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Monday, 2.4.13 ON THE WEB: www.yankton.net VIEWS PAGE: [email protected] 4 PRESS DAKOTAN views By The Associated Press Today is Monday, Feb. 4, the 35th day of 2013. There are 330 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Feb. 4, 1913, Rosa Parks, a black woman whose 1955 refusal to give up her seat on a Mont- gomery, Ala., city bus to a white man sparked a civil rights revolution, was born Rosa Louise McCauley in Tuskegee, Ala. On this date: In 1783, Britain’s King George III proclaimed a formal cessation of hostilities in the American Revolutionary War. In 1789, electors chose George Washing- ton to be the first president of the United States. In 1861, delegates from six southern states that had recently seceded from the Union met in Montgomery, Ala., to form the Confederate States of America. In 1932, New York Gov. Franklin D. Roo- sevelt opened the Winter Olympic Games at Lake Placid. In 1938, the Thornton Wilder play “Our Town” opened on Broadway. Walt Disney’s animated feature “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” opened in general U.S. release. In 1941, the United Service Organiza- tions (USO) came into existence. In 1962, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital was founded in Memphis, Tenn., by entertainer Danny Thomas. In 1972, Mariner 9, orbiting Mars, trans- mitted images of the red planet. In 1974, newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst was kidnapped in Berkeley, Calif., by the Symbionese Liberation Army. In 1976, more than 23,000 people died when a severe earthquake struck Guatemala with a magnitude of 7.5, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. In 1983, pop singer-musician Karen Car- penter died in Downey, Calif., at age 32. In 1987, pianist Liberace died at his Palm Springs, Calif., home at age 67. Ten years ago: President George W. Bush visited the Johnson Space Center in Houston, where he led a tribute to the lost crew of the shuttle Columbia and rededicated the nation to space travel. A rare television interview with Saddam Hussein aired in which the Iraqi leader denied that Baghdad had a relationship with al- Qaida or weapons of mass destruction. Law- makers formally dissolved Yugoslavia and replaced it with a loose union of its remaining two republics, Serbia and Montenegro. Opera singer Jerome Hines died in New York at age 81. Five years ago: President George W. Bush proposed a record $3.1 trillion budget that included huge deficits. Thomas S. Mon- son was introduced as the 16th president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, succeeding the late Gordon B. Hinck- ley. Harry Richard Landis, the next-to-last sur- viving U.S. veteran of World War I, died near Tampa, Fla., at age 108. (The last surviving U.S. World War I vet, Frank Buckles, died in February 2011.) One year ago: Russia and China vetoed a U.N. Security Council resolution aimed at ending Syria’s bloodshed. Republican presi- dential front-runner Mitt Romney cruised to a decisive victory in the Nevada caucuses. Running back Curtis Martin, the fourth-lead- ing rusher in NFL history, and linemen Chris Doleman, Cortez Kennedy, Willie Roaf and Dermontti Dawson were elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, along with senior com- mittee choice Jack Butler. Green Bay quarter- back Aaron Rodgers won the 2011 Associated Press NFL Most Valuable Player award in a landslide. Florence Green, who had served with the Women’s Royal Air Force and was recognized as the last veteran of World War I, died in King’s Lynn, eastern England, at age 110. Today’s Birthdays: Actor William Phipps is 91. Former Argentinian President Isabel Peron is 82. Comedian David Brenner is 77. Actor Gary Conway is 77. Movie director George A. Romero is 73. Rock musician John Steel (The Animals) is 72. Singer Florence LaRue (The Fifth Dimension) is 69. Former Vice President Dan Quayle is 66. Rock singer Alice Cooper is 65. Actor Michael Beck is 64. Actress Lisa Eichhorn is 61. Football Hall-of- Famer Lawrence Taylor is 54. Rock singer Tim Booth is 53. Rock musician Henry Bog- dan is 52. Country singer Clint Black is 51. Rock musician Noodles (The Offspring) is 50. Country musician Dave Buchanan (Yankee Grey) is 47. Actress Gabrielle Anwar is 43. Actor Rob Corddry is 42. Singer David Garza is 42. Actor Michael Goorjian is 42. Olympic gold medal boxer Oscar De La Hoya is 40. Rock musician Rick Burch (Jimmy Eat World) is 38. Singer Natalie Imbruglia is 38. Rapper Cam’ron is 37. Rock singer Gavin DeGraw is 36. Olympic gold medal gymnast-turned- singer Carly Patterson is 25. Thought for Today: “Life is doubt, and faith without doubt is nothing but death.” — Miguel de Unamuno, Spanish philosopher (1864-1936). But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added to you. Matthew 6:33. Portals of Prayer, Concordia Pub- lishing House, St. Louis T HE P RESS D AKOTAN THE DAKOTAS’ OLDEST NEWSPAPER | FOUNDED 1861 Yankton Media, Inc., 319 Walnut St., Yankton, SD 