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Media Ignore Anti-Abortion Terrorists: WIMN op-ed in Newsday

jpozners Icon Posted by Jennifer L Pozner

October 8th, 2006

Pop quiz:
1. What’s the name of the suicide bomber who tried to blow up a building on the fifth anniversary of 9/11?

2. What was the building that he intentionally set on fire?

and,
3. Why have you not heard of this before now?

Answers in my op-ed today in Newsday, Sunday, Oct. 8, headlined “The terrorists who aren’t in the news: Anti-abortion fanatics spread fear by bombings, murders and assaults, but the media take little notice.”

I’m copying it below, click on through to the Newsday website to read it online - the more hits they get, the better.

If you appreciate Newsday running this op-ed — and if you’d like more than commentary but news-section reporting on the status of the federal case against this most recent clinic bomber — send a letter to the editor thanking the paper for running this op-ed, and ask them to follow up with continued reporting on the subject of anti-abortion terrorism. See Newsday’s guidelines for letters to the editor, or simply send your letter via email to letters@newsday.com.

The terrorists who aren’t in the news
Anti-abortion fanatics spread fear by bombings, murders and assaults, but the media take little notice

By Jennifer L. Pozner
Jennifer L. Pozner is founder and executive director of Women In Media & News, a national media analysis, education and advocacy group.

October 8, 2006

On Sept. 11, 2006, the fifth anniversary of the terror attacks that devastated our nation, a man crashed his car into a building in Davenport, Iowa, hoping to blow it up and kill himself in the fire.

No national newspaper, magazine or network newscast reported this attempted suicide bombing, though an AP wire story was available. Cable news (save for MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann) was silent about this latest act of terrorism in America.

Had the criminal, David McMenemy, been Arab or Muslim, this would have been headline news for weeks. But since his target was the Edgerton Women’s Health Center, rather than, say, a bank or a police station, media have not called this terrorism - even after three decades of extreme violence by anti-abortion fanatics, mostly fundamentalist Christians who believe they’re fighting a holy war.

Since 1977, casualties from this war include seven murders, 17 attempted murders, three kidnappings, 152 assaults, 305 completed or attempted bombings and arsons, 375 invasions, 482 stalking incidents, 380 death threats, 618 bomb threats, 100 acid attacks, and 1,254 acts of vandalism, according to the National Abortion Federation.

Abortion providers and activists received 77 letters threatening anthrax attacks before 9/11, yet the media never considered anthrax threats as terrorism until after 9/11, when such letters were delivered to journalists’ offices and members of Congress.

After 9/11, Planned Parenthood and other abortion rights groups received 554 envelopes containing white powder and messages like, “You have been exposed to anthrax. … We are going to kill all of you.” They were signed by the Army of God, a group that hosts Scripture-filled Web pages for “Anti-Abortion Heroes of the Faith” including minister Paul Hill, Michael Griffin and James Kopp, all convicted of murdering abortion providers, and a convicted clinic bomber, the Rev. Michael Bray. Another of their “martyrs,” Clayton Waagner, mailed anthrax letters while a fugitive on the FBI’s 10 most wanted list for anti-abortion related crimes.

“I am a terrorist,” Waagner declared on the Army of God’s Web site. Boasting that God “freed me to make war on his enemy,” he claimed he knew where 42 Planned Parenthood workers lived. “It doesn’t matter to me if you’re a nurse, receptionist, bookkeeper, or janitor, if you work for the murderous abortionist I’m going to kill you.”

That’s textbook terrorism, defined by the USA Patriot Act as dangerous criminal acts that “appear to be intended to intimidate or coerce a civilian population” or “to influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion.”

Which brings us back to car bomber McMenemy. According to the Detroit Free Press (the only newspaper in the Nexis news database that reported his crime), he targeted the women’s health center because he thought it provided abortions. It doesn’t. (Oops!) It provides mostly low-income patients with pap smears, ob-gyn care, testing for sexually transmitted diseases, birth control, and nutrition and immunization programs for women and children.

The attack caused $170,000 in property damage and left poor families without health care for a week. But long after Edgerton’s water-logged carpets are removed, scorched medical equipment replaced and new doors reopened to the public, a culture of fear will linger among doctors, nurses, advocates and patients across the country, who will worry that they’re next. Some frightened workers will quit their jobs; some women will be too scared to get the health care they need.

Every fresh incident of anti-abortion terrorism is a reminder that women’s health supporters are not safe in a country where abortion is legal but mobilized zealots believe Jesus has empowered them to kill to prevent women from choosing it.

Is McMenemy a lone nutcase, or a member of that network of violent extremists? We don’t know, because journalists haven’t investigated.

