Sickening
Yet another reason the 
mainstream media has failed. 
Regardless of such quibbles,  about whether Gosnell was killing the 
infants one second after they left the womb instead of partially inside 
or completely inside the womb — as in a routine late-term abortion — is 
merely a matter of geography. That one is murder and the other is a 
legal procedure is morally irreconcilable.
A Lexis-Nexis search 
shows none of the news shows on the three major national television 
networks  has mentioned the Gosnell trial in the last three months. The 
exception is when Wall Street Journal columnist Peggy Noonan hijacked a segment on Meet the Press meant to foment outrage over an anti-abortion rights law in some backward red state.
The Washington Post has not published original reporting on this during the trial and The New York Times
 saw fit to run one original story on A-17 on the trial's first day. 
They've been silent ever since, despite headline-worthy testimony.
Let me state the obvious. This should be front page news. When Rush 
Limbaugh attacked Sandra Fluke, there was non-stop media hysteria. The 
venerable NBC Nightly News' Brian Williams intoned,
 "A firestorm of outrage from women after a crude tirade from Rush 
Limbaugh," as he teased a segment on the brouhaha. Yet, accusations of 
babies having their heads severed — a major human rights story if there 
ever was one — doesn't make the cut. 
And more:
For this isn't solely a story about babies having their heads 
severed, though it is that. It is also a story about a place where, 
according to the grand jury, women were sent to give birth into toilets;
 where a doctor casually spread gonorrhea and chlamydiae to unsuspecting
 women through the reuse of cheap, disposable instruments; an office 
where a 15-year-old administered anesthesia; an office where former 
workers admit to playing games when giving patients powerful narcotics; 
an office where white women were attended to by a doctor and black women
 were pawned off on clueless untrained staffers. Any single one of those
 things would itself make for a blockbuster news story. Is it even 
conceivable that an optometrist who attended to his white patients in a 
clean office while an intern took care of the black patients in a filthy
 room wouldn't make national headlines?
But it isn't even solely a
 story of a rogue clinic that's awful in all sorts of sensational ways 
either. Multiple local and state agencies are implicated in an oversight
 failure that is epic in proportions! If I were a city editor for any 
Philadelphia newspaper the grand jury report would suggest a dozen major
 investigative projects I could undertake if I had the staff to support 
them. And I probably wouldn't have the staff. But there is so much 
fodder for additional reporting.  
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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