Progessive Genius: Don't Use Word "Abortion."

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
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via CMR:


George Lakoff, the language genius behind the progressive movement, has some stunningly brilliant advice he's pushing at liberals.

Lakoff's prior brilliance has been mainly telling liberals to stop talking about "tax relief" because it makes taxes sound bad...or something. So...people won't know that it's difficult to pay their taxes unless you use the term "relief" after it?

Brilliant!!!

But it gets so much more brillianter. In today's HuffPo he tells liberals to stop using the term "abortion." Because...well...you just have to read it yourself. It's sooooo brilliant that it's hard to summarize.

Here's what progressives need to do: Never use the Cells Are People metaphor, even in arguing against conservative policy. Never use the term baby or unborn child to refer to a blastocyst, embryo, or fetus.



Stop using the term abortion. It has misleading properties. When we speak of "aborting a mission," the mission was intentional and planned, and the original idea was to bring it to an end state. What happens with an unwelcome pregnancy is nothing like this. The pregnancy was not intentional, not planned, and there was never any intention of bringing it to an end state. Rather, what is desired is development prevention, keeping any development from happening. That development can be prevented at many stages, from unfertilized cells (via morning-after pills), to blastocyst to embryo, from embryo to fetus, from fetus to a non-fully-formed-human, to an unviable human (one that can't live outside the womb). The earlier the development prevention, the better for the woman.

Never use the expression partial birth abortion. It's a conservative political tool, not a medical reality. Here's the Texas GOP in its 2012 platform: "We oppose partial birth abortion." The term was invented by a hired, conservative language professional. The image is grisly, and that was the point. But no such thing exists. The medical condition it is supposed to represent is one where a potential child cannot survive, either because it has no brain, or because of some other equally awful condition. And usually, the mother's life is at risk. This has nothing to do with either giving birth or with more common reasons for preventing development.


Whenever possible, avoid the term morning-after pill. It evokes a prototypical frame of immoral behavior, bad decision-making, the inability to "just say no" at a party or during a date. It excludes the fact that the treatment can help rape victims prevent development, be used in cases where other birth control methods failed, and so on.


Never evoke the Consumer Frame. It has been introduced to the debate by the term Pro-Choice, and is now used everywhere. For example, in the GOP's 2012 platform, where a decision for development prevention is labeled as a woman ordering an abortion, as if she were shopping. The frame hides the fact that such decisions are never made easily and are commonly made by men and women, and often their families, together.


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Creative Minority Report: Progessive Genius: Don't Use Word "Abortion."

George Lakoff: The Sacredness of Life and Liberty

h/t Zip
 

IdRatherBeSkiing

Satelitte Radio Addict
May 28, 2007
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Toronto, ON
Seems reasonable. Most of the politicing is getting your message out there. If you use improper words, you may get your opponents message out as well. This should be avoided. I am sure there are right wing word-think tanks as well.
 

Niflmir

A modern nomad
Dec 18, 2006
3,460
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Leiden, the Netherlands
It is somewhat accurate.

Know what an IntraUterine Device is? Did you know that its sole method of contraception is to abort? You rarely hear about these being brought up in abortion debates. Opponents of abortion love to talk about mechanical abortions, but never talk about the abortions induced by morning after pills, IUD's, and secondary mechanisms of the birth control pill itself or even the 30%-50% of conceptions that end in miscarriage. These are all equivalent to abortion if life begins at conception.

But few people fight the spread of IUD's.
 

Bar Sinister

Executive Branch Member
Jan 17, 2010
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Edmonton
I guess the strategy is similar to the one adopted by Conservatives in the 80s and later. Use the word "reform" instead of words like "destroy, cut-back, or eliminate," when taking about social programs.

Albertans have had a good look at this. We are still suffering from the "reforms" Ralph Klein and company brought to the province when he deregulated the electrical system, privatized many health and social services, and attempted to destroy the public school system.
 

Nuggler

kind and gentle
Feb 27, 2006
11,596
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Backwater, Ontario.
The only time the word "abortion" should be used is when referring to the C.R.A.P. party of Canada.

eg: The Self-servative party is a total abortion, as is its leader.
 

gerryh

Time Out
Nov 21, 2004
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"Murder," what an interesting way of saying birth control.


Killing a baby is birth control. Interesting. I know, I know, it's not a "baby", it's a fetus or some other "scientific" designation to make the abortionists feel good about what they support.
 

Niflmir

A modern nomad
Dec 18, 2006
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Leiden, the Netherlands
I'm glad that you've finally figured that out. It certainly has taken you quite a while.

Pardon me while I fry some chickens for breakfast... sorry, I mean eggs. I always mix that up.

Although I do have to admit, cracking open an egg to see a developing chicken embryo is kind of annoying.
 

gerryh

Time Out
Nov 21, 2004
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Yup, just one big joke. I love the hypocracy though.

Tell me, why the name changes? Why not just continue to call it an abortion?
 

TenPenny

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 9, 2004
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Location, Location
Yup, just one big joke. I love the hypocracy though.

Tell me, why the name changes? Why not just continue to call it an abortion?

I do continue to call it an abortion.

I suggest that you shouldn't refer to yourself as 'just one big joke', though, is smacks of an inferiority complex and a lack of self confidence.
 

Niflmir

A modern nomad
Dec 18, 2006
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Leiden, the Netherlands
Nobody in their right mind calls this a person:



And there are two very good reasons for that.