Matthew Franklin Cooper writes:
There
is, as we speak, a flurry in the new media surrounding the trial of Kermit
Gosnell, an abortionist who is standing trial for the gruesome murders of at
least seven infants after they were born and criminal negligence
leading to the death of at least one mother.
The case is so spectacularly horrific that one is left to marvel, as did Conor Friedersdorf at The Atlantic and David Weigel at Slate, at why the big three cable news companies haven’t been covering the Gosnell’s trial voraciously, but an article at the Daily Beast seems to have a decently objective take on the matter, with several models suggested of why the story hasn’t received broader coverage recently.
The case is so spectacularly horrific that one is left to marvel, as did Conor Friedersdorf at The Atlantic and David Weigel at Slate, at why the big three cable news companies haven’t been covering the Gosnell’s trial voraciously, but an article at the Daily Beast seems to have a decently objective take on the matter, with several models suggested of why the story hasn’t received broader coverage recently.
Josh
Dzieza points out that, for one thing (quoting David Weigel), journalists do
tend to have a socially-liberal bent to their reporting, and horror stories
relating to an abortionist are not as likely to elicit their attention as other
comparable stories. Dzieza also claims that the story is not immediately
political in the way that the Trayvon Martin shooting was… though by this I
take it that he means merely that the story is not immediately amenable to
exploitation by one side or the other in contemporary American partisan
politics.
That strikes me as the most charitable reading of his argument, given
that there are indeed political ramifications to this story – ramifications
that he himself discusses.
What
we are seeing are the consequences of deregulating the medical industry and of
promoting an anti-culture of death in one of the professions where that
anti-culture can do the greatest damage.
All but one of the rooms in Gosnell’s clinic were by all accounts utterly filthy and squalid – blood was everywhere, and they routinely stank of urine. The one clean room was reserved by Gosnell for his white patients; all patients of colour were relegated to the other rooms. A flea-infested cat had free run of the facility. Patients were routinely drugged, often by Gosnell’s unqualified and untrained staffers, one of whom was a fifteen-year-old high-school sophomore.
Aborted foeti were everywhere to be found – including a jar full of severed feet. One patient, a Bhutanese immigrant named Karnamaya Mongar, died after being given an unsafe sedative which was used because Gosnell could get it at a discounted price. No one could resuscitate this poor woman because the defibrillator was broken. And why was all of this allowed to continue in plain view?
All but one of the rooms in Gosnell’s clinic were by all accounts utterly filthy and squalid – blood was everywhere, and they routinely stank of urine. The one clean room was reserved by Gosnell for his white patients; all patients of colour were relegated to the other rooms. A flea-infested cat had free run of the facility. Patients were routinely drugged, often by Gosnell’s unqualified and untrained staffers, one of whom was a fifteen-year-old high-school sophomore.
Aborted foeti were everywhere to be found – including a jar full of severed feet. One patient, a Bhutanese immigrant named Karnamaya Mongar, died after being given an unsafe sedative which was used because Gosnell could get it at a discounted price. No one could resuscitate this poor woman because the defibrillator was broken. And why was all of this allowed to continue in plain view?
The
grand
jury report cited a change in administration as one of the reasons. Bob
Casey, a pro-life Democrat, was replaced as Pennsylvania governor by the
pro-choice Republican Tom Ridge – who basically adopted policies on the same
‘principles’ we can consistently expect from Republicans in every other field
of the economy: all regulation is bad regulation.
The Pennsylvania Department of Health, which had already found Gosnell’s clinic to be in violation of a number of basic safety and health codes, simply stopped inspecting once Ridge came to office. The reason? It would be ‘putting a barrier up’ to women seeking abortions. Resulting complaints – including complaints about injuries, about the spread of venereal disease due to unsanitary practices and equipment, and about the death of Ms Mongar – went ignored by the Ridge administration and those following it. The grand jury report concludes:
The Pennsylvania Department of Health, which had already found Gosnell’s clinic to be in violation of a number of basic safety and health codes, simply stopped inspecting once Ridge came to office. The reason? It would be ‘putting a barrier up’ to women seeking abortions. Resulting complaints – including complaints about injuries, about the spread of venereal disease due to unsanitary practices and equipment, and about the death of Ms Mongar – went ignored by the Ridge administration and those following it. The grand jury report concludes:
Bureaucratic
inertia is not exactly news. We understand that. But we think this was
something more. We think the reason no one acted is because the women in
question were poor and of color, because the victims were infants without
identities, and because the subject was the political football of abortion.
