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Update:  When I saw the quote originally posted here, I researched it and found an attribution to a source.  (The Birth Control Review of 1933-34).  It turns out that attribution was mistaken.  For posting an inaccurate quotation I apologize.  That said, the general views expressed in the quotation were in fact held by Margaret Sanger.  I replace the original post with this from Jonah Goldberg’s “Liberal Fascism”:

 

Margaret Sanger, whose American Birth Control League became Planned Parenthood, was the founding mother of the birth-control movement. She is today considered a liberal saint, a founder of modern feminism, and one of the leading lights of the Progressive pantheon. Gloria Feldt of Planned Parenthood proclaims, “I stand by Margaret Sanger’s side,” leading “the organization that carries on Sanger’s legacy.” Planned Parenthood’s first black president, Faye Wattleton — Ms. magazine’s “Woman of the Year” in 1989 — said that she was “proud” to be “walking in the footsteps of Margaret Sanger.” Planned Parenthood gives out annual Maggie Awards to individuals and organizations who advance Sanger’s cause. Recipients are a Who’s Who of liberal icons, from the novelist John Irving to the producers of NBC’s West Wing. What Sanger’s liberal admirers are eager to downplay is that she was a thoroughgoing racist who subscribed completely to the views of E. A. Ross and other “raceologists.” Indeed, she made many of them seem tame.

Sanger was born into a poor family of eleven children in Corning, New York, in 1879. In 1902 she received her degree as a registered nurse. In 1911 she moved to New York City, where she fell in with the transatlantic bohemian avant-garde of the burgeoning fascist moment. “Our living-room,” she wrote in her autobiography, “became a gathering place where liberals, anarchists, Socialists and I.W.W.’s could meet.” A member of the Women’s Committee of the New York Socialist Party, she participated in all the usual protests and demonstrations. In 1912 she started writing what amounted to a sex-advice column for the New York Call, dubbed “What Every Girl Should Know.” The overriding theme of her columns was the importance of contraception.

A disciple of the anarchist Emma Goldman — another eugenicist — Sanger became the nation’s first “birth control martyr” when she was arrested for handing out condoms in 1917. In order to escape a subsequent arrest for violating obscenity laws, she went to England, where she fell under the thrall of Havelock Ellis, a sex theorist and ardent advocate of forced sterilization. She also had an affair with H. G. Wells, the self-avowed champion of “liberal fascism.” Her marriage fell apart early, and one of her children — whom she admitted to neglecting — died of pneumonia at age four. Indeed, she always acknowledged that she wasn’t right for family life, admitting she was not a “fit person for love or home or children or anything which needs attention or consideration.”

Under the banner of “reproductive freedom,” Sanger subscribed to nearly all of the eugenic views discussed above. She sought to ban reproduction of the unfit and regulate reproduction for everybody else. She scoffed at the soft approach of the “positive” eugenicists, deriding it as mere “cradle competition” between the fit and the unfit. “More children from the fit, less from the unfit — that is the chief issue of birth control,” she frankly wrote in her 1922 book The Pivot of Civilization. (The book featured an introduction by Wells, in which he proclaimed, “We want fewer and better children…and we cannot make the social life and the world-peace we are determined to make, with the ill-bred, ill-trained swarms of inferior citizens that you inflict on us.” Two civilizations were at war: that of progress and that which sought a world “swamped by an indiscriminate torrent of progeny.”

A fair-minded person cannot read Sanger’s books, articles, and pamphlets today without finding similarities not only to Nazi eugenics but to the dark dystopias of the feminist imagination found in such allegories as Margaret Atwood’s Handmaid’s Tale. As editor of The Birth Control Review, Sanger regularly published the sort of hard racists we normally associate with Goebbels or Himmler. Indeed, after she resigned as editor, The Birth Control Review ran articles by people who worked for Goebbels and Himmler. For example, when the Nazi eugenics program was first getting wide attention, The Birth Control Review was quick to cast the Nazis in a positive light, giving over its pages for an article titled “Eugenic Sterilization: An Urgent Need,” by Ernst Rüdin, Hitler’s director of sterilization and a founder of the Nazi Society for Racial Hygiene. In 1926 Sanger proudly gave a speech to a KKK rally in Silver Lake, New Jersey.