57078 OPINION | OTHER THOUGHTS President Must Act On Pipeline TODAY IN HISTORY FROM THE BIBLE YOUR LETTERS MANAGERS Gary L. Wood Publisher Michele Schievelbein Advertising Director Tonya Schild Business Manager David Jeffcoat Circulation Director Tera Schmidt Classified Manager Kelly Hertz Editor James D. Cimburek Sports Editor Beth Rye New Media Manager Kathy Larson Composing Manager Bernard Metivier District Manager Published Daily Monday-Saturday Periodicals postage paid at Yankton, South Dakota, under the act of March 3, 1979. Weekly Dakotian established June 6, 1861. Yankton Daily Press and Dakotian established April 26, 1875. Postmaster: Send address changes to Yankton Daily Press & Dakotan, 319 Wal- nut, Yankton, SD 57078. *** *** *** *** MEMBERSHIPS The Yankton Daily Press & Dakotan is a member of the Associ- ated Press, the Inland Daily Press Associa- tion and the South Dakota Newspaper Association. The Asso- ciated Press is entitled exclusively to use of all the local news printed in this newspaper. SUBSCRIPTION RATES* (Payable in advance) CARRIER DELIVERY 1-month . . . . .$12.09 3 months . . . .$36.27 6 months . . . .$72.53 1-year . . . . . .$133.09 MOTOR ROUTE (where available) 1 month . . . . .$14.51 3 months . . . .$43.53 6 months . . . .$87.05 1 year . . . . . .$139.14 MAIL IN RETAIL TRADE ZONE 1-month . . . . .$16.93 3 months . . . .$50.79 6 months . . .$101.57 1-year . . . . . .$148.82 MAIL OUTSIDE RETAIL TRADE ZONE 1 month . . . . .$19.35 3 months . . . .$58.05 6 months . . .$116.09 1-year . . . . . .$186.33 * Plus applicable sales tax for all rates CONTACT US PHONE: (605) 665-7811 (800) 743-2968 NEWS FAX: (605) 665-1721 ADVERTISING FAX: (605) 665-0288 WEBSITE: www.yankton.net EMAIL ADDRESS: [email protected] ——— SUBSCRIPTIONS/ CIRCULATION: Extension 112 CLASSIFIED ADS: Extension 108 NEWS DEPARTMENT: Extension 114 SPORTS DEPARTMENT: Extension 106 ADVERTISING OFFICE: Extension 122 BUSINESS OFFICE: Extension 119 NEW MEDIA: Extension 136 COMPOSING DESK: Extension 129 Andrew Atwal Derek Bartos Brett Beyeler Cassandra Brockmoller Rob Buckingham Randy Dockendorf Jeannine Economy Jeremy Hoeck Nathan Johnson Muriel Pratt Sheldon Reed Noelle Schlechter Cathy Sudbeck Kelsey Thomas Sally Whiting Brenda Willcuts Jackie Williams DAILY STAFF *** BY BILL O’REILLY Creators Syndicate It is one of life’s great mysteries that so many lib- eral people are so callous when it comes to aborting fetuses. I mean, the Democratic convention last sum- mer was almost a pro-abortion pep rally, as a variety of pro-choice speakers, including the self-proclaimed “Catholic woman” Car- oline Kennedy, knelt at the altar of “repro- ductive rights.” Recently, another woman who calls her- self a Catholic, Mary Elizabeth Williams, wrote a shocking article for Salon. Entitled “So What if Abortion Ends Life?” Williams starkly states: “I believe that life starts at conception. And it’s never stopped me from being pro-choice.” In the body of the article, Williams says this about her own pregnancies: “I never wavered for a moment in the belief that I was carrying a human life inside of me.” And she continues, “Here’s the compli- cated reality in which we live: All life is not equal. That’s a difficult thing for liberals like me to talk about... (A) fetus can be a human life without hav- ing the same rights as the woman in whose body it re- sides. She’s the boss. Her life and what is right for her circumstances and her health should automatically trump the rights of the non-autonomous entity inside of her. Always.” So now a developing fetus or viable baby ingesting in the womb is a “non-autonomous entity.” Good grief! The measure of a decent human being is how he or she treats the defenseless. The philosophy of Williams echoes past tyranny: Might makes right! What gives Williams the right to determine that her life is better than the baby she carries? Who ap- pointed Williams the arbiter of who lives and who dies? Always, Williams? Abortion is acceptable al- ways? We are not talking about life endangerment or cata- strophic damage to the mother here. No. What Williams believes, and she’s not alone, is that a woman can execute her fetus simply because “she’s the boss.” You may remember the late-term abortion doctor George Tiller. For $5,000, Tiller would drill a hole into the skull of a baby anytime up until birth. Tiller had an assistant in his Kansas clinic, Dr. Ann Kristin Neuhaus, whose assignment was to put on paper a reason for the late termination. Pretty much any reason would do, including “anxiety.” On May 31, 2009, Tiller was shot through the eye while attending a church service. His killer, Scott Roeder, is serving life in prison. The murder made national head- lines, and in many press dispatches, Tiller was portrayed as a martyr. People like me who had criticized Tiller before the vicious crime were accused by far-left loons of en- couraging the assassination. On June 22, 2012, Neuhaus was informed that Kansas authorities had revoked her medical license. A judge ruled