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Dec 15, 2023 15:58:17   #
Bad Bob Loc: Virginia
 
jack sequim wa wrote:
The same minds like that of activist Margaret Sanger, opened abortion clinics in black neighborhoods (none found in white populations) and quoted "for the removal of blacks " (paraphrased)


No source for your lies?

Reply
Dec 15, 2023 16:41:06   #
keepuphope Loc: Idaho
 
Bad Bob wrote:
No source for your lies?


She could stand in front of your face and say that and you'd deny it.

Reply
Dec 15, 2023 16:41:31   #
jack sequim wa Loc: Blanchard, Idaho
 
Bad Bob wrote:
No source for your lies?


Had you read back a few post, you would have seen the link.

Reply
 
 
Dec 15, 2023 16:45:15   #
Justice101
 
Bad Bob wrote:
Thank you, please show the source of the page.


It appeared in Margaret Sanger's book titled "The Woman Rebel" as it was noted in the post from Jack.

https://sanger.hosting.nyu.edu/

Planned Parenthood of New York removed Margaret Sanger's name from their clinic due to her racist and eugenics history.

Sanger’s name to be dropped from NYC clinic over eugenics
https://apnews.com/article/ddef4d3812cfe106b7c0844536ac37ec
“The removal of Margaret Sanger’s name from our building is both a necessary and overdue step to reckon with our legacy and acknowledge Planned Parenthood’s contributions to historical reproductive harm within communities of color,” Karen Seltzer, the chair of Planned Parenthood of New York, said in a statement. “Margaret Sanger’s concerns and advocacy for reproductive health have been clearly documented, but so too has her racist legacy.”

https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2020/07/23/racism-eugenics-margaret-sanger-deserves-no-honors-column/5480192002/

For those identifying historical figures with racist roots who should be removed from public view because of their evil histories, Planned Parenthood’s founder, Margaret Sanger, must join that list. In promoting birth control, she advanced a controversial "Negro Project," wrote in her autobiography about speaking to a Ku Klux Klan group and advocated for a eugenics approach to breeding for “the gradual suppression, elimination and eventual extinction, of defective stocks — those human weeds which threaten the blooming of the finest flowers of American civilization.”

Sanger's Planned Parenthood mission
In a 1939 letter to Dr. C. J. Gamble, Sanger urged him to get over his reluctance to hire “a full time Negro physician” as the “colored Negroes…can get closer to their own members and more or less lay their cards on the table which means their ignorance, superstitions and doubt.”

Like the abortion lobby today, Sanger urged Dr. Gamble to enlist the help of spiritual leaders to justify their deadly work, writing, “We do not want 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.”

The vast majority of the abortion vendors have set up shop in minority neighborhoods, which can be seen in the scarce statistics available at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Though they are only 13% of the female population, African Americans made up 38% of all abortions tracked in 2016.

Birth control to eliminate the 'unfit'
But consider Sanger’s own words. In an article titled “A Better Race Through Birth Control,” she wrote, “Given Birth Control, the unfit will voluntarily eliminate their kind.”

“Birth Control does not mean contraception indiscriminately practised,” Sanger wrote. “It means the release and cultivation of the better elements in our society.”

Just this week, Planned Parenthood of Greater New York announced it will remove Sanger's name from its Manhattan abortion vendor location because of her “harmful connections to the eugenics movement.”

Reply
Dec 15, 2023 16:57:02   #
WEBCO
 
RascalRiley wrote:
I know you meant that as an insult but I am not offended.

No mistakes, no growth.


You're unable to learn from others mistakes or through observations and deductive reasoning?

Reply
Dec 15, 2023 16:59:31   #
RascalRiley Loc: Somewhere south of Detroit
 
Parky60 wrote:
Only thing is that you do not grow... and that wasn't meant as an insult... it's the truth.

Said the all knowing Perky.

Reply
Dec 15, 2023 17:21:54   #
Bad Bob Loc: Virginia
 
jack sequim wa wrote:
Had you read back a few post, you would have seen the link.


I did, no reliable source.

Reply
 
 
Dec 15, 2023 17:53:32   #
Parky60 Loc: People's Republic of Illinois
 
RascalRiley wrote:
Said the all knowing Perky.

It appears that others on this site agree with me slick.