One of Sanger’s closest friends and influential colleagues was the white supremacist Lothrop Stoddard, author of The Rising Tide of Color Against White World-Supremacy. In the book he offered his solution for the threat posed by the darker races: “Just as we isolate bacterial invasions, and starve out the bacteria, by limiting the area and amount of their food supply, so we can compel an inferior race to remain in its native habitat.” When the book came out, Sanger was sufficiently impressed to invite him to join the board of directors of the American Birth Control League.

Sanger’s genius was to advance Ross’s campaign for social control by hitching the racist-eugenic campaign to sexual pleasure and female liberation. In her “Code to Stop Overproduction of Children,” published in 1934, she decreed that “no woman shall have a legal right to bear a child without a permit…no permit shall be valid for more than one child.”47 But Sanger couched this fascistic agenda in the argument that “liberated” women wouldn’t mind such measures because they don’t really want large families in the first place. In a trope that would be echoed by later feminists such as Betty Friedan, she argued that motherhood itself was a socially imposed constraint on the liberty of women. It was a form of what Marxists called false consciousness to want a large family.

Sanger believed — prophetically enough — that if women conceived of sex as first and foremost a pleasurable experience rather than a procreative act, they would embrace birth control as a necessary tool for their own personal gratification. She brilliantly used the language of liberation to convince women they weren’t going along with a collectivist scheme but were in fact “speaking truth to power,” as it were. This was the identical trick the Nazis pulled off. They took a radical Nietzschean doctrine of individual will and made it into a trendy dogma of middle-class conformity. This trick remains the core of much faddish “individualism” among rebellious conformists on the American cultural left today. Nonetheless, Sanger’s analysis was surely correct, and led directly to the widespread feminist association of sex with political rebellion. Sanger in effect “bought off” women (and grateful men) by offering tolerance for promiscuity in return for compliance with her eugenic schemes.

In 1939 Sanger created the above-mentioned “Negro Project,” which aimed to get blacks to adopt birth control. Through the Birth Control Federation, she hired black ministers (including the Reverend Adam Clayton Powell Sr.), doctors, and other leaders to help pare down the supposedly surplus black population. The project’s racist intent is beyond doubt. “The mass of significant Negroes,” read the project’s report, “still breed carelessly and disastrously, with the result that the increase among Negroes…is [in] that portion of the population least intelligent and fit.” Sanger’s intent is shocking today, but she recognized its extreme radicalism even then. “We do not want word to go out,” she wrote to a colleague, “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.”

It is possible that Sanger didn’t really want to “exterminate” the Negro population so much as merely limit its growth. Still, many in the black community saw it that way and remained rightly suspicious of the Progressives’ motives. It wasn’t difficult to see that middle-class whites who consistently spoke of “race suicide” at the hands of dark, subhuman savages might not have the best interests of blacks in mind. This skepticism persisted within the black community for decades. Someone who saw the relationship between abortion and race from a less trusting perspective telegrammed Congress in 1977 to tell them that abortion amounted to “genocide against the black race.” And he added, in block letters, “AS A MATTER OF CONSCIENCE I MUST OPPOSE THE USE OF FEDERAL FUNDS FOR A POLICY OF KILLING INFANTS.” This was Jesse Jackson, who changed his position when he decided to seek the Democratic nomination.

Just a few years ago, the racial eugenic “bonus” of abortion rights was something one could only admit among those fully committed to the cause, and even then in politically correct whispers. No more. Increasingly, this argument is acceptable on the left, as are arguments in favor of eugenics generally.

In 2005 the acclaimed University of Chicago economist Steven Levitt broke the taboo with his critical and commercial hit Freakonomics (co-written with Stephen Dubner). The most sensational chapter in the book updated a paper Levitt had written in 1999 which argued that abortion cuts crime. “Legalized abortion led to less unwantedness; unwantedness leads to high crime; legalized abortion, therefore, led to less crime.” Freakonomics excised all references to race and never connected the facts that because the aborted fetuses were disproportionately black and blacks disproportionately contribute to the crime rate, reducing the size of the black population reduces crime. Yet the press coverage acknowledged this and didn’t seem to mind.

