The Media Research Center’s already strident rhetoric against abortion has only gotten more so as the coronavirus pandemic spread. In addition to obsessing over whether a public health expert was identified as a former Planned Parenthood official despite that being irrelevant to the issue, the MRC has freaked out over the following:
- Alexa Moutevelis melted down over an Abortion Provider Appreciation Day earlier this month, denying the humanity of abortion doctors as she called them “monsters” who have “more in common with supervillain Thanos.”
- Moutevelis returned to attack family planning proponents as the “Death Lobby” that wants to make abortion to be considered an essential medical service during the pandemic (of course, in Moutevelis’ highly biased and hateful take, they’re “making sure they can keep killing preborn babies in a timely manner”). She further complained; “There is a genuine disconnect between doctors trying to save the weak and vulnerable elderly that coronavirus seems to target most in one room while killing the weak and vulnerable in the womb that abortion targets in another,” adding, “At a time when there’s death and destruction all around us, let’s do everything we can to save lives instead of take them.”
- In another post, Moutevelis slandered abortion rights proponents as “blood-thirsty” and “monstrous” for complaining about provisions in the stimulus bill, huffing that “at a time when our country is shut down to protect the weak and vulnerable members of our society, some want to keep open the abortion clinics that kill the weakest and most vulnerable of all humans, the unborn, as essential businesses.”
- And Gabriel Hays mocked the idea that abortion clinics should be allowed to stay open: “Ah, yes, killing kids is as essential as the ER doctor saving lives. This is just a dark Orwellian leftist game. The notion that someone wanting an abortion (A CHOICE) is an equal emergency to someone’s imminent death from coronavirus or a heart attack is not convincing.”
But when someone actually advocated letting the sick and elderly die from coronavirus as an expeditious way to save the economy, the MRC ran to his defense.
In a March 26 post, Curtis Houck complained that a man who advocated letting the elderly and infirm die during the pandemic since they are “not productive” and are “generally expensive to maintain” had a Washington Post article done about him. At no point does Houck express offense at the man’s views, despite his employer’s pro-life agenda; he merely calls the “harsh and unpopular.” The greater offense, according to Houck, is that a Post reporter called the man’s elderly parents for their views on the subject:
If The Washington Post and senior editor Marc Fisher want Americans to stop calling the press “the enemy of the people,” a place to start would be not publishing stories like Fisher’s March 25 item trying to tear down a man who, as of Wednesday night, had less than 400 Twitter followers.
The thought crime committed by La Mesa, California lawyer Scott McMillan? Offering a harsh and unpopular take about the coronavirus and senior citizens.
In response, Fisher penned a 1,786-word piece entitled “He urged saving the economy over protecting those who are ‘not productive’ from the coronavirus. Then he faced America’s wrath.”
On Twitter, most of the brutal but well-deserved scorn came with Fisher tweeting how he not only wrote about McMillian, but he called his parents:
[…]So, a few points. One, anyone surprised by Twitter’s vitriol must either not have an account or be living under a rock. Two, perhaps forcing McMillan to relive the past few days isn’t the best for his well-being. And three, why did Fisher decide to further bring attention to this poor soul’s life again?
Yep — according to Houck, the “poor soul” and victim here is the man getting criticized for expressing an unpopular opinion — despite it being one that he and the MRC should be opposed to as supposed “pro-life” activists. And Houck’s concern that the person’s life was being “ruined” for expressing said opinion rings hollow considering that he very much wants to ruin the life of the Post reporter for the supposedly “unpopular” action of calling the guy out. Some targets are much more acceptable than others, it seems.
It’s doubly hypocritical given that the MRC has come out against the view the tweet expressed elsewhere — albeit only when media figures accused conservatives of supporting it. A March 23 post by Scott Whitlock complained that “the hard left in the media” like MSNBC’s Chris Hayes are accusing President Trump and conservatives of being “ready to kill a ‘million’ senior citizens as a way of saving the economy from the coronavirus” (while making sure to note that Hayes is “a staunch supporter of abortion”), while a March 26 post by Whitlock accusing MSNBC’s Joe Scarborough of claiming conservatives support “the mass death of the elderly population” to preserve “Boeing’s corporate earnings.”
So is it cool to let the elderly die, or nah? The MRC should perhaps get on the same page on that.