Nor have they reported that just last year, nearly one in five abortion clinics experienced gunfire, arson, bombings, chemical attacks, assaults, stalking, death threats and blockades, according to the 2005 National Clinic Violence Survey. Additionally, 59 percent suffered intimidation tactics such as photo/video surveillance.

Federal efforts to hunt down these terrorists improved with the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act in 1994 and the National Task Force on Violence Against Health Care Providers, established by the Department of Justice in 1998. The feds have taken over McMenemy’s case, charging him with arson against a business affecting interstate commerce. Yet as of Oct. 5, no news outlet on Nexis reported this, despite a second AP story.

As we continue national debates on how to keep America safe from terrorism, journalists do us - and especially women - no good pretending that the threats come only from radical Muslims outside our borders.

12 Responses to “Media Ignore Anti-Abortion Terrorists: WIMN op-ed in Newsday”

  1. Donna Jackel
    October 9th, 2006 11:37
    1

    Hi Jennifer,

    Thank you for writing about this incident–I had not heard about it for the reasons you mention in your article.

    What we need to explore, it seems, is why the media is ignoring the continued violence against abortion providers, and their employees and patients. From my experience as a mainstream newspaper journalist, right-to-life groups are very vocal and intimidate editors. And local Planned Parenthoods have become VERY reluctant to take center stage in publicly advocationg for abortion rights.

  2. Anonymous
    November 28th, 2006 21:50
    2

    Oh,what a beautiful site! I like it very much! I’m agreeable to your point of view!

  3. WIMN’s Voices: A Group Blog on Women, Media, AND… » Blog Archive » WIMN’s Voices Year in Review: October, 2006
    December 30th, 2006 20:06
    3

    […] Media Ignore Anti-Abortion Terrorists: WIMN op-ed in Newsday Jennifer L. Pozner, Oct. 8 […]

  4. news
    January 1st, 2007 05:53
    4

    Like what you have to say. Your blog makes good since to me.

  5. Sara Paretsky
    February 7th, 2007 15:58
    5

    Thanks for this very important essay, which I found late on line. Please keep it up.

  6. WIMN’s Voices: A Group Blog on Women, Media, AND… » Blog Archive » Silence is Complicity
    April 26th, 2007 14:00
    6

    […] They’re at it again: A week since the SCOTUS began dismembering Roe anti-choice lunatics are terrorizing women’s clinics. The “they” in question, however, is not the domestic terrorists responsible. It is the media that systematically ignores these stories, as Jennifer Pozner has pointed out in the past. This particular story took place in Austin, TX. I wouldn’t have known myself unless I had a friend down there, where it was covered with all the fanfare of a traffic accident. The national press? Nothing. Now imagine if this clinic had been a bank, or a high school, or a sports arena. I bet we would have heard something about it then. The media’s silence surrounding issues of violence against women is not only emblematic of a fundamentally dismissive attitude, it ultimately harms all feminist causes, and lends to the perception that feminists are all just knee-jerk alarmists railing against imaginary enemies. It’s easier to dismiss the need to constitutionally protect women from violence and discrimination if you erase all evidence that such things exist. […]

  7. WIMN’s Voices: A Group Blog on Women, Media, AND… » Blog Archive » 9/11/06 anti-abortion clinic bomber sentenced
    July 2nd, 2007 13:31
    7

    […] Long-time readers of WIMN’s Voices will remember that McMenemy’s crime got virtually no media coverage, as I detailed in Newsday, even during a 9/11 news cycle scurrying to report anything remotely related to terrorism. […]

  8. feministdracona.net » Sorry for what?
    July 3rd, 2007 06:51
    8

    […] Why is this not reported or ejudicated as an act of terrorism? What the hell else would you call it? Oh. Right. Arson, with the added bonus of ‘interstate commerce’ to get it in federal court. […]

  9. helen boyd
    May 31st, 2009 16:11
    9

    The links aren’t working - file not found. A look at the Op-Ed page doesn’t turn it up.

    Has it been pulled?

  10. helen boyd
    May 31st, 2009 16:19
    10

    whoops. probably just archived funny, but I can’t seem to find it.

  11. administrator
    May 31st, 2009 17:29
    11

    Helen, I think that they archive or pull old pieces. That’s why we posted the piece in its entirety above, here on WIMN’s Voices.

  12. WIMN’s Voices: A Group Blog on Women, Media, AND… » Blog Archive » Will Media Report Dr. George Tiller’s Murder as an Act of Terrorism?
    May 31st, 2009 20:50
    12

    […] Back in early 2006, I wrote an op-ed for Newsday, reprinted here at WIMN’s Voices (and reposted below in its entirety), exposing the shameful way media have failed to report anti-abortion violence (including but not limited to murder) for what it is: domestic terrorism. […]

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