Stephanie
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SNIP:
By Michelle Malkin February 10, 2012 09:06 AM
To Stop the Multiplication of the Unfit
by Michelle Malkin
Creators Syndicate
Copyright 2012
If you arent creeped out by the No Birth Control Left Behind rhetoric of the White House and Planned Parenthood, you arent listening closely enough. The anesthetic of progressive benevolence always dulls the senses. Wake up.
When a bunch of wealthy white women and elite Washington bureaucrats defend the trampling of religious liberties in the name of increased access to reproductive services for poor women, the ghost of Margaret Sanger is cackling.
As she wrote in her autobiography, Sanger founded Planned Parenthood in 1916 to stop the multiplication of the unfit. This, she boasted, would be the most important and greatest step towards race betterment. While she oversaw the mass murder of black babies, Sanger cynically recruited minority activists to front her death racket. She conspired with eugenics financier and businessman Clarence Gamble to hire three or four colored ministers, preferably with social-service backgrounds, and with engaging personalities to sell their genocidal policies as community health and welfare services.
Outright murder wouldnt sell. But wrapping it under the egalitarian cloak of womens health and adorning it with the moral authority of black churches would. Sanger and Gamble called their deadly campaign The Negro Project.
In other writings, historian Mike Perry found, Sanger attacked programs that provided medical and nursing facilities to slum mothers because they facilitate the function of maternity when the absolute necessity is to discourage it. In an essay included in her writing collection held by the Library of Congress, Sanger urged her abortion clinic colleagues to breed a race of thoroughbreds. Nationwide birth control bureaus would propagate the proper science of breeding to stop impoverished, non-white women from breeding like weeds.
Speaking with CBS veteran journalist Mike Wallace in 1957, long after her racist views had supposedly mellowed, Sanger again revealed her true colors: I think 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 theyre born. That to me is the greatest sin that people can can commit.
read it all at.
Michelle Malkin
SNIP:
By Michelle Malkin February 10, 2012 09:06 AM
To Stop the Multiplication of the Unfit
by Michelle Malkin
Creators Syndicate
Copyright 2012
If you arent creeped out by the No Birth Control Left Behind rhetoric of the White House and Planned Parenthood, you arent listening closely enough. The anesthetic of progressive benevolence always dulls the senses. Wake up.
When a bunch of wealthy white women and elite Washington bureaucrats defend the trampling of religious liberties in the name of increased access to reproductive services for poor women, the ghost of Margaret Sanger is cackling.
As she wrote in her autobiography, Sanger founded Planned Parenthood in 1916 to stop the multiplication of the unfit. This, she boasted, would be the most important and greatest step towards race betterment. While she oversaw the mass murder of black babies, Sanger cynically recruited minority activists to front her death racket. She conspired with eugenics financier and businessman Clarence Gamble to hire three or four colored ministers, preferably with social-service backgrounds, and with engaging personalities to sell their genocidal policies as community health and welfare services.
Outright murder wouldnt sell. But wrapping it under the egalitarian cloak of womens health and adorning it with the moral authority of black churches would. Sanger and Gamble called their deadly campaign The Negro Project.
In other writings, historian Mike Perry found, Sanger attacked programs that provided medical and nursing facilities to slum mothers because they facilitate the function of maternity when the absolute necessity is to discourage it. In an essay included in her writing collection held by the Library of Congress, Sanger urged her abortion clinic colleagues to breed a race of thoroughbreds. Nationwide birth control bureaus would propagate the proper science of breeding to stop impoverished, non-white women from breeding like weeds.
Speaking with CBS veteran journalist Mike Wallace in 1957, long after her racist views had supposedly mellowed, Sanger again revealed her true colors: I think 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 theyre born. That to me is the greatest sin that people can can commit.
read it all at.
Michelle Malkin