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- <text id=93TT1462>
- <title>
- Apr. 19, 1993: Camp for Crusaders
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Apr. 19, 1993 Los Angeles
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SOCIETY, Page 40
- Camp for Crusaders
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>After 12 weeks of training in the ABCs of protest, antiabortion
- activists prepare to teach others what they have learned
- </p>
- <p>By PAUL GRAY--With reporting by Sarah Tippit/Melbourne and
- Nancy Traver/Washington
- </p>
- <p> No caps and gowns, no Pomp and Circumstance, but a
- graduation of sorts took place last week, casually celebrated
- at a local restaurant in the Florida city of Melbourne. After
- three months of work, 22 men and women, ranging in age from 16
- to 67, became the nation's first formally trained class of
- abortion protesters. Following the meal, and an Easter weekend
- of demonstrations at nearby abortion clinics, the graduates
- began dispersing to their homes across the country, where they
- will teach the tactics they learned in Florida.
- </p>
- <p> This small ceremony underscored the growing organizational
- savvy of the militant pro-life movement. The Melbourne boot
- camp, organized and led by Keith Tucci, a pastor and executive
- director of Operation Rescue National, offered its first batch
- of students a comprehensive curriculum of conflict. Antiabortion
- demonstrations seem, to the uninitiated, noisy, chaotic affairs.
- The Melbourne IMPACT training (which stands for Institute of
- Mobilized Prophetic Activated Christian Training) disclosed some
- recommended methods behind the madness.
- </p>
- <p> A private detective lectured on how best to obtain
- information about everyone associated with an abortion clinic.
- License plates make it easy to trace home addresses; Social
- Security numbers and public records can be useful in assessing
- a subject's financial status. The point of such snooping is to
- lay siege to people who perform or facilitate abortions: pray
- or picket in front of their houses, confront them in the
- supermarket, identify them as "murderers" to their neighbors and
- children. A lawyer instructed the Melbourne volunteers on how
- far they could go with such harassing activities while remaining
- within their First Amendment rights. The attorney took them to
- the Brevard County courthouse and showed them how to file
- lawsuits against local officials, police, abortion doctors and
- activists in order to tie them up with paperwork.
- </p>
- <p> Some instructors appeared via videotape. One featured a
- woman named Karen Black, whom pro-lifers describe as one of the
- nation's most successful "sidewalk counselors," which means that
- she is good at persuading women not to have an abortion during
- the 20 seconds or so it takes to walk from a car to a clinic
- door. Her advice was peppy pop psychology: Be well groomed.
- Don't shout or intimidate. Recite the alternatives to abortion,
- and be prepared to deliver on any of them, including cash,
- immediately. If the subject seems to be wavering, use a plastic
- model of a fetus at 10 to 12 weeks to sell her on life.
- </p>
- <p> Other lessons included schemes for infiltrating abortion
- clinics. In one scenario, a man and a woman posing as husband
- and wife make an appointment and then stage a dialogue in the
- waiting area, one pleading with the other not to go through with
- the procedure; witnesses to this scene are usually rattled and
- discomfited. In another, a protester uses a borrowed urine
- sample that indicates she is pregnant, and then goes through all
- the steps at a clinic up to reclining on the operating table.
- Her goal is not only to disrupt but also to gather information
- about clinic routines and personnel.
- </p>
- <p> Supporting and abetting such activities is a sophisticated
- array of technology, all of it provided or paid for, according
- to Tucci, by individuals and small businesses: still and video
- cameras, computers, cellular phones, walkie-talkies, copiers,
- fax machines. Pro-choice activists in the Melbourne area claim
- that the volunteers have also been trained in the use of phone
- taps and long-distance surveillance devices. Boot-camp
- officials neither confirmed nor denied the charge.
- </p>
- <p> Tucci argues that his organization wants to abolish
- totally the practice of abortion through legal and nonviolent
- means. Boot-camp volunteers were required to sign a pact of
- nonviolence before every demonstration. And lessons were not
- given, as far as reporters allowed to witness some of the
- classroom sessions could determine, in several of the anti
- abortion faction's most extreme tactics: torching abortion
- clinics and suffusing them with noxious chemicals.
- </p>
- <p> Such omissions do not much comfort pro-choice advocates or
- those responsible for the approximately 1,500 increasingly
- beleaguered abortion clinics in the U.S."They've changed their
- tactics--more harassment, more stalking, more violence," says
- Eleanor Smeal, president of the Fund for the Feminist Majority,
- who last Friday took part in a pro-choice demonstration at a
- Melbourne church surrounded by about 150 clinic defenders. One
- statement from a boot camp graduate aptly underscored the
- persistence of those who took the course. He remarked, "You can
- draw a lot of comparisons between the fight over abortion and
- slavery. The abolitionists' movement lasted some 60 years, and
- it could be the same with abortion."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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