Pols tend to find Jesus Christ not through priests and preachers
but through pollsters. Howard Dean, a baptized Catholic turned
Episcopalian turned Congregationalist, has seen enough polling to
realize that he better appear religious pretty quick if he wishes
to compete with George Bush. But as Dr. Dean suddenly ruminates on
the life of Jesus Christ, Americans should ask him how his
“committed” Christianity led him to an OB/GYN rotation at Planned
Parenthood in the 1970s.
The Democrats, as if to underscore that they belong to the party
of abortion, appear ready to make a former Planned Parenthood
doctor and executive board member their nominee. Dean has said that
he is “proud to have served as a Board Member of Planned Parenthood
of Northern New England.” But he is not so proud that he wants to
claim credit for any of its abortions. Though he worked at Planned
Parenthood on an OB/GYN rotation and as a “contract physician,”
according to news reports, he says that he never performed
abortions. “I did not perform abortions, I’m a medical doctor,”
Dean has said. My, what a snob. Perhaps his old colleagues from
Planned Parenthood should take offense.
Dr. Dean’s work for Planned Parenthood invites further
journalistic scrutiny. Is it true he never performed an abortion?
Never even assisted at one? Somehow along the way he gained a
knowledge of abortion procedures, according to Vermont
Magazine in 1998. How did he learn them?
Surely Dean will at least take credit for abortion referrals.
Recall his NARAL dinner speech last year where, in a attempt to
score a debating point against parental notification laws, he
described an occasion in his medical office where he lent a
sympathetic ear to a 12-year-old who had been impregnated by her
father. Under questioning from NBC’s Tim Russert, Dean had to admit
his incest story was bogus. The girl’s father wasn’t involved.
Russert: “…when you told the story, you knew otherwise.”
Dean: “That’s right.” Russert: “Why didn’t you say that?” Dean:
“Because it didn’t make any difference.”(It would have made a
difference for his argument. He needed the incest fabrication to
punctuate the story with the line: “You explain that to the
American people who think that parental notification is a good
idea.”)
Such lies and schemes are familiar to Vermont pro-lifers. They
are still shaking their heads over Dean’s “Dr. Dynasaur” health
care program which allowed low-income mothers to claim their unborn
child for eligibility in the program, then gave them funds to abort
the child.
Mary Hahn Beerworth, the executive director of the Vermont Right
To Life Committee, recalls Dean’s ludicrous television ads where he
would appear outfitted in a stethoscope as he touted the program.
“Under Dean’s Dr. Dynasaur program an unborn child is considered a
family member for the purpose of income eligibility for the
program,” she says, even as it provides funds for the “abortion of
that unborn child.” “Dr. Dynasaur could be a real Achilles heel for
him,” she says.
“There is no abortion that Governor Dean doesn’t think is a good
idea and doesn’t think the government should pay for,” she says.
“There is no more pro-abortion a politician in America.”
Beerworth also recalls Dean’s failed attempt to get the Vermont
legislature to pass a universal health care plan that included “$5
copay” abortions. “Dean is unbelievable,” she says, also noting the
time he refused to talk to Vermont pro-lifers because, as he
explained on a Vermont talk show, he didn’t want to meet with
common criminals.
That Dean is a “moderate” comes as news to Vermont pro-lifers.
They remember him giving $350,000 a year in taxpayer funding to
Planned Parenthood. They remember him supporting partial-birth
abortion, opposing parental notification laws, and engaging in
surreal bombast. “I am tired of people in the Legislature thinking
that they have an M.D. when what they really have is a B.S,” he has
said, reports LifeNews.com (in this case, about his support for
physician-supported suicide). It also noted that he was the only
Dem to appear at NARAL’s presidential forum, where he said, “I’d
hate to have Tom DeLay, who exterminates cockroaches when he’s not
in Congress, decide what my medical needs are.”
Vermont pro-lifers say Dean personifies a “Yankee elitist
mentality” common in the state. “Planned Parenthood is a beloved
institution here,” says one. “It deals with a lot of the messy
people” who might encroach upon the “quaint lives” of the Yankee
elite. Dean’s proud association with Planned Parenthood, while
making sure to distance himself from any direct hand in its
abortions, is typical of this mindset, they say.
Under Governor Dean, Vermont ranked near the top of the nation
in rate of abortion.
It averaged 359 abortions for every 1,000 live births in
1992.
Needless to say, Planned Parenthood is very proud of their
alumnus. So much so it has given Dr. Dean its prestigious Margaret
Sanger award.