Ask me why I love Planned Parenthood
Ask me why I love Planned Parenthood
Please post your questions here.
Ashli Babbitt -- SAY HER NAME!
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Re: Ask me why I love Planned Parenthood
Hongtong or Sangsom?
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Re: Ask me why I love Planned Parenthood
Why do you love Planned Parenthood? Are you kicking off about another American culture war?
Lock 'em up - Eastman, Giuliani, Senator Graham, Meadows and Trump
Re: Ask me why I love Planned Parenthood
PP's founder, Margaret Sanger, was a lovely lady. Truly embodied the spirit and ideology of the Compassionate Left.
Ashli Babbitt -- SAY HER NAME!
Re: Ask me why I love Planned Parenthood
I'd never heard of her. It seems to me some of her ideas would appeal to conservatives? She was against abortion, opposed censorship and wanted restricted immigration. I thought you might like her ideas on eugenics. Wiki:
This is 100 years ago. We've still not solved the problem of irresponsible and unsuitable people becoming parents.Sanger's view of eugenics was influenced by Havelock Ellis and other British eugenicists,[117] including H.G. Wells, with whom she formed a close, lasting friendship.[118] She did not speak specifically to the idea of race or ethnicity being determining factors and "although Sanger articulated birth control in terms of racial betterment and, like most old-stock Americans, supported restricted immigration, she always defined fitness in individual rather than racial terms."[119][23]: 195–6 Instead, she stressed limiting the number of births to live within one's economic ability to raise and support healthy children. This would lead to a betterment of society and the human race.[120] Sanger's view put her at odds with leading American eugenicists, such as Charles Davenport, who took a racist view of inherited traits. In A History of the Birth Control Movement in America, Engelman also noted that "Sanger quite effortlessly looked the other way when others spouted racist speech. She had no reservations about relying on flawed and overtly racist works to serve her own propaganda needs."[121]
In "The Morality of Birth Control", a 1921 speech, she divided society into three groups: the "educated and informed" class that regulated the size of their families, the "intelligent and responsible" who desired to control their families in spite of lacking the means or the knowledge, and the "irresponsible and reckless people" whose religious scruples "prevent their exercising control over their numbers". Sanger concludes, "There is no doubt in the minds of all thinking people that the procreation of this group should be stopped."[122]
Lock 'em up - Eastman, Giuliani, Senator Graham, Meadows and Trump