that she did not perform adequate mental health examinations of 11 abortion patients. The prosecution said that Neuhaus was a “threat to any future patients she might have.” Not to mention the babies she helped Tiller abort. There comes a time when a human being has to ei- ther face evil or admit to allowing it. Abortion is legal in the United States, but it should not be celebrated or used as a political tool. Viable babies are human beings. If they could talk, they would tell Williams and other pro-choice zealots that their lives should not be marginalized by someone who thinks she’s the boss. That’s what the babies would say. Veteran TV news anchor Bill O’Reilly is host of the Fox News show “The O’Reilly Factor” and author of the book “Pinheads and Patriots: Where You Stand in the Age of Obama.” What The Babies Would Say Bill O’REILLY BY LEONARD PITTS JR. Tribune Media Services Rush Limbaugh thinks John Lewis should have been armed. “If a lot of African-Americans back in the ‘60s had guns and the legal right to use them for self-defense, you think they would have needed Selma?” Limbaugh said recently on his radio show, referencing the 1965 voting rights campaign in which Lewis, now a con- gressman from Georgia, had his skull frac- tured by Alabama state troopers on the Edmund Pettus Bridge. “If John Lewis had had a gun, would he have been beat upside the head on the bridge?” Right. Because a shootout between pro- testers and state troopers would have done so much more to secure the right to vote. Incredibly, that’s not the stupidest thing anyone has said recently about the Civil Rights Movement. No, that distinction goes to one Larry Ward, who claimed in an appearance on CNN that Mar- tin Luther King would have supported Ward’s call for a Gun Appreciation Day “if he were alive today.” In other words, the premiere American pacifist of the 20th cen- tury would be singing the praises of guns, except that he was shot in the face with one 45 years ago. Thus do social conservatives continue to rewrite the inconvenient truths of African-American history, repurposing that tale of incandescent triumph and in- consolable woe to make it useful within the crabbed corners of their failed and discredited dogma. This seems an especially appropriate moment to call them on it. Not simply because Friday was the first day of Black History Month, but because Monday is the cen- tenary of a signal event within that history. Rosa Louise McCauley was born a hundred years ago. You know her better by her married name — Rosa Parks, the quiet, unassuming 42-year-old seam- stress from Montgomery, Ala., who ignited the Civil Rights Movement in December 1955 when bus driver J.F. Blake ordered her to give up her seat for a white man and she refused. Doubtless, Limbaugh thinks she should have shot Blake instead, but she did not. She only waited quietly for police to come arrest her. Thus began the 381-day Montgomery Bus Boycott. Though legend would have it that Parks, who died in 2005, refused because her feet were tired, the truth, she always said, was that it was not her body that was fatigued. “The only tired I was, was tired of giving in” to a system that judged her, as a black woman, unworthy of a seat on a public bus. Years later, Martin Luther King Jr., the young preacher who led the boycott, would phrase that philosophy of refusal in terms of rhetorical elegance: “Noncooperation with evil is as much a moral obligation as is cooperation with good.” Mrs. Parks put it more simply that day in 1955: “No,” she said. The Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Mich., which counts Rosa Parks’ bus among its holdings, has persuaded the Senate to designate Monday a “National Day of Courage” in her honor. Full disclosure: I gave a compensated speech for the Michi- gan Department of Civil Rights at the Museum last month. While there, I had the distinct privilege of climbing onto that bus. Sitting in that sacred space, it is easy to imagine yourself transported back to that fateful moment of decision. Fifty-eight years later, those of us who are guardians — and beneficiaries — of African-American history, who live in a world transformed by the deci- sions of Rosa, Martin, Fannie Lou, Malcolm, Frederick, W.E.B., Booker T. and a million others whose names history did not record, now have decisions of our own to make. One of them is this: What shall we say to conservatives who seem hell- bent on rewriting, disrespecting and arrogating that history? Many sharp rebukes come to mind, but none of them improves on the brave thing said by a tired woman born a hundred years ago this week. No. Leonard Pitts is a columnist for the Miami Herald, 1 Herald Plaza, Miami, Fla., 33132. Readers may con- tact him via e-mail at [email protected]. © 2013, The Miami Herald Calling Out The Revisionists Leonard PITTS Hagel Is Excellent Choice Frank J. Kloucek, Scotland Former state legislator I am a 22-year-veteran of the South Dakota Legisla- ture. As a supporter of not only a strong defense but also a