It has to be said.
Jun. 1st, 2009 01:25 pmDr Tiller, who was 67, was shot just after 1000 (1500 GMT) at the Reformation Lutheran Church.
I find it very angering that they refer to this man as an 'abortion doctor' - all he did was provide all the services his licensure allowed - without apology or question - to the best of his ability.
(In spite of more pressure to quit and behave - including physical injury, property damage, harassment and now his murder - than any reasonable physician should have to endure.)
That would be like branding that fellow we found to treat Cliff in his last days as a 'porn-star creator' because he specialized in both plastic surgery and urology. (He fixed dicks. That's all he did. Very well, I may add.)
Jim told me - I responded with a very fast 'do I look surprised?' I know the people who hate. They tend to believe everyone hates them just as much as they hate others - and folks who truly believe that, tend to be pretty scared. And pretty scared people tend to buy weapons, thinking they need 'the protection.' And then they think they really need to use them, are justified in using them. In cold blood.
There are those who would vehemently argue the 'unborn' needed someone to speak for them. I will only say the only people who have the right to speak for their children are their parents - whether they decide they are parents, or patients in need of a procedure. It is no business of mine to judge that question - it is for the woman herself to decide which it is.
Even if she chooses to terminate a pregnancy. She can be a parent - or just a patient. Her choice. Her decision.
Unwed pregnant teens and 20-somethings who attend or have graduated from private religious schools are more likely to obtain abortions than their peers from public schools, according to research in the June issue of the Journal of Health and Social Behavior.
"This research suggests that young, unmarried women are confronted with a number of social, financial and health-related factors that can make it difficult for them to act according to religious values when deciding whether to keep or abort a pregnancy," said the study’s author, sociologist Amy Adamczyk of John Jay College of Criminal Justice and the Graduate Center, City University of New York.
Yup. It's only a moral outrage when it's NOT your abortion.
What did the man himself have to say about it?
There are journals quoting from the site - here, go see it for yourself:
In July of 1970, I planned to start a dermatology residency. On August 21, 1970, my father, mother, sister and brother-in-law were killed in an aircraft accident. My sister had a 12-month-old boy, Maurice. They had written out a will in longhand the evening before the airplane crash, that I was to raise Maurice. So we took charge of my sister's boy and we moved back to Wichita. My game plan was to spend six months here, close out my father's huge family medicine practice.
After I had been there for a little while, patients in the practice began to ask me if I was going to do abortions like my father did. I was outraged. Why would these nice people say that he was a scumbag kind of a physician?
The story didn't end there. He got an education, and saw his experience as an education in things he could not have learned otherwise.
I have more to be grateful for than I have to be resentful about. We have much more support in Wichita than we have rejection and castigation. If Wichita and our community did not want us to be here, I wouldn't be here. But the vast majority of people in Wichita support, on a quiet level, what we do, which is help women and families.
Oh, he'll be missed.
And even worse for his detractors...he'll be remembered.
I find it very angering that they refer to this man as an 'abortion doctor' - all he did was provide all the services his licensure allowed - without apology or question - to the best of his ability.
(In spite of more pressure to quit and behave - including physical injury, property damage, harassment and now his murder - than any reasonable physician should have to endure.)
That would be like branding that fellow we found to treat Cliff in his last days as a 'porn-star creator' because he specialized in both plastic surgery and urology. (He fixed dicks. That's all he did. Very well, I may add.)
Jim told me - I responded with a very fast 'do I look surprised?' I know the people who hate. They tend to believe everyone hates them just as much as they hate others - and folks who truly believe that, tend to be pretty scared. And pretty scared people tend to buy weapons, thinking they need 'the protection.' And then they think they really need to use them, are justified in using them. In cold blood.
There are those who would vehemently argue the 'unborn' needed someone to speak for them. I will only say the only people who have the right to speak for their children are their parents - whether they decide they are parents, or patients in need of a procedure. It is no business of mine to judge that question - it is for the woman herself to decide which it is.
Even if she chooses to terminate a pregnancy. She can be a parent - or just a patient. Her choice. Her decision.
Unwed pregnant teens and 20-somethings who attend or have graduated from private religious schools are more likely to obtain abortions than their peers from public schools, according to research in the June issue of the Journal of Health and Social Behavior.
"This research suggests that young, unmarried women are confronted with a number of social, financial and health-related factors that can make it difficult for them to act according to religious values when deciding whether to keep or abort a pregnancy," said the study’s author, sociologist Amy Adamczyk of John Jay College of Criminal Justice and the Graduate Center, City University of New York.
Yup. It's only a moral outrage when it's NOT your abortion.
What did the man himself have to say about it?
There are journals quoting from the site - here, go see it for yourself:
In July of 1970, I planned to start a dermatology residency. On August 21, 1970, my father, mother, sister and brother-in-law were killed in an aircraft accident. My sister had a 12-month-old boy, Maurice. They had written out a will in longhand the evening before the airplane crash, that I was to raise Maurice. So we took charge of my sister's boy and we moved back to Wichita. My game plan was to spend six months here, close out my father's huge family medicine practice.
After I had been there for a little while, patients in the practice began to ask me if I was going to do abortions like my father did. I was outraged. Why would these nice people say that he was a scumbag kind of a physician?
The story didn't end there. He got an education, and saw his experience as an education in things he could not have learned otherwise.
I have more to be grateful for than I have to be resentful about. We have much more support in Wichita than we have rejection and castigation. If Wichita and our community did not want us to be here, I wouldn't be here. But the vast majority of people in Wichita support, on a quiet level, what we do, which is help women and families.
Oh, he'll be missed.
And even worse for his detractors...he'll be remembered.
God Rest His Soul
Date: 2009-06-02 04:49 pm (UTC)The question always seems to be "what would you do if you were told your baby would have downs, or not be developing a brain, or some other terrible Trisomy disease. Would you carry out the pregnancy and raise the child?" Most people don't know that for many many women (read most) there is no question because there are no options. Oh? You'd like to terminate? Well we couldn’t do the screening till you were 16 weeks and now that’s a late term abortion so here's information on raising a downs baby."