[Vision2020] Anger Trails Sali Cancer Comments

Tom Hansen thansen at moscow.com
Tue Oct 31 06:06:01 PST 2006


As stated earlier by B.J. Swanson and reported from today's (October 31,
2006) Spokesman Review -

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Anger trails Sali cancer comments 
Survivors condemn linking of abortion, breast cancer
Betsy Z. Russell 
Staff writer
October 31, 2006

BOISE - Breast cancer survivors gathered in a chilly Boise park on Monday to
call on GOP congressional candidate Bill Sali to stop claiming there's a
link between abortion and breast cancer.

"To put this on top of you, this horrible idea that you must've had an
abortion because you got breast cancer - that is totally unacceptable, the
research isn't there and this kind of statement should not be made," said
House Minority Leader Wendy Jaquet, D-Ketchum, herself a survivor of the
disease.
 
Sali stuck to his position, however. "I've never claimed that I'm absolutely
right," he told The Spokesman-Review. "What I've said is I believe my
position is true."

An outspoken anti-abortion advocate, Sali said: "Obviously I would hope that
women would be discouraged from having abortions if they know that there's
an increased risk, but clearly if we care about women we should want them to
know about this elevated risk. What's the damage of women being told some
people think there's a link between abortion and breast cancer? What does
that hurt?"

Both the U.S. National Cancer Institute and the American College of
Obstetricians and Gynecologists reviewed the issue in 2003 and published
their conclusions that there's no link between abortion and breast cancer.
The International Journal of Cancer published similar findings earlier this
month, based on a study of women in nine countries.

Kris Troxel, an engineer from Nampa who's a 10-year survivor of Stage 4
breast cancer, said it took her just two minutes to do a Google search on
the Internet and turn up reputable studies showing there's no link between
abortion and breast cancer. "Two minutes - and he couldn't take that time
before he slandered all of us. I find that just despicable," she said.

Sharon Van Slyke of Kuna said her treatment for breast cancer was a
"grueling experience" that included a lumpectomy, chemotherapy and radiation
treatments. "I get to save my breasts for now," she said. "But I'm still
sick - I'm sick of Bill Sali's rhetoric, I'm sick of Bill Sali's lies."

Sali was adamant, and said seven states have required women seeking
abortions to be informed of the alleged link. "Clearly this is not some
weird idea that only Bill Sali thinks is true," he said. "The folks who held
the press conference today were essentially trying to silence one side of
the debate."

Jaquet said 12 percent of women today will get breast cancer, while 30 years
ago it was just 5 percent of the population. She said she has a friend who
just has been diagnosed with the disease who is only 35 and has two small
children, and will likely lose both her breasts. Victims of the disease
struggle to understand why it's happening to them, she said. "You can
understand the emotion that we feel with regard to someone accusing us of
having had an abortion and therefore we got breast cancer."

Sali said, "I've never said anything like that. For them to draw that
inference is just unfair." 

But Jaquet said, "He's scaring women who are trying to make very complicated
decisions about abortions, and he denigrates those of us who are breast
cancer survivors. . We think that is wrong."

Sali said most studies he's seen show a link. "All I've said is that studies
show that there is a statistical link between abortion and breast cancer, an
increased risk, and women before they have an abortion should be told.
That's what I believe."

Marty Durand, executive director of the Idaho Women's Network, said, "Breast
cancer is a serious health concern for women. . We encourage women and their
families to seek the facts."

The women at the press conference have started an online petition objecting
to Sali's statements, saying in part: "We have suffered enough, having lived
with this awful disease. We refuse to become a victim of anyone who, either
through ignorance or willful misrepresentation, continues to perpetuate this
falsehood."

Sali said the petition appears to be an attempt to limit free speech by
trying to "quash one side of a debate."

Sali faces Democrat Larry Grant, two third-party candidates and an
independent candidate in the race for North Idaho's open seat in Congress.
The election is next Tuesday.

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Bill Sali makes Dan "Potato[e]" Quayle look like a Rhodes Scholar.

Seeya at the polls, Moscow.

Tom Hansen
Moscow, Idaho

"Madness does not always howl.  Sometimes, it is the quiet voice at the end
of the day saying, 'Hey, is there room in your head for one more?'"

- Author Unknown




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