smart one, I can think of no one better than Chuck Hagel to lead our Department of Defense. I have studied his career as Nebraska senator and knew several of his staff. He is the man to lead the De- fense Department. Also I would encourage Congress to introduce leg- islation to provide federal funding for our county [or parish in southern states] veteran service officers who do so much to help our veterans transition to civilian life. They have saved many lives and made life more bearable for many veterans and their families in our state. CAPITAL JOURNAL, Pierre (Jan. 22): South Dakota’s Sen. John Thune re- acted Tuesday to news that Gov. Dave Heineman — a Republican, like Thune — has approved a new route through Nebraska for the proposed Keystone XL pipeline, which would also run through South Dakota. That could pave the way for the State Department and President Obama to approve the presidential per- mit required for the project. “The ball is now squarely in the president’s court,” Thune said in a statement. “Now that TransCanada has worked with the state of Nebraska to reroute the pipeline around the Nebraska Sandhills, the president is running out of excuses for delaying this job-creating, domestic energy-producing project. It is time for the president to decide between job creation and energy production or political expediency. I call on the president to immediately lend his support to this bipar- tisan project so that we can begin investing in America’s energy future.” Minus some of the rhetoric, we agree with Sen. Thune. In his second inaugural address Monday, President Barack Obama said America must lead the transition to sustainable energy sources; no disagreement here. But part of the transition means using the energy sources we have now while working on something better for the future. Anyone who loves the environment should be glad to have the Canadians lin- ing up to ship their oil sands down to the United States - especially considering the fact that Canada has mused in the past about sending that petroleum over- seas to China instead. Those who oppose the Keystone XL pipeline on environmental grounds should think about that, and China’s notorious status now as a polluter. Far bet- ter for the health of the planet would be to bring that petroleum to the U.S. and process it and use it according to the rules we’ve put in place to try to use our energy responsibly while taking care of the country we love. LINCOLN JOURNAL STAR (Jan. 24): If there is any doubt about the gen- erosity of the safety net provided for farmers with the help of the nation’s tax- payers, consider this: Despite a record nationwide payout of perhaps $15 billion because of drought and other crop losses last year, premiums for crop insurance actually will decrease next year for many farmers. That’s according to the administrator of the Risk Management Agency in the U.S. Department of Agriculture. William Murphy said that in Nebraska, for example, the statewide average decrease in premiums for corn insurance will be about 6 percent. The decline is due to new rate-making methodology recommended by Sumeria Systems Inc. While the drop in premiums is excellent news for Nebraska farmers in the short-term, there’s also a downside. The news that premiums are going down for some farmers may add new voices to the chorus that is complaining about the crop insurance program. The Washington Post, for example, this week opined that “federally backed crop insurance has long since evolved into yet another form of corporate wel- fare, whose direct costs and perverse unintended consequences outweigh its purported public benefits.” Strident critics can be found even in the Corn Belt. As we noted in an ear- lier editorial, Iowa State ag economic Professor Bruce Babcock called crop in- surance “Obamacare for corn” on the Stephen Colbert show. Other critics include the conservative Heritage Foundation and a faction of Republicans in the House of Representatives that identifies with the tea party. While one reason for the drop in 2013 premiums for some farmers is the new actuarial study, another reason is that rates generally are set on the basis of crop production averages over a period of decades. One single bad year doesn’t carry that much weight. What might change those calculations is continued drought because of cli- mate change. Forecasts for the start of the growing season are not encourag- ing. More than 60 percent of the continental United States is in some stage of drought, compared to only 32 percent last year. Seventy-seven percent of Ne- braska is in the most severe drought category. For the moment, Nebraska farmers have the security of perhaps the most generous safety net they’ve ever had. Not only are farmers still collecting di- rect payments, taxpayers are paying, on average, more than 60 percent of crop insurance premiums. The question is how long that safety net will be there. The spike in the cost of crop insurance has made it difficult to ignore. Crop Insurance Draws Scorn