In 2005 William Bennett, a committed pro-lifer, invoked the Levitt argument in order to denounce eugenic thinking. “I do know that it’s true that if you wanted to reduce crime, you could — if that were your sole purpose — you could abort every black baby in this country, and your crime rate would go down. That would be an impossible, ridiculous, and morally reprehensible thing to do, but your crime rate would go down.” What seemed to offend liberals most was that Bennett had accidentally borrowed some conventional liberal logic to make a conservative point, and, as with the social Darwinists of yore, that makes liberals quite cross. According to the New York Times’s Bob Herbert, Bennett believed “exterminating blacks would be a most effective crime-fighting tool.” Various liberal spokesmen, including Terry McAuliffe, the former head of the Democratic National Committee, said Bennett wanted to exterminate “black babies.” Juan Williams proclaimed that Bennett’s remarks speak “to a deeply racist mindset.”

In one sense, this is a pretty amazing turnaround. After all, when liberals advocate them, we are usually told that abortions do not kill “babies.” Rather, they remove mere agglomerations of cells and tissue or “uterine contents.” If hypothetical abortions committed for allegedly conservative ends are infanticide, how can actual abortions performed for liberal ends not be?

Some liberals are honest about this. In 1992 Nicholas Von Hoffman argued in the Philadelphia Inquirer:

Free cheap abortion is a policy of social defense. To save ourselves from being murdered in our beds and raped on the streets, we should do everything possible to encourage pregnant women who don’t want the baby and will not take care of it to get rid of the thing before it turns into a monster… At their demonstration, the anti-abortionists parade around with pictures of dead and dismembered fetuses. The pro-abortionists should meet these displays with some of their own: pictures of the victims of the unaborted — murder victims, rape victims, mutilation victims — pictures to remind us that the fight for abortion is but part of the larger struggle for safe homes and safe streets.

Later that same year, the White House received a letter from the Roe v. Wade co-counsel Ron Weddington, urging the new president-elect to rush RU-486 — the morning-after pill — to the market as quickly as possible. Weddington’s argument was refreshingly honest:

[Y]ou can start immediately to eliminate the barely educated, unhealthy and poor segment of our country. No, I’m not advocating some sort of mass extinction of these unfortunate people. Crime, drugs and disease are already doing that. The problem is that their numbers are not only replaced but increased by the birth of millions of babies to people who can’t afford to have babies. There, I’ve said it. It’s what we all know is true, but we only whisper it, because as liberals who believe in individual rights, we view any program which might treat the disadvantaged as discriminatory, mean-spirited and… well… so Republican.

[G]overnment is also going to have to provide vasectomies, tubal ligations and abortions. . , . There have been about 30 million abortions in this country since Roe v. Wade. Think of all the poverty, crime and misery . . . and then add 30 million unwanted babies to the scenario. We lost a lot of ground during the Reagan-Bush religious orgy. We don’t have a lot of time left.

How, exactly, is this substantively different from Margaret Sanger’s self-described “religion of birth control,” which would, she wrote, “ease the financial load of caring for with public funds . . . children destined to become a burden to themselves, to their family, and ultimately to the nation”?

The issue here is not the explicit intent of liberals or the rationalizations they invoke to deceive themselves about the nature of abortion. Rather, it is to illustrate that even when motives and arguments change, the substance of the policy remains in its effects. After the Holocaust discredited eugenics per se, neither the eugenicists nor their ideas disappeared. Rather, they went to ground in fields like family planning and demography and in political movements such as feminism. Indeed, in a certain sense Planned Parenthood is today more eugenic than Sanger intended. Sanger, after all, despised abortion. She denounced it as “barbaric” and called abortionists “bloodsucking men with M.D. after their names.” Abortion resulted in “an outrageous slaughter” and “the killing of babies,” which even the degenerate offspring of the unfit did not deserve.

So forget about intent: Look at results. Abortion ends more black lives than heart disease, cancer, accidents, AIDS, and violent crime combined. African Americans constitute little more than 12 percent of the population but have more than a third (37 percent) of abortions. That rate has held relatively constant, though in some regions the numbers are much starker; in Mississippi, black women receive some 72 percent of all abortions, according to the Centers for Disease Control. Nationwide, 512 out of every 1,000 black pregnancies end in an abortion. Revealingly enough, roughly 80 percent of Planned Parenthood’s abortion centers are in or near minority communities. Liberalism today condemns a Bill Bennett who speculates about the effects of killing unborn black children; but it also celebrates the actual killing of unborn black children, and condemns him for opposing it.

