The year, 1957. Mike Wallace interviewed 78-year-old Margaret Sanger, the founder of what eventually became Planned Parenthood, a group that now receives nearly half a billion dollars a year in taxpayer money to function as America’s largest abortion provider.
Near the beginning of the interview, Wallace sought to determine her motives for birth control. Even a young Mike Wallace seemed shocked by some of what he heard from Margaret Sanger that day, including her belief that “the greatest sin in the world is bringing children into the world that have disease from their parents, that have no chance in the world to be a human being practically, delinquents, prisoners, all sorts of things, just marked when they’re born.”
Sadly, and strangely, Wallace never asked Margaret Sanger about the most controversial aspects of her character — her association with eugenics, and the ample evidence of her racism. In her autobiography, Margaret Sanger wrote about a speech she gave in 1926 at a Ku Klux Klan rally in Silver Lake, New Jersey. The Planned Parenthood founder bragged about the fact that afterward, she was invited by 12 other Klan chapters to speak at their events.
Because of Margaret Sanger’s vision, there are, in fact, disproportionately fewer blacks in America than any other race. Since 1973, legal abortion has killed more African-Americans than AIDS, cancer, diabetes, heart disease and violent crime combined. Every week, more blacks die in American abortion clinics than were killed in the entire Vietnam War. African-American Pastor Clenard Childress has said, “The most dangerous place for an African-American to be is in the womb of their African-American mother.”
In Sanger’s 1922 book, Women, Mortality, and Birth Control, she wrote, “We should hire three or four colored ministers, preferably with social service backgrounds and with engaging personalities. The most successful educational approach to the Negro is through a religious appeal. We don’t want the word to go out that we want to exterminate the Negro population, and the minister is the man who can straighten out that idea if it ever occurs to any of their more rebellious members.”
In her magazine, Birth Control Review, Sanger wrote, “Birth control must lead ultimately to a cleaner race.”
If it sounds familiar, it should. It’s essentially the same policy advocated and carried out by Germany’s Nazi leader Adolf Hitler, whose sterilization policy Sanger openly praised. Most people associate eugenics with Hitler and the Nazis. And while the Nazis may have perfected the movement, they did not start it. It began in England and spread to the United States very early in the 20th century.
Margaret Sanger was, in fact, a racist and eugenicist who advocated for the, “extermination of the Negro population.”
Source: Abortion Part II: Margaret Sanger from Glenn Beck.com.
There is a part III and part IV of this series too.
Under Margaret Sanger’s system Beethoven would have been aborted. Because his father had syphilis and the mother had tuberculosis (TB). They already had four children. One was blind, one died, one was deaf and dumb, and the fourth had TB too.
When you kill an unborn child not only do you take away its future but also a possible contribution to society. The reader might ask what about Hitler or any murderer? If they were aborted there would have been no future victims. A baby is amoral until he/she gets old enough to know the difference between good and evil. Only God knows what possible futures a baby would have. Mankind has no clue what a baby that grows up will do. Hitler was a fine arts student before he became an evil dictator.
Basically, Margaret Sanger and eugenicists like her were playing God.
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