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Page 1: OPINION | OTHER THOUGHTS P President Musttearsheets.yankton.net/february13/020413/ypd_020413_SecA_004.pdfSinger Natalie Imbruglia is 38. Rapper Cam’ron is 37. Rock singer Gavin DeGraw

Monday, 2.4.13ON THE WEB: www.yankton.net

VIEWS PAGE: [email protected] PRESS DAKOTANviews

By The Associated PressToday is Monday, Feb. 4, the 35th day of

2013. There are 330 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Feb. 4,

1913, Rosa Parks, a black woman whose1955 refusal to give up her seat on a Mont-gomery, Ala., city bus to a white man sparkeda civil rights revolution, was born Rosa LouiseMcCauley in Tuskegee, Ala.

On this date: In 1783, Britain’s KingGeorge III proclaimed a formal cessation ofhostilities in the American Revolutionary War.

In 1789, electors chose George Washing-ton to be the first president of the UnitedStates.

In 1861, delegates from six southernstates that had recently seceded from theUnion met in Montgomery, Ala., to form theConfederate States of America.

In 1932, New York Gov. Franklin D. Roo-sevelt opened the Winter Olympic Games atLake Placid.

In 1938, the Thornton Wilder play “OurTown” opened on Broadway. Walt Disney’sanimated feature “Snow White and the SevenDwarfs” opened in general U.S. release.

In 1941, the United Service Organiza-tions (USO) came into existence.

In 1962, St. Jude Children’s ResearchHospital was founded in Memphis, Tenn., byentertainer Danny Thomas.

In 1972, Mariner 9, orbiting Mars, trans-mitted images of the red planet.

In 1974, newspaper heiress PatriciaHearst was kidnapped in Berkeley, Calif., bythe Symbionese Liberation Army.

In 1976, more than 23,000 people diedwhen a severe earthquake struck Guatemalawith a magnitude of 7.5, according to the U.S.Geological Survey.

In 1983, pop singer-musician Karen Car-penter died in Downey, Calif., at age 32.

In 1987, pianist Liberace died at his PalmSprings, Calif., home at age 67.

Ten years ago: President George W. Bushvisited the Johnson Space Center in Houston,where he led a tribute to the lost crew of theshuttle Columbia and rededicated the nation tospace travel. A rare television interview withSaddam Hussein aired in which the Iraqi leaderdenied that Baghdad had a relationship with al-Qaida or weapons of mass destruction. Law-makers formally dissolved Yugoslavia andreplaced it with a loose union of its remainingtwo republics, Serbia and Montenegro. Operasinger Jerome Hines died in New York at age81.

Five years ago: President George W.Bush proposed a record $3.1 trillion budgetthat included huge deficits. Thomas S. Mon-son was introduced as the 16th president ofThe Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daySaints, succeeding the late Gordon B. Hinck-ley. Harry Richard Landis, the next-to-last sur-viving U.S. veteran of World War I, died nearTampa, Fla., at age 108. (The last survivingU.S. World War I vet, Frank Buckles, died inFebruary 2011.)

One year ago: Russia and China vetoeda U.N. Security Council resolution aimed atending Syria’s bloodshed. Republican presi-dential front-runner Mitt Romney cruised to adecisive victory in the Nevada caucuses.Running back Curtis Martin, the fourth-lead-ing rusher in NFL history, and linemen ChrisDoleman, Cortez Kennedy, Willie Roaf andDermontti Dawson were elected to the ProFootball Hall of Fame, along with senior com-mittee choice Jack Butler. Green Bay quarter-back Aaron Rodgers won the 2011Associated Press NFL Most Valuable Playeraward in a landslide. Florence Green, whohad served with the Women’s Royal Air Forceand was recognized as the last veteran ofWorld War I, died in King’s Lynn, easternEngland, at age 110.