Of course, orthodox eugenics also aimed at the “feebleminded” and “useless bread gobblers” — which included everyone from the mentally retarded to an uneducated and malnourished underclass to recidivist criminals. When it comes to today’s “feebleminded,” influential voices on the left now advocate the killing of “defectives” at the beginning of life and at the end of life. Chief among them is Peter Singer, widely hailed as the most important living philosopher and the world’s leading ethicist. Professor Singer, who teaches at Princeton, argues that unwanted or disabled babies should be killed in the name of “compassion.” He also argues that the elderly and other drags on society should be put down when their lives are no longer worth living.

Singer doesn’t hide behind code words and euphemisms in his belief that killing babies isn’t always wrong, as one can deduce from his essay titled “Killing Babies Isn’t Always Wrong” (nor is he a lone voice in the wilderness; his views are popular or respected in many academic circles). But that hasn’t caused the Left to ostracize him in the slightest (save in Germany, where people still have a visceral sense of where such logic takes you). Of course, not all or even most liberals agree with Singer’s prescriptions, but nor do they condemn him as they do, say, a William Bennett. Perhaps they recognize in him a kindred spirit.

 

 

Comments
StephenB@21: So do you believe other murderers should not have to face trial for murder if they are ignorant about what they are doing and emotionally compromised? I always understood that ignorance of the law was no excuse.5for
April 15, 2013
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I see UD approach to scholarship extends beyond science. Unless you have a citation for this quote?wd400
April 15, 2013
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KN, I would have bet a $1,000 that you would defend Planned Parenthood. Is there a single instance where you do not toe the line in the faculty lounge? Does it not bother you to be so utterly conventional? Do you even realize that you are utterly conventional?Barry Arrington
April 15, 2013
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If abortion is murder, please explain how every woman who has one is not as culpable as Andrea Yates.
I believe that most young women who have abortions are both ignorant of what they are doing and emotionally compromised to the point where that cannot think straight. Among other things, their boyfriends often pressure them to end their pregnancy and secular institutions, like Planned Parenthood, routinely lie to them about fetal development. Under those circumstances, the young woman’s decision to abort is not made with full knowledge or full consent of the will. With doctors, counselors, legislators, and judges, however, it is a different story. They are morally obliged to know what the science of embryology has to say about the matter and to act on what they know. From a technical perspective, there might be some scientists who approve of abortion, but that simply means that they are questioning the value of human the life at that stage. None of them question the scientific fact that human life begins at conception. If, then, the woman’s health is not in danger, which is almost always the case, educated adults are morally bound to defend the baby's right to live. If, on the other hand, they procure abortion or provide one, they should, indeed, be put in jail. Of course, that will never happen in a culture of death like ours.StephenB
April 15, 2013
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If abortion is murder and becomes so under law, doesn't that mean we will be -- and rightfully should be -- prosecuting the women who have them for capital murder, rather than counseling them the way that the Christian therapeutic community does today? If so, fine. We will at least be logically consistent at law, notwithstanding how distasteful doing so might be. But if not, then why not? If abortion is murder, please explain how every woman who has one is not as culpable as Andrea Yates. Personally, I think very few Christians who wave the bloody shirt on this issue have thought through the implications at law if they succeed. Historically, reckoning the beginning of human life at conception rather than birth is as novel an idea as homosexual marriage.jstanley01
April 15, 2013
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Chance, I think you have put your finger on the critical difference between pie-in-the-sky morality and the more practical standard of contemporary norms. The cultural zeitgeist has taught us that nothing in life is more important than the tingling of nerve ends. Every man who is trying to make sense of his sexuality must learn to avoid irrelevant questions such as, "how can I donate myself in a spirit of self-sacrificial love?"--or "How can I build a loving, intimate relationship through mutual self giving?" -- and focus on the really important question: "Is she hot?" Similarly, the woman must avoid over-intellectualizing with questions like, "How can I cooperate with God in the creation of new life,"-- or "What is the true purpose of sex?"-- and pose the challenge that really matters: "Did you bring protection?" Most important, all parties must eschew the problem of demographic chaos and cultural survival. When aging liberals wonder about the absence of young citizens contributing to the social security fund, it is bad form to say, "What did you expect? You killed them all?"StephenB
April 15, 2013
