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Τρίτη 9 Σεπτεμβρίου 2014
ON ABORTION...
ON ABORTION
By Joe Sobran, Sobran’s Newsletter, August 24, 2000.
In his famous essay “Politics and the English
Language,” George Orwell analyzed the corrupting influence of dishonest
politics on the way we speak and think. There is no better example than the
effect abortion has had on our language.
Though abortion—including the killing of viable
infants at the verge of birth—is now a “sacrament” of the Democratic Party,
nobody admits to being “pro-abortion”; they are “pro-choice.” This is an
obvious lie. The right to choose anything presupposes the right to live. The
child, fetus, embryo, or whatever you want to call the entity growing within
its mother’s womb has no “choice” about being killed. It will never have a
choice about anything.
The pro-abortion side is pro-abortion in the same way
that advocates of slavery were pro-slavery. “Oh,” they protest, “but we don’t
insist that everyone get an abortion; we only want people”—that is, mothers—“to
have a choice!”
Then nobody was pro-slavery either, since nobody
insisted that every white man own a slave; they were “pro-choice.”
They wanted each white man to be “free” to decide
whether to buy slaves; or they wanted every state to decide whether to permit
slavery. Of course they overlooked the obvious fact that the slaves themselves
had no choice; in their minds this was irrelevant.
The bad conscience of the proaborters shows in their
studious avoidance of the word kill to describe what abortion is. Why be coy
about it? We don’t mind speaking of “killing” when we kill lower life forms.
Lawn products kill weeds; mouthwashes kill germs; insecticides kill bugs;
mousetraps kill mice. If the human fetus is an insignificant little thing, why
shrink from saying an abortion kills it? But the pro-abortion side prefers the
evasive euphemism that abortion “terminates a pregnancy.”
As Orwell noted, dishonest people instinctively prefer
the abstract to the concrete. Abstract language avoids creating unpleasant
mental images that might cause horror and shame; concrete language may remind
us of what we are really doing. This is why military jargon dehumanizes the
targets of bombs and artillery: so that soldiers and pilots won’t vividly
imagine the men, women, and children they are killing. Part of the job of
military leadership is to anesthetize the consciences of fighting men. And
political leaders (who usually start the wars in the first place) do their part
by describing the bombing of cities as “defending freedom.”
In the modern world people are trained to avoid
looking directly at the effects of violence they commit or sanction. If
possible, the killing is delegated to specialists, who themselves are
increasingly remote from their victims—as in the U.S. bombings of Iraq and Yugoslavia,
where American casualties were nearly zero.
Most of us don’t mind if our
military kills people on the other side of the world; we feel no pain, even
vicariously. We may even buy the official explanation that our bombs are
“preventing another Holocaust.” It may seem otherwise to the Iraqis and Slavs
on whose homes those bombs are falling.
But just as the news media refrain from showing us
what those bombs actually do, they never show us what an abortion looks like.
They even refuse to carry ads by abortion opponents, on grounds that pictures
of slaughtered fetuses are in “bad taste.” They certainly are in bad taste; all
atrocities are. But the media are willing to show some atrocities, as in the
killing fields of Rwanda a few years ago. Since we’re forever debating
abortion, why not let us see one? Why the blackout?
The answer, of course, is that the news media
themselves are pro-abortion. They adopt the dishonest language of the
pro-abortion side: pro-choice, fetus, terminate, and—my favorite—abortion
provider (to make the abortionist sound like a humanitarian).
A few years ago NBC produced a sympathetic movie about
a woman seeking an abortion—Norma McCorvey, the “Roe” of Roe v. Wade. But when
Mrs. McCorvey later changed her mind and became an active opponent of abortion,
did NBC do a sequel? Unimaginable.
We have to keep our guard up at all times against
political language, especially in seemingly bland journalism, that is subtly
infected with propagandistic purposes.
Vol. 18, Issue
07-08
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