Posted on 05/08/2015 11:56:11 AM PDT by drewh
To liberal media outlets, the saddest thing about abortion is how women seeking to terminate their baby may have to drive more than 20 minutes to a clinic. The Washington Post on Thursday offered a 2,390-word opus on a woman named Emily [last name sympathetically withheld] who procured an abortion in Missoula, Montana, driving 407 miles from Wyoming.
The headline was The long drive to end a pregnancy. The story took up two entire inside pages with a page of scenic color pictures along the drive, but no people in them. Post writer Monica Hesse lectured in large letters on the front of the Style section about the geography of abortion being too taxing in red states:
This was a drive Emily had never taken for a procedure she hadn't imagined needing, in a time when fewer clinics and tougher laws were making the geography of abortion more complex. Because of the sensitivity of the abortion issue, The Washington Post agreed with Emily's request not to use her last name or identify where she lives. In some parts of America, the accessibility of abortion has remained unchanged, but not in great swaths of the country - not in places such as Texas, where more than half of the clinics have closed since 2013, or in South Dakota, where the single clinic has a mandatory 72-hour waiting period between appointment and procedure, or in Wyoming, where there is one private provider and no clinics in all the state's 98,000 square miles, and where the nearest facility Emily could find an appointment was six hours away.
Readers who didnt turn the page were duped. Emily decided on Missoula after she failed to make a timely appointment in Helena, a shorter drive. (The one private provider is Wyoming is in Jackson, which is even closer.) The mileage count and the photo captions on the highways driven suggest Emily (and the Post reporter) drove from Cody, Wyoming.
To liberal journalists, there should apparently be an abortion clinic in every city to meet the "needs" of women who need to "end a pregnancy."
At first, Emily and her husband nicknamed their baby Beauregard, but then the boyfriend got in an alcohol-infused altercation and went to jail with no hearing date. So she scheduled an abortion. (After the abortion, we learn the husband called to say he had a hearing date, and might only get probation, so maybe she shouldnt abort. Oooops.)
In bold black headline-size letters on the top of page C-6 was Emilys argument for aborting: Children deserve so much. And if you dont start with a solid platform, how can you ever give them that?
The pro-life view in the story was limited to an acquaintance telling Emily she had other options, and Choose life billboards Emily saw after the abortion. (No one expects a Post reporter to talk her out of it.)
Hesses story ended on a perverse note often seen in pro-abortion media. Emily tries to convince herself (and the Post audience) that the baby is better off dead:
Back in the clinic, when the surgical part of the abortion was over and she was again in the recovery room, Emily had decided to add her own entry to the diary of experiences. She wrote out a few lines from a T.S. Eliot poem that she liked, and another by Pablo Neruda. She wrote, "I loved my baby, Bo, dearly, and I hope in the coming years I will believe that this was the best decision for both of us. He will be in my heart and on my mind always." Then she wrote another sentence, addressing the child she would not have. "I know you would've been a beautiful joy in my life, and I can only hope and strive one day to be the mother you deserve."
Eight hundred and fourteen miles, driven since yesterday, and she pulled back in front of her house and sat for a minute before going inside.
It reminds me of an old Glamour magazine article on women who wrote love notes to their ahem, lost babies. Brent Bozell wrote:
Glamour finds it "poignant" that one woman wrote to her victim: "To my little angel, Please understand that you are better off in the hands of God than mine at this moment." (This is hard to debate.) "I smile when I think of you, even if I cry. You have given me reason to be strong and wise and responsible. You will always be my baby. I will see you in heaven, sweetheart. Love you! Love always and unconditionally, your mommy."
WashPost Style writer Dan Zak raved on Twitter that Hesses story was fabulous: I also love how there is no comment section at the end. Encourages reflection, not reaction. Yes, how convenient that the Post allows no debate or disagreement with the womans choice.
Zak had tweeted harshly earlier about the BS article by James Franco touting how McDonalds employed him when he really needed the money: I've written my share of bullsh-- but this is way out of my league. I tweeted back There may be no written BS in a newspaper greater than Dear aborted baby: I think this was best for both of us.
She really had a strong desire to murder her child.
Well, which is it?
I agree with the WaPo that this is a terrible thing to put someone through. Could have given her a miscarriage.
Why hide her name? Abortion is supposed to be something a woman is proud of.
How far would the now very DEAD baby have traveled to LIVE!
Who cry’s for the DEAD baby besides Jesus.
That is sick, that woman pretending that she killed that child “for its own good”. That is just sick.
[She wrote, “I loved my baby, Bo, dearly”]
Reminds me of the Manson follower who stabbed Sharon Tate to death remarking that she “loved her” even as she was killing her.
Why? The article presents her as a heroine doing a heroic act. She should be proud to have people know who she is.
The long drive to end a pregnancy.
Should be: The long drive to end a life.
They won’t be happy until a shuttle bus stops at every woman’s doorstep once a month offering a short ride to a taxpayer-funded abortion.
“400 miles to murder a baby”
The story is fiction. It really is silly, surface, condescending and fabricated.
Women who have abortions have a 40% chance of SEVERE clinical depression. That is a side effect of the CLINICAL procedure and it is not disclosed as would be REQUIRED in normal clinical procedures.
But in any case the real reason why the story is a fabrication, is the very real choice of adoption. It is not my home or God’s house, but someone else’s house too.
That is probably the reason depression sets in. After doing the irreversible choice of abortion the woman cuts through the mythological nonsense of pop culture and realizes Bo could have actually have had a life, maybe without her and her boyfriend...but a life all the same... that she chose to cut him loose from the bonds of the earth.
Most people are horrified to be responsible for someone’s death...and I would submit that this would be one of the regrets a woman would keep forever, after overcoming the challenges of immaturity and finally growing up. That is the burden for the 40% that can never be forgiven by the party that was wronged.
But I’m a guy, so I will never make that choice.
But I would not write a story glorifying that serious a choice, and I would not condone anyone in the medical community glossing over the side effects and pretending is is just a procedure that does not involve another person.
Comedic hint on above, no one refers to a fetus when the baby is wanted. But the fetus is still a baby...
Changing the language to make something more palatable but less clear is usually lying, and has all the baggage of lying, even if the baggage is not immediately apparent.
DK
This self-centered woman's so sure that the child will be recycled and born to be hers again someday, like a discarded beer can... that it never occurred to her that she has disqualified herself the child, like all of us, has always been in God's hands, and that they had no more business deciding to murder the child entrusted to them than they had in having sex outside of wedlock. They rejected God's help in raising the boy into whom God breathed life - so why does she expect Him to only love the child after it is dead?
The most amazing thing about this whole story is that the WP is actually still printing newspapers. Who knew?!
It’s WYOMING! I grew up in Wyoming!
I had to go to Salt Lake to see a urologist. My FIL had to go to Denver for his spinal surgery! My mom’s friend has to go to Salt Lake to see her cardiologist.
Why in the hell aren’t they crying about *that*? You can’t get anything more than basic medical care in freaking Wyoming and that’s why hubs and I decided not to retire there.
There is NOTHING THERE.
My friends and I drove a hundred miles for a good ice cream cone.
It’s freaking WYOMING. Most of the state is national park or BLM or railroad.
These city hippie idiots need to get out more because they have NO idea what they’re talking about.
Everything in Wyoming is a ‘long drive’! If it’s less than 200 miles, it’s not even a drive worth mentioning.
We went to Salt Lake to go to decent thrift stores.
Sheesh!
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