Today’s Birthdays: Actor William Phippsis 91. Former Argentinian President IsabelPeron is 82. Comedian David Brenner is 77.Actor Gary Conway is 77. Movie directorGeorge A. Romero is 73. Rock musician JohnSteel (The Animals) is 72. Singer FlorenceLaRue (The Fifth Dimension) is 69. FormerVice President Dan Quayle is 66. Rock singerAlice Cooper is 65. Actor Michael Beck is 64.Actress Lisa Eichhorn is 61. Football Hall-of-Famer Lawrence Taylor is 54. Rock singerTim Booth is 53. Rock musician Henry Bog-dan is 52. Country singer Clint Black is 51.Rock musician Noodles (The Offspring) is 50.Country musician Dave Buchanan (YankeeGrey) is 47. Actress Gabrielle Anwar is 43.Actor Rob Corddry is 42. Singer David Garzais 42. Actor Michael Goorjian is 42. Olympicgold medal boxer Oscar De La Hoya is 40.Rock musician Rick Burch (Jimmy Eat World)is 38. Singer Natalie Imbruglia is 38. RapperCam’ron is 37. Rock singer Gavin DeGraw is36. Olympic gold medal gymnast-turned-singer Carly Patterson is 25.

Thought for Today: “Life is doubt, andfaith without doubt is nothing but death.” —Miguel de Unamuno, Spanish philosopher(1864-1936).

But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all thesethings will be added to you. Matthew 6:33. Portals of Prayer, Concordia Pub-lishing House, St. Louis

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OPINION | OTHER THOUGHTS

President MustAct On Pipeline

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DAILY STAFF

* * *BY BILL O’REILLY Creators Syndicate

It is one of life’s great mysteries that so many lib-eral people are so callous when it comes to abortingfetuses. I mean, the Democratic convention last sum-mer was almost a pro-abortion pep rally, asa variety of pro-choice speakers, includingthe self-proclaimed “Catholic woman” Car-oline Kennedy, knelt at the altar of “repro-ductive rights.”

Recently, another woman who calls her-self a Catholic, Mary Elizabeth Williams,wrote a shocking article for Salon. Entitled“So What if Abortion Ends Life?” Williamsstarkly states: “I believe that life starts atconception. And it’s never stopped mefrom being pro-choice.”

In the body of the article, Williams saysthis about her own pregnancies: “I neverwavered for a moment in the belief that Iwas carrying a human life inside of me.”

And she continues, “Here’s the compli-cated reality in which we live: All life is notequal. That’s a difficult thing for liberals like me totalk about... (A) fetus can be a human life without hav-ing the same rights as the woman in whose body it re-sides. She’s the boss. Her life and what is right for hercircumstances and her health should automaticallytrump the rights of the non-autonomous entity insideof her. Always.”

So now a developing fetus or viable baby ingestingin the womb is a “non-autonomous entity.” Good grief!

The measure of a decent human being is how he orshe treats the defenseless. The philosophy ofWilliams echoes past tyranny: Might makes right!What gives Williams the right to determine that herlife is better than the baby she carries? Who ap-pointed Williams the arbiter of who lives and whodies? Always, Williams? Abortion is acceptable al-ways?

We are not talking about life endangerment or cata-

strophic damage to the mother here. No. WhatWilliams believes, and she’s not alone, is that awoman can execute her fetus simply because “she’sthe boss.”

You may remember the late-term abortion doctorGeorge Tiller. For $5,000, Tiller would drill a hole into

the skull of a baby anytime up until birth.Tiller had an assistant in his Kansas clinic,Dr. Ann Kristin Neuhaus, whose assignmentwas to put on paper a reason for the latetermination. Pretty much any reason woulddo, including “anxiety.”

On May 31, 2009, Tiller was shot throughthe eye while attending a church service.His killer, Scott Roeder, is serving life inprison. The murder made national head-lines, and in many press dispatches, Tillerwas portrayed as a martyr. People like mewho had criticized Tiller before the viciouscrime were accused by far-left loons of en-couraging the assassination.

