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George Tiller: Casualty of the Culture Wars?
In the summer of 1993, a housewife from Grants Pass, Oregon, named Rachelle Ranae (Shelly) Shannon traveled to Wichita, Kansas, with a Bible and a .25-caliber pistol and shot George Tiller, a 51-year-old doctor and abortion provider. Tiller was not the first physician so targeted--six months earlier, an abortion provider named David Gunn had been murdered outside his medical clinic in Pensacola, Florida--but, despite sustaining wounds in both arms, Tiller managed to survive the attack. Sixteen years later, while standing in the foyer of his church, where he was serving as an usher and distributing bulletins, Tiller was shot again. This time he wasn't so lucky.
The election of Barack Obama, it was said, would put the culture wars behind us, and two weeks ago, in a commencement address at the University of Notre Dame, President Obama tried to inject a note of civility into the debate about abortion. In his speech, Obama urged opponents and supporters of abortion rights to seek common ground by working to reduce the number of unintended pregnancies. He also told the story of an e-mail he'd received from a doctor who had voted for him in the Illinois primary but who'd taken offense at a passage on Obama's website describing "right-wing ideologues who want to take away a woman's right to choose." The doctor characterized himself as prolife and wrote, "I do not ask at this point that you oppose abortion, only that you speak about this issue in fair-minded words."Obama wrote back to thank him and directed his staff to alter the wording, which, in its original form, was positively gracious compared to the language on www.stopobamanotredame.com, a website featuring the writings and video clips of Operation Rescue founder Randall Terry, who showed up at Notre Dame to protest and who compared Obama, unfavorably, to Herod. "Obama wants open ended child-killing," declared Terry on the website, promising to "raze hell" in the "war" to come. After the murder of Dr. Tiller, Terry came forward with more inflammatory words, calling Tiller "a mass murderer" and adding, "Those men and women who slaughter the unborn are murderers according to the Law of God. We must continue to expose them."
It is too early to say whether the murder of Dr. Tiller will trigger a wave of violent terrorism targeting abortion providers similar to the one that took place during the mid-1990s. It is not too early to be struck by the parallels. Then, as now, the violence came not in a moment of triumph for the prolife movement but in the face of isolation and defeat. The year Shelly Shannon shot Dr. Tiller was the year that Bill Clinton assumed office. It was the year after the Supreme Court ruled, in the Casey decision, that the central holding of Roe v. Wade "should be affirmed." It was the year that a small band of militant antiabortion activists began openly endorsing murder and that a blueprint for violence and sabotage called the Army of God Manual declared, "All of the options have expired. Our Most Dread Sovereign Lord God requires that whosoever sheds man's blood, by man shall his blood be shed."
The Bush presidency brought John Roberts and Samuel Alito to the Supreme Court, but, for now, Roe remains the law of the land, and while opponents of abortion have managed to chip away at the right to choose in recent years, they have failed, even in states like South Dakota, to get the procedure banned by popular vote. For all the talk during the Bush years of the religious right's cultural and political resurgence, a firm majority of Americans continues to believe abortion should remain legal under at least some circumstances. The true believers who had their hopes for dramatic change raised and then dashed by Bush are not likely to be feeling optimistic right now.
"Fair-minded words" are what Barack Obama called for at Notre Dame. Yet his election has brought coarsened rhetoric from the right on more than just the abortion front. Sonia Sotomayor, the Puerto Rican woman Obama recently nominated to the Supreme Court, has been denounced as a "racist" and compared to David Duke by the likes of Rush Limbaugh and Newt Gingrich. "Terrorist" and "Kill him!" were among the shouts heard at right-wing rallies during last year's presidential campaign. Bullets kill. Inflammatory words merely incite. But those who deploy hateful language can hardly profess shock when their words are taken seriously, particularly over emotionally freighted issues that have sparked violence. Before he was murdered, George Tiller was a popular topic on Fox's O'Reilly Factor, with the host referring to him as "Tiller the Baby Killer," a man guilty of "Nazi stuff." These are not innocent words, as doctors targeted by antiabortion protesters have pointed out in the past. In a letter to his hometown newspaper some years ago, one such physician wrote:
The members of the local non-violent, pro-life community may continue to picket my home. They may continue to scream that I am a murderer and a killer when I enter the clinics at which they 'peacefully' exercise their First Amendment Right of freedom of speech. They may do all of the above to me and other abortion providers of this community. But please don't feign surprise, dismay and certainly not innocence when a more volatile and less restrained member of the group decides to react to their inflammatory rhetoric by shooting an abortion provider.
This letter appeared in The Buffalo News in 1994, one year after Shelly Shannon shot George Tiller. Its author, Barnett Slepian, a physician and abortion provider, was murdered four years later while standing in the kitchen of his home. He was the last abortion provider to be gunned down in America, until George Tiller was.

15 Comments so far
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"Nazi stuff"
-Penetrating analysis from one of the conservative movement's greatest minds.
Army of God calls the murderer "an American hero" www.armyofgod.com.
I am surprised that Randall Terry's words are still public. He is clearly inciting violence- that's not protected speech.
