Posted on 05/19/2014 12:54:47 PM PDT by topher
Published: May 17, 2014 4:19 pm to Opinion Column: Media attacks Rubios semantics, prove their own ignorance instead
by Susan Michelle Tyrell
Proving that journalistic objectivity is a thing of the past, the Washington Post and MSNBC have demonstrated ignorance and irresponsibility in a semantic parsing of Senator Marco Rubios simple comments that science shows that life begins at conception.
Rubios statement was in response to comments on the science behind climate change. He said:
Let me give you a bit of settled science that theyll never admit to. Science is settled, its not even a consensus, it is a unanimity, that human life begins at conception. So I hope the next time that someone wags their finger about science, theyll ask one of these leaders on the left: Do you agree with the consensus of scientists that say that human life begins at conception? Id like to see someone ask that question.
Both the Washington Post and MSNBC went at him with arrogant boldness, seemingly determined to wag their fingers about philosophy and religion instead of analyzing science.
Post writer Philip Bump declared:
Theres a blurry line between pregnancy and life in this discussion. When we asked ACOG if the two were interchangeable, we were told that the organization approach[es] everything from a scientific perspective, and as such, our definition is for when pregnancy begins. On the question of when life begins, then, the scientific experts we spoke with didnt offer any consensus.
Bump continues by trying to sound like Rubio is only speaking from a philosophical view:
Life is something of a philosophical question, making Rubios dependence on a scientific argument which, it hardly bears mentioning, is an argument about abortion politically tricky. After all, if someone were to argue that life begins at implantation, its hard to find a moral argument against forms of birth control that prevent that from happening. If that someone were, say, running for president as a conservative Republican, that could be problematic.
Bump is not alone in trying to attack Rubio on his politics and philosophy rather than the real issue.
MSNBCs response, which called Rubios comment a scientific blunder, was more ironic than anything. Its story on Rubios comment criticized him for commenting on abortion at all:
Florida Republican Sen. Marco Rubio recently fired back at criticism of his stance on climate change he said last weekend that he did not believe climate change is caused by human activity by changing the subject to abortion.
So MSNBC changed the subject to show its blatant bias against life. Using a news article as an editorial vehicle, MSNBC said:
In fact, life and conception arent scientific terms, and the rights of a blastocyst, embryo or fetus compared to the pregnant woman arent up to scientists; theyre subjective, based on personal, religious, or political commitments. But its ironic that Rubio should mention science and abortion. He and his fellow Republicans have passed numerous laws restricting womens health with stated rationales that directly contravene scientific or medical consensus.
MSNBC then uses its space to detail the type of abortion laws Rubio has supported, and then adds more commentary, even branching into South Dakota laws, thus turning its whole article on Rubio into a pro-choice diatribe that really had little to do with Rubio.
Rubio is scientifically correct, of course, regardless of terms. Unlike these articles, Rubio was commenting on the clarity of scientific evidence, not what terms are used by people. Picking apart semantics the difference between pregnancy beginning and life beginning, for example show the ways in which the abortion industry has broken down reality to serve its own purposes. If a woman is pregnant, and if that pregnancy continues, she will birth a life, not a pregnancy. To call life a philosophical or religious term is utter ignorance. In fact, its troubling because it suggests that life should be valued only if ones personal values allow it. The deconstruction of absolutes can only self-destruct.
Both pieces actually are making political statements as well as moral ones, and both are ludicrous in light of the science, which, indeed, shows that new life begins when sperm and egg fuse whatever term you give it.
Media attacks Rubios semantics, prove their own ignorance instead
An article about the IGNORANCE OF THE LAMESTREAM MEDIA is enjoyable reading for me...
Let me give you a bit of settled science that theyll never admit to. Science is settled, its not even a consensus, it is a unanimity, that human life begins at conception. So I hope the next time that someone wags their finger about science, theyll ask one of these leaders on the left: Do you agree with the consensus of scientists that say that human life begins at conception? Id like to see someone ask that question.
If they had simply proferred blah blah blah blah their diatribe would have made sense. It at least would have expressed their true intent. Oh, yes, and printed in bold to demonstrate their fingers are in their ears.
Rubio can go to Hell!
He is not fooling me with this a bit.
I don’t believe that is fair. Rubio may not have a good conservative posture on some/several issues but I don’t think abortion is one of them. Maybe I am mistaken but that is what I recall.
Do I have doubts about his amnesty position? You betcha.
He is trying to undue the damage that he did to himself joining Reid Schumer and Obama and so he figures that abortion is the safest issue for him to join conservatives on.
The Priebus/Bohner/Cantor group made this decision.
There is no morality in pure science. From where would come the authority to issue the morality?
Consensus? That blacks/Jews are subhuman? The claims have been made by scientists in the past. Just as some pro-abort activists try to claim that a fetus is subhuman and not deserving of basic protections of life and liberty.
Some ghouls are even seeking to genetically create something not quite human for medical testing and sourcing parts (and possibly creating unique patented creations).
Barack Obama said that question is above his pay grade. A whole lot of requirements for the office of the Presidency are beyond the skills set of the current occupant but yet there he is.
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