On June 22, 2012, Neuhaus was informedthat Kansas authorities had revoked hermedical license. A judge ruled that she did

not perform adequate mental health examinations of11 abortion patients. The prosecution said thatNeuhaus was a “threat to any future patients shemight have.”

Not to mention the babies she helped Tiller abort. There comes a time when a human being has to ei-

ther face evil or admit to allowing it. Abortion is legalin the United States, but it should not be celebratedor used as a political tool. Viable babies are humanbeings. If they could talk, they would tell Williams andother pro-choice zealots that their lives should not bemarginalized by someone who thinks she’s the boss.That’s what the babies would say.

Veteran TV news anchor Bill O’Reilly is host of theFox News show “The O’Reilly Factor” and author ofthe book “Pinheads and Patriots: Where You Stand inthe Age of Obama.”

What The Babies Would Say

Bill

O’REILLY

BY LEONARD PITTS JR.Tribune Media Services

Rush Limbaugh thinks John Lewis should havebeen armed.

“If a lot of African-Americans back in the ‘60s hadguns and the legal right to use them forself-defense, you think they would haveneeded Selma?” Limbaugh said recently onhis radio show, referencing the 1965 votingrights campaign in which Lewis, now a con-gressman from Georgia, had his skull frac-tured by Alabama state troopers on theEdmund Pettus Bridge. “If John Lewis hadhad a gun, would he have been beat upsidethe head on the bridge?”

Right. Because a shootout between pro-testers and state troopers would havedone so much more to secure the right tovote.

Incredibly, that’s not the stupidest thinganyone has said recently about the CivilRights Movement.

No, that distinction goes to one LarryWard, who claimed in an appearance on CNN that Mar-tin Luther King would have supported Ward’s call for aGun Appreciation Day “if he were alive today.” In otherwords, the premiere American pacifist of the 20th cen-tury would be singing the praises of guns, except thathe was shot in the face with one 45 years ago.

Thus do social conservatives continue to rewritethe inconvenient truths of African-American history,repurposing that tale of incandescent triumph and in-consolable woe to make it useful within the crabbedcorners of their failed and discredited dogma. Thisseems an especially appropriate moment to call themon it. Not simply because Friday was the first day ofBlack History Month, but because Monday is the cen-tenary of a signal event within that history.

Rosa Louise McCauley was born a hundred yearsago. You know her better by her married name —Rosa Parks, the quiet, unassuming 42-year-old seam-stress from Montgomery, Ala., who ignited the CivilRights Movement in December 1955 when bus driverJ.F. Blake ordered her to give up her seat for a whiteman and she refused.

Doubtless, Limbaugh thinks she should have shot

Blake instead, but she did not. She only waited quietlyfor police to come arrest her. Thus began the 381-dayMontgomery Bus Boycott.

Though legend would have it that Parks, who diedin 2005, refused because her feet were tired, the truth,she always said, was that it was not her body that

was fatigued. “The only tired I was, wastired of giving in” to a system that judgedher, as a black woman, unworthy of a seaton a public bus.

Years later, Martin Luther King Jr., theyoung preacher who led the boycott, wouldphrase that philosophy of refusal in termsof rhetorical elegance: “Noncooperationwith evil is as much a moral obligation as iscooperation with good.”

Mrs. Parks put it more simply that day in1955: “No,” she said.

The Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn,Mich., which counts Rosa Parks’ bus amongits holdings, has persuaded the Senate todesignate Monday a “National Day ofCourage” in her honor. Full disclosure: Igave a compensated speech for the Michi-

gan Department of Civil Rights at the Museum lastmonth. While there, I had the distinct privilege ofclimbing onto that bus.

Sitting in that sacred space, it is easy to imagineyourself transported back to that fateful moment ofdecision. Fifty-eight years later, those of us who areguardians — and beneficiaries — of African-Americanhistory, who live in a world transformed by the deci-sions of Rosa, Martin, Fannie Lou, Malcolm, Frederick,W.E.B., Booker T. and a million others whose nameshistory did not record, now have decisions of ourown to make. One of them is this:

What shall we say to conservatives who seem hell-bent on rewriting, disrespecting and arrogating thathistory? Many sharp rebukes come to mind, but noneof them improves on the brave thing said by a tiredwoman born a hundred years ago this week.

No.

Leonard Pitts is a columnist for the Miami Herald,1 Herald Plaza, Miami, Fla., 33132. Readers may con-tact him via e-mail at [email protected].

