CNSNews.com managing editor Michael W. Chapman huffs in an Aug. 18 “news” article:
When Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) was Speaker of the House for four years (2007-2010), at least 709,885 black babies were killed by abortion, which is 35.4% of all the abortions during those years, according to the Abortion Surveillance reports of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
[…]In all, that equals 709,885 black abortions — 35.4% of the total — during the four years that Nancy Pelosi was Speaker of the House, based upon the areas that reported to the CDC.
There were a total 1,918,419 abortions during those four years.
Blacks make up 13.3% of the U.S. population, according to the Census Bureau.
In 2015, Planned Parenthood, the nation’s largest abortion provider, presented then-Speaker Pelosi (D-Calif.) with the Margaret Sanger Award. The award is Planned Parenthood’s “highest honor” and is named for a woman who believed in breeding better humans through eugenics and even promoted her birth control philosophy to female members of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK).
What is the “news” hook that justifies the existence of this article? None that we’re aware of — the Margaret Sanger Award Pelosi received was two years ago. What direct link does Pelosi have to the number of black women having abortions? None. What relevance does the number of abortions among blacks have to any current debate about abortion, especially given that no organized campaign led by Planned Parenthood or anyone else exists for force black women to have abortions? None.
In other words, Chapman is simply making a partisan political attack and, yes, presenting it as “news” — it does appears in the “news” section of CNS.
One side note: As proof of Sanger’s speaking to “female members of the Ku Klux Klan,” Chapman links to a 2015 CNS column by right-wing historian Paul Kengor in which he’s responding to me (though he refused to use my name) after I had called him out for distorting the events surrounding Sanger’s talk and for misleading about Sanger in general. Kengor didn’t concede his factual failings, of course, but he effectively admits he’s exploiting the alleged ambiguity of Sanger’s words to present the worst possible interpretation of them as fact in order to smear her as a virulent racist.