Interesting that Janet Napolitano felt compelled to apologize (http://www.dhs.gov/ynews/releases/pr_1239817562001.shtm )
over her report on the increase of rightwing extremism. Maybe it's just a Democrat reflex to apologize and back off whenever Republicans make a stink.
Obama fools himself first of all, in believing that he can get the enemies of women's rights to regard abortion as something that people can disagree on: they dispute that very premise. They have always asserted that giving women rights is basically war on their divinity, who they regard as the true creator & dispenser of life, with human beings only the instruments of his paternal will. All the guff about believing in human rights is purely a tactical concession to the political landscape: they believe only in the divine right of the deity, not the rights of human beings.
Dr. Tiller was a casualty of Bill O'Reilly's hate-filled, vicious, ignorant and inflammatory rhetoric. And Bill O'Reilly and Fox News should be held accountable for inciting that murder. To use the terms "culture" and "Bill O'Reilly" in any way together is to denigrate any form of culture other than laboratory growths. O'Reilly may not have pulled the trigger, but he did everything short of that. For the actual killer to go for a head shot (in church, in front of the victim's wife, which is truly horrific in and of itself) is a clear indication of premeditation, as Dr. Tiller wore Kevlar on his torso routinely. Is there any record of O'Reilly mentioning that fact? Hate kills, and hate is Bill O'Reilly's middle name.
The killing in Tennessee.. The killing in Witchita.. The killing in Oklahoma City.. THE KILLING.. This doctrine of 'justified' violence within the MASTER's legacy church's is ludicrous... and so are those who espouse violence thru both 'word' and 'deed' .........
my prayers are with Dr. Tillers family and friends.. He was a very brave man.....
"We believe in the Sanctity of LIFE" so we are just going to KILL anyone who doesn't agree with our interpretation of life.
this is the second recent murder prompted by hate jocks!
Surely free speech is being usurpt by the hate mongers.
While following comments on the Washington Post thread about Susan Brooks Thistlethwaite's article today, I did a little checking and found out something amazing. In my dear home state of Texas, it can be a capital offense to perform an abortion. There's nothing on the books justifying or excusing abortion and thereby making it justifiable homicide. Had the homicide death of Dr. Tiller occurred in Texas, Scott Roeder could attempt a defense of protecting fetuses, which Texas deems individuals like born humans, against the imminent threat of more unjustified homicides (i.e., abortions). My amazement comes partly from the fact that this revolution of the criminal law occurred with so little fanfare. It's an example of the slow but steady progress of the anti-choice movement.
I'm unsure whether Kansas has the same laws. If anyone knows, please write in response to this. If Kansas has similar legislation, we're about to see Roeder claiming that he was justified under Kansas law in preventing more capital offenses. I doubt that defense would work unless the killer could show his homicide prevented an imminent abortion. This seems unlikely since the doctor was in church, not preparing to conduct an abortion. Nonetheless, if Kansas law follows that of Texas, the defense would be a powerful one, since the defendant could claim the victim was a serial capital murderer.
Okay, call me stupid, but how can someone who is "pro-life" kill?
No, Dr. Tiller was a victim of terrorist.
No, Dr. Tiller was a victim of terrorists.
No, Dr. Tiller was a victim of organized religion.
Gandhi and King and Archbishop Romero, Sandinista (now Pres. of UN GA) Fr. Miguel D'Escoto, Fr. Roy Bourgeois, Sr. Prejean, Sr. Chitteser, Fr. John Dear, the Christian peacemaker teams, were/are members of an organized religion too!
No, Dr. Tiller was a victim of anti-abortion terrorists . . .
spurred on by right-wing religious fanatics --
THIS WAS A POLITICAL ASSASSINATION --
*************************************
"According to all myth, the female - not the male -- gives life"
Is it me. or does the US seem to treat right-wing terorists and murderers with kid gloves?
The right blows up a federal building, killing 168 and injuring 800, blows up medical clinics, murders doctors, mirders cops - and it is all quietly treated as the action of an individual.
Mweanwhile, no killings of anyone have been comitted by anyone on the US left since Pres. Mckinley's Assassination. But when an anarchist vandalizes an SUV, releases some minks, burns some GMO crops, plans to block some streets at a political convention, and what happens? Whole activist centers are raided, the participants arrected, FBI infiltrated, put on FBI Terrorist lists. Many forest preservation, animal rights, anti GMO, and even peace and justice groups are regarded as "terrorists" by the FBI.
Meanwhile, are any of these loony ant-abortion organizations - with a proven track record of violence even on any terorist lists? Why isn't this being treated as an act of terorism? Why isn't the FBI right now not raiding the offices of these violent right-wing "christian" wackos.
If I believed, as apparently the shooter of Dr. Tiller did, that he was indeed killing other humans, it would seem his principles would compell him to take action. As a nation we have a long history of just such behavior, given that we have made efforts to kill those we perceived of as committing unjustifiable murders, like Sadam, Hitler, Castro, though these men beleived their own killings were justifiable. I may believe it justifiable to kill the killer of my daughter, even though the law prohibits it. What is the difference? The morality of this event is relative to the values of the individual,is it not? How does your belief that the fetus was not a unique living human being trump his belief that it was?