One Nation Under God

One Nation Under God

Friday, April 8, 2011

Barf Alert!! Lawrence O'Donnell Gets Emotional Defending Planned Parenthood

In my defense, I normally would not get caught dead visiting the likes of Huffpost Media, as one general feels compelled to wash off the filth upon leaving the site. However, I couldn't resist. The headline was just too tempting. Lawrence Odonell getting teary eyed on the air defending Planned Parenthood? Really?. Good grief! Below is the story from Huffpost Media  Continue if you can contain the bile rising up in your throat.



Lawrence O'Donnell mounted a highly emotional and personal defense of Planned Parenthood on his Friday show. The organization is under attack from Republicans, and, as the deadline for government shut down looms closer and closer, its federal funding has been the last major obstacle to a budget deal between Republicans and Democrats.

O'Donnell first zeroed in on Sen. Jon Kyl's assertion (which he was later forced to retract) that 90 percent of Planned Parenthood's services are abortion related. He called Kyl a "nice guy" who had told a "horrible lie" that he said was fed to him by "fanatical enemies of Planned Parenthood who hate the idea that the word 'planned' should ever come before the word 'parenthood.'"

O'Donnell then showed charts which demonstrated that, actually, only around three percent of the organization's resources go towards abortion services, with the rest going to various screening and sexual health services. He said that Kyl's false statement would not be forgotten.
"Lies that big...do not go unnoticed in the Senate," he said. "Jon Kyl will never again be trusted by Senators, including Republican Senators, as a source of reliable facts."

O'Donnell then turned to an email which he said came from a friend of his who used Planned Parenthood. He read the email out from his Blackberry, and as he did so, his hands, and his voice, started shaking with emotion. The friend's email recounted her dire financial straits and history of medical illnesses. Planned Parenthood, she wrote, was the place she went for her mammograms, her birth control and her cancer screenings.

"It's terrifying to think that with lack of funds, millions of women would not have access to this kind of care," the friend wrote.

"I can't imagine what I would do without Planned Parenthood. Talking about what they do is part of your job right now...please yell some sense into these people."

As O'Donnell said those last words, his voice broke perceptibly, and he then dropped the blackberry shaking in his hands, and turned away from the camera.