Reply
Dec 15, 2023 17:55:12   #
Parky60 Loc: People's Republic of Illinois
 
Bad Bob wrote:
I did, no reliable source.

According to who?... You? HAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!

Reply
Dec 15, 2023 18:03:47   #
Bad Bob Loc: Virginia
 
Justice101 wrote:
It appeared in Margaret Sanger's book titled "The Woman Rebel" as it was noted in the post from Jack.

https://sanger.hosting.nyu.edu/

Planned Parenthood of New York removed Margaret Sanger's name from their clinic due to her racist and eugenics history.

Sanger’s name to be dropped from NYC clinic over eugenics
https://apnews.com/article/ddef4d3812cfe106b7c0844536ac37ec
“The removal of Margaret Sanger’s name from our building is both a necessary and overdue step to reckon with our legacy and acknowledge Planned Parenthood’s contributions to historical reproductive harm within communities of color,” Karen Seltzer, the chair of Planned Parenthood of New York, said in a statement. “Margaret Sanger’s concerns and advocacy for reproductive health have been clearly documented, but so too has her racist legacy.”

https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2020/07/23/racism-eugenics-margaret-sanger-deserves-no-honors-column/5480192002/

For those identifying historical figures with racist roots who should be removed from public view because of their evil histories, Planned Parenthood’s founder, Margaret Sanger, must join that list. In promoting birth control, she advanced a controversial "Negro Project," wrote in her autobiography about speaking to a Ku Klux Klan group and advocated for a eugenics approach to breeding for “the gradual suppression, elimination and eventual extinction, of defective stocks — those human weeds which threaten the blooming of the finest flowers of American civilization.”

Sanger's Planned Parenthood mission
In a 1939 letter to Dr. C. J. Gamble, Sanger urged him to get over his reluctance to hire “a full time Negro physician” as the “colored Negroes…can get closer to their own members and more or less lay their cards on the table which means their ignorance, superstitions and doubt.”

Like the abortion lobby today, Sanger urged Dr. Gamble to enlist the help of spiritual leaders to justify their deadly work, writing, “We do not want 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.”

The vast majority of the abortion vendors have set up shop in minority neighborhoods, which can be seen in the scarce statistics available at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Though they are only 13% of the female population, African Americans made up 38% of all abortions tracked in 2016.

Birth control to eliminate the 'unfit'
But consider Sanger’s own words. In an article titled “A Better Race Through Birth Control,” she wrote, “Given Birth Control, the unfit will voluntarily eliminate their kind.”

“Birth Control does not mean contraception indiscriminately practised,” Sanger wrote. “It means the release and cultivation of the better elements in our society.”

Just this week, Planned Parenthood of Greater New York announced it will remove Sanger's name from its Manhattan abortion vendor location because of her “harmful connections to the eugenics movement.”
It appeared in Margaret Sanger's book titled "... (show quote)




The Negro Project, conceptualized by birth control activist Margaret Sanger and implemented by the Birth Control Federation of America (now Planned Parenthood Federation of America), was an initiative to spread awareness of contraception to lower poverty rates in the South.

Negro Project - Wikipedia

Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Negro_Project

History of the Negro Project
Sanger's Vision for the Negro Project
As a result of the National Emergency Council’s 1938 Report on the Economic Conditions of the South – a report which cited the region as the nation’s primary economic concern – national attention shifted towards fixing issues of Southern poverty.[1][3][4] Birth control activists, including Margaret Sanger, believed that one way to combat Southern poverty was through increased access to birth control, and Sanger aimed to tackle Southern poverty by addressing black Southern poverty in particular.[1][3]

Drawing upon her previous experience with opening a successful birth control clinic in Harlem, NY, the Harlem Clinic, Sanger conceptualized the Negro Project.[1] The goals of the project, as defined by Sanger in a proposal written to Albert Lasker, an American advertising executive and philanthropist whose $20,000 donation provided much of the funding for the project, were to improve the overall quality of life for Southern blacks by reducing high infant and mother mortality rates, promoting higher education, increasing access to public health clinics, etc.[3][5]

In the proposal of the Negro Project, Sanger delineated two essential components: that of educational outreach and that of clinical access.[1] In order to facilitate educational outreach, Sanger believed it was imperative to recruit the aid of black ministers and physicians.[6][7] Sanger noted that their primary responsibility would be to tour the South, dispelling misconceptions about birth control and promoting the use of future clinical resources.[6][7] Additionally, being aware of the general distrust that existed between black patients and white doctors, Sanger believed that their involvement in outreach would be instrumental in ensuring continued use of the clinical resources.[7] According to Sanger, then, only after a successful educational campaign, should black-operated birth control clinics be established and opened for use.[1]

The BCFA, Birth Control Federation of America, readily accepted Sanger’s proposal.[1]

Reply
Dec 15, 2023 18:07:16   #
Bad Bob Loc: Virginia
 
Parky60 wrote:
According to who?... You? HAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!


