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George Tiller and How Dehumanization Leads to Violence

What does the murder of Dr. George Tiller say about the anti-abortion movement?
It certainly doesn’t say that all people who oppose a woman’s right to terminate a pregnancy condone the murder of abortion providers. I would never allege that. However, I think we need to examine how the rhetoric and ideology of the anti-abortion movement contribute to an environment in which the murder of abortion providers is justifiable. I haven’t done any formal research on this topic, but I did grow up around hardcore “pro-lifers." Based on my personal experiences, I can see how the mainstream anti-abortion movement supports the development of violence and extremism in its ranks. This movement demonizes and dehumanizes its opponents, portraying them as godless and immoral. Dehumanization is the first step in promoting violence. Consequently, it is not surprising to me that some people who have internalized the rhetoric of the anti-abortion movement could justify violence against providers.

I grew up in a community where being prochoice was unheard of. I went to Catholic school in the lily white and extremely Catholic south suburbs of St. Louis. As a child, I was told that the abortion debate was between those who believed in killing babies and those who didn’t. People who called themselves “pro-choice” were hideous and immoral women who wanted to kill their babies. Pro-lifers, on the other hand, were good people who knew that killing babies was wrong. All the way through high school, abortion was portrayed as the most disgusting and hideous crime anyone could commit. Only immoral people could support legal abortion. Abortion providers were a special breed of evil and were portrayed as truly heartless and depraved.

One of the most striking examples of this dehumanization that I remember is the St. Louis Archbishop’s behavior during the 2004 election. Archbishop Burke declared that John Kerry and anyone who supported John Kerry were not eligible for communion. Because Kerry supported safe and legal abortion, he was not allowed to participate in the sacrament that is supposed to be the source and summit of Catholic life. The Eucharist is sacred, but John Kerry and his supporters were profane. They were evil. They were not human.

I can think of countless other examples. For instance, the people who protested a performance of Vagina Monologues on my college campus because Eve Ensler is prochoice. Her stance on abortion made her work immoral and unfit for Catholic eyes. Or the protesters outside of Planned Parenthood who shouted at me as I entered the clinic (I was there for an exam, not an abortion btw). They didn’t see me as a person; they saw me as evil. Or the people at the University of Notre Dame who refused to attend commencement because Barack Obama was the speaker. They didn’t see him as the president; they saw him as evil.

These are just a few examples from my own life that I’m just coming up with on the spur of the moment. I’m sure I don’t have to spell out how dehumanization and demonization create a climate in which violence is acceptable. People that you don’t view as “people” are a lot easier to hate. They are a lot easier to kill. This situation is only exacerbated when those non-humans are also considered evil. That’s why I can draw very clear connections between mainstream anti-abortion rhetoric and the murder of abortion providers. Average “pro-lifers” don’t support the murder of providers. However, they do promote dehumanizing and demonizing ideology that justifies and fuels the actions of violent extremists.

So for those of you who consider yourself a part of the anti-abortion movement and who oppose the murder of George Tiller and other abortion providers, speak up. Voice your disapproval. Voice your disapproval of the daily harassment that abortion providers receive (see this article). And make an effort to see those who disagree with you as human beings with dignity.

Posted by cng87 - June 01, 2009, at 10:41AM | in Reproductive Rights
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8 Comments

[0+] Author Profile Page ladylicious said:

"And make an effort to see those who disagree with you as human beings with dignity."

I think that one sentence sums it up beautifully.

[0+] Author Profile Page edie55 said:

Are you kidding me? Do you really not know when life begins? How are so many libs so ignorant? How did we know when Tiller's life ended? In the same way that we know when it began.

The deumanizing began long ago when the pro-abortion movement began demonizing and dehumanizing innocent life in the womb. The pro-life people did not do anything with this man other than portray him as the person he is.

When will you feminists begin standing up for the innocent future women in the womb, and the mothers that really want to keep their babies but cannot afford to?

Obama was put into office by George Soros and Planned Parenthood money. When are feminists going to see reality?

[0+] Author Profile Page analogue.rockk replied to edie55 :

We are not ignorant. We simply have different views. How can you not see that? I don't believe a fetus is the same as a child, but I respect that you do believe that. Does that mean I am supposed to stop fighting for what I see as just and moral? When are you going to start respecting others? "You feminists"....gimme a break......It is disputable when life starts, but there is no dispute when it comes to the murder of a man in a house of worship. What would Jesus do? Murder a law-abiding citizen in a house of God? not the Jesus I believe in. and yes, I am a feminist, and yes I believe in the teachings of Jesus. He taught peace, never hate.

[0+] Author Profile Page analogue.rockk replied to analogue.rockk :

oi, I got carried away. Let me make sure to state that I do not consider myself a christian, even though I was raised catholic, but I still think that the teachings of Jesus of Nazareth have significance. I don't view him as the son of god, but as a humanitarian, anachronistic in his compassion, and worthy of my respect as someone who would like to be considered a humanitarian myself. Abortion is a social issue as much as a moral issue, and it is detrimental to a society to encourage unlicensed and dangerous medical procedures, and making abortion legal does just that. Do you feel like you would accomplish anything by butchered abortions in which the mother AND the fetus would perish?

[0+] Author Profile Page analogue.rockk replied to analogue.rockk :

man, I'm on a role of not typing what I intended. "making abortion ILLEGAL does just that" not legal lol.

[0+] Author Profile Page jackiboa@live.com said:

What would Jesus do? Murder a law-abiding citizen in a house of God? not the Jesus I believe in. and yes, I am a feminist, and yes I believe in the teachings of Jesus. He taught peace, never hate.

Online biology degree | health science degree | Educational Psychology Degree

[0+] Author Profile Page jackiboa@live.com said:

it is detrimental to a society to encourage unlicensed and dangerous medical procedures, and making abortion legal does just that. Do you feel like you would accomplish anything by butchered abortions in which the mother AND the fetus would perish?
social service school | history degree

[0+] Author Profile Page Ronald Pettigrew said:

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