U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen (D-TN-9) on Wednesday accused an African-American conservative activist who testified about abortion’s harmful effects on the black community of “ignorance” with respect to the sincerity of his positions on social problems and an “inability” to appropriately address Congress.
The tense exchange came during a hearing in Washington, D.C., before the House Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on the Constitution and Civil Justice on the “Heartbeat Protection Act of 2017,” which would ban abortions of babies with detectable heartbeats.
Star Parker, founder and president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education (CURE) and a longtime conservative columnist and speaker, said it was “disingenuous” of Cohen to distract from the abortion issue by bringing Medicaid into the debate, reports LifeSiteNews.
Cohen, whose district covers most of Memphis, is against the heartbeat bill, arguing that it violates Roe v. Wade.
“The culture of death is taking 23 million people’s health care aware from them,” Cohen had said, according to a video of the hearing posted by The Daily Caller. “That seems to be the main focus of this Congress. It’s also taking a billion dollars from Medicaid, which is the main focus of the budget.”
Cohen said that “if you believe in life, you should believe in Medicaid, health care, nutrition for people who are here, utility payments for people who need it for safety, and preventing the eventuality of backroom abortions and where only the wealthy can afford to go to where they may be legal, making poor women even more poor.”
Cohen raised his voice in anger in addressing Parker, saying, “To suggest I’m disingenuous shows your ignorance or your absolute inability to deal with Congresspeople the way they should. I believe in those issues and I think they’re proper, and to say I’m disingenuous is just wrong and I expect an apology.”
Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-TX-1) asked Cohen to apologize, saying Parker “has a whole lot more knowledge and wisdom.”
“She’s ignorant about me!” Cohen replied.
Citing the “lack of civility,” Chairman Rep. Steve King (R-IA-4) ended the hearing.
During her testimony, Parker related how she had four abortions years ago when she was “lost in sexual recklessness.” Parker said she received no counseling or information from abortion providers about “the distinct humanity of the life that was growing within me.”
“I heard all the propaganda of the abortion peddlers in school, in media, from community and political leaders,” she said. “Yet I heard nothing of the infant development in the womb nor any information about their mortality.”
With the technology we have today, there’s even less of an excuse for not informing women about the development of an infant in the womb, Parker said.
Parker called abortion the “leading cause of death in the black community today” and compared Roe v. Wade with the Dred Scott decision. Since the U.S. Supreme Court legalized abortion in Roe v. Wade in 1973, 20 million humans have been killed inside black women’s wombs, she said.
“Abortion feeds a narrative that women are victims, that they have no control over their sexual impulses,” Parker said. “And the result of this narrative being forced down into our hardest-hit communities – we are seeing now recklessness in sexual activity and marriage has collapsed. In the 50s, 70% of black adults were married. Today, that number is 30 percent.”
Parker said that family breakdown has created many social pathologies that should be addressed in other types of legislation. The focus of the heartbeat bill should be on the “innocent” in the womb, she said.
Roe v. Wade gave women the right to abortion throughout an entire pregnancy, but set up conditions allowing states to regulate abortion in the second and third trimesters.
https://youtu.be/8_VB33oV9-8
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[…] was interviewed by FRC’s Patrina Mosley about the contentious exchange she had with Democratic Rep. Steve Cohen when she testified on behalf of the “Heartbeat […]
[…] was interviewed by FRC’s Patrina Mosley about the contentious exchange she had with Democratic Rep. Steve Cohen when she testified on behalf of the “Heartbeat […]
Cohen was useless as a representative in the Tennessee house and he hasn’t changed much since he arrived in Washington. On second thought, be may be worse if that is possible. His constituents are the ones that are ignorant of him and what he stands for.
Rep. Steve Cohen has seen fit to block me from commenting at his twitter and Facebook pages for reprimanding him about his racist comments to Ms. Star Parker this morning.
Cohen is Jewish elected to a district with roughly 80% black voters. He believes he can speak to people any way he wants thinking he is secure in office. His anger is over one black woman who has escaped the plantation of which he is the overseer. He demands she get back in line and keep her mouth shut.
Amen. That finger in her face, as she reported on FOX news after the hearing, will get him into more trouble than he bargained for if he does that go the wrong person. Yes seems to be a racist and seems to not give the black community any credit to make positive changes. He needs his retirement papers.
‘“She’s ignorant about me!” Cohen replied.”
Well, I cannot speak for Ms. Parker, but I can speak for myself. I am not ignorant of Congressman’s record. Based upon that record Congressman Cohn is an idiot and an embarrassment to the great state of Tennessee.
I agree. My family is from Sweetwater and I’m completely embarrassed to say we are from there.
It took this woman 4 abortions to realize what she was doing, from what she explains, really?? And now she somehow The Hollies One? Seriously? And just because she lashes out at a Congressman who defended himself now you accuse him to be an idiot, interesting… So you repeated a quote and missspelled his last name but you maintain your stand that he is an idiot, interesting ?