Normal people

Reply
 
 
Dec 15, 2023 19:05:17   #
RascalRiley Loc: Somewhere south of Detroit
 
Parky60 wrote:
It appears that others on this site agree with me slick.

Would you be a player on this very unique platform if you were not a part of the majority? I think not.

Would you prefer if OPP was a site of only those that agreed with you, slick?

Who would you insult? You would have no one to pretend to be better then.

Reply
Dec 15, 2023 19:45:15   #
Justice101
 
Bad Bob wrote:
The Negro Project, conceptualized by birth control activist Margaret Sanger and implemented by the Birth Control Federation of America (now Planned Parenthood Federation of America), was an initiative to spread awareness of contraception to lower poverty rates in the South.

Negro Project - Wikipedia

Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Negro_Project

History of the Negro Project
Sanger's Vision for the Negro Project
As a result of the National Emergency Council’s 1938 Report on the Economic Conditions of the South – a report which cited the region as the nation’s primary economic concern – national attention shifted towards fixing issues of Southern poverty.[1][3][4] Birth control activists, including Margaret Sanger, believed that one way to combat Southern poverty was through increased access to birth control, and Sanger aimed to tackle Southern poverty by addressing black Southern poverty in particular.[1][3]

Drawing upon her previous experience with opening a successful birth control clinic in Harlem, NY, the Harlem Clinic, Sanger conceptualized the Negro Project.[1] The goals of the project, as defined by Sanger in a proposal written to Albert Lasker, an American advertising executive and philanthropist whose $20,000 donation provided much of the funding for the project, were to improve the overall quality of life for Southern blacks by reducing high infant and mother mortality rates, promoting higher education, increasing access to public health clinics, etc.[3][5]

In the proposal of the Negro Project, Sanger delineated two essential components: that of educational outreach and that of clinical access.[1] In order to facilitate educational outreach, Sanger believed it was imperative to recruit the aid of black ministers and physicians.[6][7] Sanger noted that their primary responsibility would be to tour the South, dispelling misconceptions about birth control and promoting the use of future clinical resources.[6][7] Additionally, being aware of the general distrust that existed between black patients and white doctors, Sanger believed that their involvement in outreach would be instrumental in ensuring continued use of the clinical resources.[7] According to Sanger, then, only after a successful educational campaign, should black-operated birth control clinics be established and opened for use.[1]

The BCFA, Birth Control Federation of America, readily accepted Sanger’s proposal.[1]
The Negro Project, conceptualized by birth control... (show quote)


So, what did you find out on her other works? You pick out one thing and disregard the rest of the information that was sent to you.

Reply
Dec 15, 2023 19:55:24   #
Bad Bob Loc: Virginia
 
Justice101 wrote:
So, what did you find out on her other works? You pick out one thing and disregard the rest of the information that was sent to you.


One at a time, thanks.

Reply
Dec 15, 2023 21:16:12   #
Parky60 Loc: People's Republic of Illinois
 
RascalRiley wrote:
Would you be a player on this very unique platform if you were not a part of the majority? I think not.

The people on "your side" are nothing more than communists who would like nothing more than to destroy this country so the NWO can be ushered in. Only thing is stupid people like you and your friends don't realize that they're going to get rid of the useful idiots like you once they're successful.

BTW... I don't consider myself a "player." I don't post nearly as much as you and others.
RascalRiley wrote:
Would you prefer if OPP was a site of only those that agreed with you, slick?

I would prefer if lying liars like you and other leftists on this site would tell the truth for a change... slick.
RascalRiley wrote:
Who would you insult? You would have no one to pretend to be better then.

Oh look at RR playing Mr Innocent who just insulted me... HYPOCRITE. I don't insult. I can't help it if you can't handle the truth.

Reply
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