kalm wrote:JoltinJoe wrote:
Not over-thinking it. The satirical "beat" at the end of almost every paragraph returns to the theme of Richards saying something which trivializes abortion, or commentary that does the same. As you know, when you read/write satire, the punch is always in the curl at the end of the paragraph.
Comments about stopping tiny little beating hearts or sucking a uterus clean are completely unnecessary otherwise.
I get your point and will straight up acknowledge you probably have a much richer background in the rules of satire. But still, perhaps the true satire here lies in the probability that no one involved with planned parenthood makes abortion a trivial matter.
Ya think? That's the whole point: PP recites its "97 percent" figure as if it isn't the nation's largest provider, by far, of abortion services (a fact which it tries to obscure) and that abortion services account for 15% of its annual revenue.
Why can't you just accept that the Onion is satirizing PP's extremism? An adoption center for unwanted cats and dogs? If that isn't satire which touches a raw-nerved truth about abortion advocates, what is it?
Look, I have cited to repeated instances in the text, and accompanying "floor plan," to support my contention that this piece is aimed at PP, and I have explained why this text supports my position, given its placement in the overall structure of this article. Simply saying that the "true satire" is something else, without any real analysis, doesn't really cut it. Where are you seeing this? Why?
And the beauty of this satire is that, of course, its targets insist that it is not possible that they are the intended targets -- out of touch, just as charged in this piece. Hysterical that it was PP supporters who started a thread about this piece.