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« Double Dose: Genetic Risk of Breast Cancer, Dairy Council Ditches Weight Loss Campaign and the Relationship Between Gender Inequity and HIV/AIDS | Main | The Mothers Movement on Fathers » June 04, 2007Cracks in the Antiabortion Movement Reveal Frustration with National LeadersThe Washington Post has an interesting story today about a growing rift in the antiabortion movement. A coalition of evangelical Protestant and Roman Catholic groups that prefers to focus efforts on overturning Roe v. Wade instead of chipping at it incrementally is upset with Focus on the Family founder James C. Dobson, accusing him and other national antiabortion leaders of "building an 'industry' around relentless fundraising and misleading information." The rift came to a head following the Supreme Court's recent 5-4 decision in Gonzales v. Carhart, which upheld the so-called Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act. Alan Cooperman writes: In an open letter to Dobson that was published as a full-page ad May 23 in the Colorado Springs Gazette, Focus on the Family's hometown newspaper, and May 30 in the Washington Times, the heads of five small but vocal groups called the Carhart decision "wicked," and accused Dobson of misleading Christians by applauding it. Though it is interesting to listen in on this debate, ultimately the story offers too little too late -- it doesn't include any responses to the inaccurate assertions about the procedure, and the issues raised by the internal fighting should have been probed earlier. Really, what about all the money raised by groups asserting that upholding the ban would save lives? Rev. Bob Enyart, a Christian talk radio host and pastor of the Denver Bible Church, isn't pleased with the propaganda some antiabortion groups put forth while drumming up support for the partial-birth abortion ban: "Over the past seven years, the partial-birth abortion ban as a fundraising technique has brought in over a quarter of a billion dollars" for major antiabortion groups, "but the ban has no authority to prevent a single abortion, and pro-life donors were never told that," he said. "That's why we call it the pro-life industry." Well, we couldn't agree more with that statement. Yet while Enyart and others see the focus on incremental rulings as a calculated reluctance by Republican Party-backed antiabortion groups to fight for personhoood for a fetus -- because that might turn off more centrist Republican voters -- we see it as something far more critical than political gamesmanship: Lost in all the friction and uproar is the fact that they're playing politics with women's lives. Plus: Over at Slate, Emily Bazelon writes about how the Supreme Court decision puts doctors in the hot seat in "Partial-Birth Confusion." |
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