2010 - 10:07 — Vic Anderson (not verified)Time to Reframe: Them as PRO-HANGERS, Again!
The anti-choice movement is
Tue, 10/12/2010 - 10:17 — Anonymous (not verified)The anti-choice movement is authoritarian, fascist. It has absolutely nothing to do with being "pro-life," as these same people are pro-war, pro-torture, anti-science, anti-healthcare scum of the Earth.
I think this is so funny.
Tue, 10/12/2010 - 12:13 — Anonymous (not verified)I think this is so funny. The Repubs will NEVER allow Roe v Wade to actually be overturned. It's their biggest money maker.
Let these fools spend there money. I never understood "Pro Life" The unborn are sacred but actual living beings can be executed.
I wish just once, people
Tue, 10/12/2010 - 12:29 — Anonymous (not verified)I wish just once, people would admit that there are a whole lot worse things out there, than never having been born.
Yes, "authoritarian" indeed.
Tue, 10/12/2010 - 12:42 — Anonymous (not verified)Yes, "authoritarian" indeed. Look at the tactics: bullying and lying, even bombing and assassinations. The idea that "anti-choice" equals "pro-life" is absurd. For many of these people it seems that the right to life ends at birth.
I know, Amanda. You've had
Tue, 10/12/2010 - 15:32 — Lavrenti Beria (not verified)I know, Amanda. You've had an abortion that needs rationalizing and yet nothing seem to satisfy? Sure sounds that way to me. Otherwise why the obsession with denying the fact that others see abortion for the unspeakable atrocity that it is? And their revulsion simply a screen for an underlying puritanism? You entertain, little lady.
Anti-choice
Tue, 10/12/2010 - 18:25 — Anonymous (not verified)Anti-choice murderers:
Michael F. Griffin
Paul Jennings Hill
John Salvi
Eric Rudolph (also responsible for the Olympic Park bombing)
James Kopp
Scott Roeder
The actions of these people--I use the term loosely--help us understand even more clearly that anti-choice is not "pro-life" but rather authoritarianism. It is an effort to impose an irrational religious viewpoint on the rest of us--which the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment prohibits.
17:30 Anonymous--"The Repubs
Tue, 10/12/2010 - 19:32 — Anonymous (not verified)17:30 Anonymous--"The Repubs will NEVER allow Roe v Wade to actually be overturned. It's their biggest money maker."
So true! Yet, think of it the way LGBT community has had to deal with their demonization in society:
If you make abortions illegal, not unlike DADT laws or anti-gay laws, the price to do these things goes up, big time! Bribes, extortion, forced favors---all become commonplace and a bi-product of a society that makes something fairly commonplace, illegal. It becomes a boondoggle and a cash-cow for anyone in the religious right to completely capitalize on! Cha-ching!!!
Lavrenti Bera, You repulse,
Tue, 10/12/2010 - 21:22 — Les (not verified)Lavrenti Bera,
You repulse, puny man.
Starting off with name
Tue, 10/12/2010 - 21:33 — Christopher Marlowe (not verified)Starting off with name calling is not really a serious discussion. It could be "Pro-Life" and "Pro-Choice", but the author makes the decision to call the opposition "Anti-Choice". I hope everyone realizes that the Roe and Casey courts both saw the decision as being a balance between the mother's right to control her body and the State's duty to protect life. The names I mentioned above seem to describe the competing policy issues more fairly because they are merely emphasizing the side they favor. Calling someone who favors the rights of the unborn "anti-choice" is not fair because it makes a presumption that their interest is merely in suppressing a woman's rights. A similar name choice could be made by the Pro-Life side by calling the opposition "Pro-Death". Do you see the Logic?
Are "Lavrenti Beria" and
Wed, 10/13/2010 - 07:22 — Austin Loomis (not verified)Are "Lavrenti Beria" and "Christopher Marlowe" the same person? Or just the same apostle? Certainly neither one seems to have bothered actually reading the article before replying to it.
"Do you see the Logic?" No.
Wed, 10/13/2010 - 08:01 — Anonymous (not verified)"Do you see the Logic?"
No. So long as the anti-choice side supports a political establishment that is pro-war, pro-torture, anit-environment, and anti-healthcare, it cannot be called "pro-life". There's the logic.
In addition--the idea that the State should have the power to FORCE a woman to come to term is horrid and authoritarian. Yet people on the Right who say they favor "freedom" and "libertarianism" support this concept--and even in cases of rape. What hypocrites.
Returning to this article
Wed, 10/13/2010 - 08:01 — Austin Loomis (not verified)Returning to this article after a few minutes away from it: if "Lavrenti Beria" is really horrified by abortion, he should be fighting for the methods European countries have used to keep their abortion rates low: better sex education (as opposed to America's "abstinence-only" sex ed, which works about as well as "walking-only" driver's ed would) and better access to contraception.
While a few radicals try to
Wed, 10/13/2010 - 10:13 — Anonymous (not verified)While a few radicals try to impose their views,generally pro-life supporters don't support bullying,lying,bombing & assassinations.Further,prayer vigils and support for adoption as an alternative does not constitute forcing one's view.Influencing the decision toward avoiding an abortion is perfectly legitimate and does not generally imply a pro-war,pro-torture,pro-capital punishment or anti-health carestance.
Beria is well-named. I hope
Wed, 10/13/2010 - 12:18 — Jan Boudart (not verified)Beria is well-named. I hope you're not too young to remember the chief of clandestine ops in the old Soviet Union.
The brainwashed "believers"
Thu, 10/14/2010 - 17:24 — Anonymous (not verified)The brainwashed "believers" do what their clergy masters tell them to do without thinking about the world history of domination of the masses by those in charge. Once you get the picture that "believers" are "entertained" by theatre: the costumes of the clergy, special effects: the lighting in the "church" is directed at the alter and pulpit, and feed stories that distort world history, authoritatively design sociology and cultural geography, and promote genocide by armies ie Bible, Koran, you'll understand why Europeans have rejected the power of the alters and thrones. The new thrones are the corporate masters invented by the King of England to preserve his sovereignty used imperially to control the empire and its subjects ie "globalization" by the super major corporations, central banks, IMF, World Bank and dominate world militarism: USA, Briton, China, India, Russia, and France.
I am not Beria and I read
Thu, 10/14/2010 - 18:48 — Christopher Marlowe (not verified)I am not Beria and I read this crummy article. I am against the war and against torture. I am pro environment and pro SINGLE PAYER health care; I am not in favor of this handout to insurance companies. And I am PRO-LIFE because human life is a sacred gift from God. I am in favor of people thinking for themselves and not getting all their info from TV. I am against conquering people by dividing them into false dichotomies of repug/democorp. I am against banks ruling society by debt slavery. I am for the Constitution and a federal government of limited powers; I'm against the courts legislating and inventing "rights" like corporate personhood and abortion.