By Jim Spencer
SpencerSpeaks.com
Marie Allan sat on the front porch of her apartment and tried to envision anti-abortion protesters walking the sidewalk by the now-empty building across
She didn’t like what she imagined.
“We don’t need protesters here every day,†Allan said fretfully.
Neighbors of a new headquarters for Planned Parenthood of the
For Allan and her neighbors, this is not good news.
“I think I might move once they put it there,†said Monique, a woman who would only give her first name because of the contentiousness of the abortion debate.
Monique opposes the abortion services Planned Parenthood offers. But like Allan, she’s equally upset with the prospect of protesters harassing patients entering the clinic and turning her street into a spectacle.
And like most people, including those who oppose abortion, Monique doesn’t consider the new Planned Parenthood clinic “a death camp†or a place that “kills babies for profit,†as a spokesperson for Colorado Right to Life described it.
“I’ve gone to Planned Parenthood,†Monique said, standing in the doorway of her
Monique was talking about birth control that reduces the need for abortions.
Family planning, counseling and distribution of birth control makes up 94 percent of services rendered in the five-state area administered by Planned Parenthood of the
“Six percent of our service is abortion,†Durgin said.
Those abortions are legal, and they are safer than the illegal abortions that would result if groups like Colorado Right to Life succeed in their ultimate goal – taking away women’s individual reproductive rights.
Calling Planned Parenthood clinics death camps or for-profit baby killing factories is the kind of inflammatory talk that led Planned Parenthood of the
Planned Parenthood branches in
In
“We’ve been a good neighbor for 90 years,†Durgin said.
Allan, Monique and others living in the townhouse apartments facing the new clinic wonder how good Planned Parenthood will be for their neighborhood. At the same time, they blame protesters as much as anyone for the disruptions that are likely to occur.
Over-the-top rhetoric has led to threats and attempts to intimidate Planned Parenthood’s local staff. In other parts of the country, such hate-speak has inspired killings of clinic workers. Think Eric Rudolph.
Allan has friends who lived near Planned Parenthood of the
But with proper zoning in place and with permits in the works, Planned Parenthood is coming. The former red brick United Airlines office between Poplar and
Conspicuously missing from the picture are the fence that will surround the property and, of course, the anti-abortion activists who have the right to stand on publicly owned sidewalks.
“We have very few neighbors,†Durgin said “We bought a whole city block to provide privacy and security.â€
The new clinic and administrative site is surrounded on three sides by railroad tracks, a parking lot and storage units and the back of a hotel. Planned Parenthood placed the clinic’s main entrance on a side of the building that faces the rear of the Renaissance Hotel at 38th and
Among the lies anti-abortion activists like to tell is that Planned Parenthood targets minority women for abortions. That has already happened in
Durgin said only 7 percent of the women who receive abortions at Planned Parenthood are African-American.
Allan, who is black, isn’t buying the racism charge.
She has seen the impact of unwanted and neglected children of any color on the entire community.
“We’re paying for babies people can’t afford,†she said.
There are also circumstances where Allan would consider an abortion.
“I’m not going to have a baby if I get raped,†she said.
Seated beside her, a friend who would identify himself only as Marshall E. told the story of his long-time girlfriend. “When she was young, she got pregnant by a friend who used drugs,†he said. “She had an abortion because she knew she couldn’t afford to have a baby.â€
That was, as it should always be, her choice to make. Thing is, if she’d gone to Planned Parenthood in the first place she might not have had to make the decision.
That’s the point the folks talking about death camps and protesting outside Planned Parenthood seem to miss.
The organization’s main mission has never been to give women abortions. It has always been to keep women from getting pregnant until they feel ready to give birth.
Copyright 2007 by Jim Spencer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.




6 users commented in " Planned Parenthood Protesters Sling Mud, Miss Point "
Follow-up comment rss or Leave a TrackbackThe Denver post said yesterday that 7% of their services are abortion. Today, you say 6%. Why the discrepancy?
http://www.denverpost.com/preps/ci_6666100
Leslie Durgin told me 6 percent of Planned Parenthood services went for abortions. She said of that 6 percent, 7 percent went to aboritons for African-American women. I don’t know what she told the Post, only what she told me.
Jim Spencer
Planned Parenthood is where the rubber meets the road. Our world is overpopulated with humans right now, and if we trust women to listen to their instincts on the subject of birth control and family planning, tomorrow’s world may be a better place to live. Yes, babies are wonderful, but babies become adults, and all need water, food, space, fuel, shelter, education, medicine. We cannot continue to add to our population based on some vague and mystical belief that science and technology will bail us out of the consequences of that decision. They can’t. They can just warn us of what is coming if we don’t get responsible. Three cheers for Planned Parenthood!
I grew up in a home and a church where abortion was a dirty word and Planned Parenthood was a nasty business. Intellectually I no longer think that way, but my gut hasn’t caught up with my head and I still react emotionally to both those concepts. I’m happy to hear that the number of abortions Planned Parenthood performs is low and that they provide life-giving services as well. I still wouldn’t want them across the steet from me.
How fitting that our health care system and the Planned Parenthood columns are side by side. I am very thankful for Planned Parenthood. In my 20’s I went to Planned Parenthood - in large part because I either didn’t have health insurance, or when I had health insurance I felt uncomfortable with my insurance company knowing about my personal matters. I knew I could afford Planned Parenthood and I felt I would be treated with privacy and respect. I have health insurance and go to a private doctor now, however, I still appreciate their support during my 20’s. Come on people - stop focusing on the 6 percent and look at the 94 percent - they provide an invaluable service in this country where access to affordable women’s health care is hard to find.
This was a very well-written column.
You summed it up precisely. The key point is the last paragraph.
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