Use Inflammatory Rhetoric
As a former journalism instructor of the "old school" of objective reporting, I have always believed in using accurate, factual descriptions and definitions. That is why abortion is referred to throughout this book as "killing," and why the unborn child is called a "baby," and why a pregnant woman or girl is called a "mother." These are accurate, on-target words for the reality of what we are describing.
But to the abortionists, these are all examples of "inflammatory rhetoric." The abortionists prefer to disguise the reality of what they are engaged in by using vague, evasive words and phrases. They have to mask the monstrosity of abortion. They refer to the child as "fetal tissue" or merely the "P.O.C" (product of conception). It does not sound as barbaric, they reason, to remove fetal tissue, as it does to dismember a live human baby. It is easier to "interrupt" a "problem pregnancy" than it is to "kill" a new human life.
Abortionists thrive on such euphemisms and weasel words. Like things that creep around in the dark, they hate to have the bright light of truth shine on their activities. Many chafe at being called "abortionists," even though they may spend the greater part of their medical "practice" cutting up, salting out, or otherwise destroying human life.
Many abortionists are embarrassed to admit their involvement in abortion, and they wish to keep that phase of their practice quiet. It is important for pro-life activists to take every opportunity to broadcast the fact that Dr. So-and-So violates his oath to protect life. It is important to associate them in the public eye with their profession.
Samples of other "inflammatory rhetoric" that pro-lifers must use at appropriate times to counter pro-abortion jargon are "holocaust," for Americas abortion culture, "abortuary" or "death camp," to describe the abortion clinic, "abortifacient," for pills and IUDs, "fornication," for sex outside marriage, "adultery," for "having an affair."
Inflammatory rhetoric must be used with discretion.Do not always use the strongest terms or you will dilute their force when they are most needed. Inflammatory rhetoric is best used for emphasis. Other accurate but less descriptive terms should be used in most discourse, interviews, talks, and writing. A constant litany of inflammatory terms distracts an audience from the main point of a talk. It may lead them to believe anger and revenge motivate the speaker.
The abortionists consider nearly any reference to reality of abortion, pregnancy, and reproduction that does not fit their description as "inflammatory," just as they regard nearly any form of pro-life activity as "harassment" or "terrorism."
But then, people who kill babies for living are not going to be particularly accurate in describing their trade, or our efforts to shut down that industry.