People always want to try and make that as one of those things, well, how do you, how do you slice this particularly tough sort of ethical question. It seems to me, first of all, from what I understand from doctors, that’s really rare. If it’s a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down. But let’s assume that maybe that didn’t work or something. You know, I think there should be some punishment, but the punishment ought to be on the rapist and not attacking the child.
But her reaction was nothing compared to the scrambling, the fumbling, the hasty word salads coming out of the Republicans who, bless ‘em, saw immediately how this could royally screw things up come November if people kept linking that idiot Akin to their almost-main guy, Paul Ryan.
That same Paul Ryan whose views on personhood — the belief that the life of each human being begins with fertilization — meshed so thoroughly with Todd Akin’s they co-sponsored a bill calling for the legitimization of that loony theory.
That same Paul Ryan who, along with Akin and a couple hundred other GOP House members, actually tried to make laws about the degrees of rape, defining “forcible rape” as the only violation worth noting — as if, in fact, “forcible” could be defined; as if, in fact, there was any other kind.
So, because Akin reminds them too much of Ryan and all that’s unholy about him, the rest of the Republicans would like nothing better than to see Akin just fall in a hole, his name erased from any future historical references to the Great Race of 2012.
On Hardball, Cynthia Tucker told Chris Matthews that this notion about a woman’s body protecting her from a rapist’s sperm — in a “legitimate” rape — is nothing new. She said Georgia Representative Don Thomas, a physician, said much the same thing — in 2003.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Jim Galloway quotes Thomas as saying, “Relying on my personal experience in my home county of 90,000 people, we don’t have rape cases resulting in pregnancy.”
Galloway found another instance of the same crazy theory, this time by a North Carolina legislator (Republican) in 1995:
“The facts show that people who are raped — who are truly raped — the juices don’t flow, the body functions don’t work and they don’t get pregnant,” said [Henry] Aldridge, a 71-year-old periodontist. “Medical authorities agree that this is a rarity, if ever… [t]o get pregnant, it takes a little cooperation. And there ain’t much cooperation in a rape,” he said.
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