© 2013, The Miami Herald

Calling Out The Revisionists

Leonard

PITTS

Hagel Is Excellent ChoiceFrank J. Kloucek, Scotland Former state legislator

I am a 22-year-veteran of the South Dakota Legisla-ture. As a supporter of not only a strong defense butalso a smart one, I can think of no one better thanChuck Hagel to lead our Department of Defense.

I have studied his career as Nebraska senator and

knew several of his staff. He is the man to lead the De-fense Department.

Also I would encourage Congress to introduce leg-islation to provide federal funding for our county [orparish in southern states] veteran service officerswho do so much to help our veterans transition tocivilian life. They have saved many lives and made lifemore bearable for many veterans and their families inour state.

CAPITAL JOURNAL, Pierre (Jan. 22): South Dakota’s Sen. John Thune re-acted Tuesday to news that Gov. Dave Heineman — a Republican, like Thune —has approved a new route through Nebraska for the proposed Keystone XLpipeline, which would also run through South Dakota. That could pave the wayfor the State Department and President Obama to approve the presidential per-mit required for the project.

“The ball is now squarely in the president’s court,” Thune said in a statement.“Now that TransCanada has worked with the state of Nebraska to reroute thepipeline around the Nebraska Sandhills, the president is running out of excusesfor delaying this job-creating, domestic energy-producing project. It is time forthe president to decide between job creation and energy production or politicalexpediency. I call on the president to immediately lend his support to this bipar-tisan project so that we can begin investing in America’s energy future.”

Minus some of the rhetoric, we agree with Sen. Thune. In his second inauguraladdress Monday, President Barack Obama said America must lead the transitionto sustainable energy sources; no disagreement here. But part of the transitionmeans using the energy sources we have now while working on something betterfor the future.

Anyone who loves the environment should be glad to have the Canadians lin-ing up to ship their oil sands down to the United States - especially consideringthe fact that Canada has mused in the past about sending that petroleum over-seas to China instead.

Those who oppose the Keystone XL pipeline on environmental groundsshould think about that, and China’s notorious status now as a polluter. Far bet-ter for the health of the planet would be to bring that petroleum to the U.S. andprocess it and use it according to the rules we’ve put in place to try to use ourenergy responsibly while taking care of the country we love.

LINCOLN JOURNAL STAR (Jan. 24): If there is any doubt about the gen-erosity of the safety net provided for farmers with the help of the nation’s tax-payers, consider this:

Despite a record nationwide payout of perhaps $15 billion because ofdrought and other crop losses last year, premiums for crop insurance actuallywill decrease next year for many farmers.

That’s according to the administrator of the Risk Management Agency inthe U.S. Department of Agriculture.

William Murphy said that in Nebraska, for example, the statewide averagedecrease in premiums for corn insurance will be about 6 percent.

The decline is due to new rate-making methodology recommended bySumeria Systems Inc.

While the drop in premiums is excellent news for Nebraska farmers in theshort-term, there’s also a downside.

The news that premiums are going down for some farmers may add newvoices to the chorus that is complaining about the crop insurance program.The Washington Post, for example, this week opined that “federally backedcrop insurance has long since evolved into yet another form of corporate wel-fare, whose direct costs and perverse unintended consequences outweigh itspurported public benefits.”

Strident critics can be found even in the Corn Belt. As we noted in an ear-lier editorial, Iowa State ag economic Professor Bruce Babcock called crop in-surance “Obamacare for corn” on the Stephen Colbert show.

Other critics include the conservative Heritage Foundation and a faction ofRepublicans in the House of Representatives that identifies with the tea party.

While one reason for the drop in 2013 premiums for some farmers is thenew actuarial study, another reason is that rates generally are set on the basisof crop production averages over a period of decades. One single bad yeardoesn’t carry that much weight.

What might change those calculations is continued drought because of cli-mate change. Forecasts for the start of the growing season are not encourag-ing. More than 60 percent of the continental United States is in some stage ofdrought, compared to only 32 percent last year. Seventy-seven percent of Ne-braska is in the most severe drought category.

For the moment, Nebraska farmers have the security of perhaps the mostgenerous safety net they’ve ever had. Not only are farmers still collecting di-rect payments, taxpayers are paying, on average, more than 60 percent of cropinsurance premiums.

The question is how long that safety net will be there. The spike in the costof crop insurance has made it difficult to ignore.

Crop Insurance Draws Scorn