And
what has been the reaction by the abortion lobby, to the poor or non-existent
regulation of a private clinic run by a bigoted and murderous doctor and his
unqualified staff? Tellingly, it is the same as the reaction by the Tea Party
to the poor or non-existent regulation of unscrupulous and avaricious
investment banks, and the same as the reaction by the NRA to the poor or
non-existent regulation of high-powered assault guns which seem to fall into
the hands of mass murderers.
Any whiff of regulation will send these interest groups and their defenders into a delirious Panglossian frenzy saying how futile such regulation would be. And the inevitable Wayne LaPierre-style wingnuttery in this story is brought by none other than Ilyse Hogue, the head of NARAL, on record as saying this case was ‘exactly what happens when you place undue restrictions and you try to shame women to keep them from exercising their constitutional right to safe and legal abortions’.
Wait – huh?
Please enlighten me, Ms Hogue, precisely what ‘undue restrictions’ were in place in Pennsylvania when this ghoulish nightmare was taking place?
Any whiff of regulation will send these interest groups and their defenders into a delirious Panglossian frenzy saying how futile such regulation would be. And the inevitable Wayne LaPierre-style wingnuttery in this story is brought by none other than Ilyse Hogue, the head of NARAL, on record as saying this case was ‘exactly what happens when you place undue restrictions and you try to shame women to keep them from exercising their constitutional right to safe and legal abortions’.
Wait – huh?
Please enlighten me, Ms Hogue, precisely what ‘undue restrictions’ were in place in Pennsylvania when this ghoulish nightmare was taking place?
Given
the substance of the grand jury report, which notes scathingly that even nail
salons in Pennsylvania are subject to more stringent client safety standards,
it strikes me that claiming Gosnell’s clinic to be the product of
overly-onerous requirements on medical facilities and abortion providers is one
of the single most asinine and ideologically-blinkered things one can possibly
say about it.
It is the precise analogical equivalent of the NRA claiming that the answer to school shootings is more guns and less regulation (because, y’know, all regulation means that the government is out to take away your right to self-defence, and will result in only criminals having guns), or the followers of Rick Santelli claiming that the 2007 financial crisis was the government’s fault for over-regulating investment banks and, supposedly, forcing them to make risky loans to irresponsible ‘losers’.
It is the precise analogical equivalent of the NRA claiming that the answer to school shootings is more guns and less regulation (because, y’know, all regulation means that the government is out to take away your right to self-defence, and will result in only criminals having guns), or the followers of Rick Santelli claiming that the 2007 financial crisis was the government’s fault for over-regulating investment banks and, supposedly, forcing them to make risky loans to irresponsible ‘losers’.
For
a supposedly ‘left-leaning’ organisation such as NARAL to make such a statement
is a travesty. If they truly did care about the young women who went into
Gosnell’s clinic, particularly those women of colour who were placed at
greatest risk, they would not be agitating for ‘more access’ to services which
might seriously endanger their lives, but for safer services – even if
that meant some clinics would have to be shut down. And good riddance if they
are anything like Gosnell’s.
It rather goes without saying that if they cared at all about the children-to-be, of course, they wouldn’t be NARAL. More to the point, though, such a reaction simply shows that they are not willing to face up to the ramifications of a deregulated medical system where this neoliberal, pro-choice logic dictates every aspect of service provision. Gosnell was allowed to continue murdering infants and leaving their mothers to die precisely because regulators under a pro-choice Republican administration were directed not to touch abortion providers. In other words, laissez-faire was the rule of the day under Ridge, and this is the direct result.
It rather goes without saying that if they cared at all about the children-to-be, of course, they wouldn’t be NARAL. More to the point, though, such a reaction simply shows that they are not willing to face up to the ramifications of a deregulated medical system where this neoliberal, pro-choice logic dictates every aspect of service provision. Gosnell was allowed to continue murdering infants and leaving their mothers to die precisely because regulators under a pro-choice Republican administration were directed not to touch abortion providers. In other words, laissez-faire was the rule of the day under Ridge, and this is the direct result.
It’s
time for us on the left to start showing some consistency on this issue. I am
only appalled and saddened that it took a mass-murderer like Gosnell to start
this conversation, and only after pro-life bloggers made the determination to
bring the trial to nation-wide attention.
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