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Stephen, you're a credit to contemporary wisdom. I'm glad you paddled yourself into the calm, warm waters of subjective morality. Nobody likes a partisan anti-choice religious nut case. It's not like people are going to modify their behavior just because a few million babies die. Besides, unwanted pregnancies make for unattractive bikini lines. More personal discretion means fewer drunk and uninhibited hotties at last call. Welcome aboard.Chance Ratcliff
April 15, 2013
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I have no interest in showing that Luther was racist or that he wasn't. I have no horse in that race. The opinions of Martin Luther mean nothing to me. I brought it up because I know that many of you think that Luther is an admirable figure, even if you repudiate his beliefs. Likewise, one might reasonably believe that organizations like Planned Parenthood do more good in the world than harm, regardless of the beliefs of its founder. What Sanger herself believed doesn't really matter to me in the slightest, and it certainly doesn't affect how much money I donate to Planned Parenthood each month.Kantian Naturalist
April 15, 2013
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KN, It is my understanding that Luther was not an anti-Semite.  He wanted them driven out because of their religion, not because of their ethnicity (i.e. their 'lies', not their genes).  He wanted them converted, and thought they would do so in light of his reformation, but they would not.  Hence, Luther was not racist. It's just that he did not subscribe to the concept of freedom of religion, apparently.  I have no citation. I only remember reading this from a Christian Jew who posted a review to Luther's little book on amazon.  I seem to remember him as an admirer of Luther.  Thus, if what I say is true, Luther would not have been an advocate of having this man driven out of Germany. He would have bid him welcome and rejoiced with him that he had escaped the lies of his kinsmen. But I'm open to learning more. If you could provide a quote from Luther's book showing that he wanted them driven out purely because of their ethnicity, then I will consider him a racist too. But not until then.M. Holcumbrink
April 15, 2013
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Chance Ratliff
I think you mean reproductive rights. It’s irresponsible of you not to apply the Orwellian gloss here.People don’t work hard to coin phrases intended couch calloused endorsement of mass murder in faux-libertarian language, just to have such language ignored. Stick with the correct terminology and you’ll avoid causing offense, particularly to individuals who have to make hard, personal choices about who lives and who dies. Reproductive rights assures that poor lifestyle choices don’t lead to personal responsibility, which would be devastating to the moral evolution of modern consequence-free lifestyles.
Chance, I temporarily lost my head, so I appreciate the pointed rebuke. As I reread my words, I now realize, with regret, that there is no excuse for my reckless foray into the human rights arena. As everyone knows, the Declaration of Independence was meant to liberate humans from the arduous task of managing their sexual instincts or exercising self control in any fashion. What good is personal freedom if we cannot fornicate with anyone, or anything, at any age, at any time, in any way, under any circumstances, and for any reason--with no consequences? What good is reproductive freedom if we cannot kill those infernal products of conception that such freedom provides? What good is settled law if we must continue to entertain irksome questions about justice and constitutional warrant? What good does it do to conceive the "faux-libertarian language" if we must endure inflammatory references from partisan reactionaries about "unborn children" or tolerate mindless questions about those images of a baby sucking its thumb in the mother's womb. It is time to re-establish the proper priorities and acknowledge the most important right of all--the right to not be offended. Surely, it is a far greater crime to disturb the peace of a liberal by showing him a picture of a dismembered baby than to disturb the peace of a baby by tearing her apart piece by piece.StephenB
April 15, 2013
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Well this is not really origin stuff but indeed the legacy of abortion origins comes from people who believed in controlling who gets born. Its fine to comment on foreigners as its the right of the native people, however it shows a hostility that can be further seen as a hostility to dignity of mankind and so easily translates into aborting mankind. i do think abortion is based on denying humanity to the fetus and not agreeing it has it and then killing these days. However this woman seems quite ugly and being the posterboy for feminism and abortion and birth control says it all. by the way martin luther was the greatest man in human history, changing mankind for the better, and any comments on his nations issues with Jews is fair and square. If a little rough well everyone was rough and tough back then. In context his comments are fair even if wrong. Just have a fair trial. Trying to say the great Protestent leader was immoral or wrong on these matters is unlikely to be persuasive to people back then or today once the facts are known about problems between different people groups. Reagan once said BOMBING will start on the soviet union but one understood it was just anger upon complaints sincerely believed in.Robert Byers
April 15, 2013
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Kantian Naturalist: In answer to your question, the big difference between the two examples you cite is that the Lutheran Church has repeatedly disowned and repudiated Luther's anti-semitism (see here for examples), whereas even today, there's disturbing evidence suggesting that Planned Parenthood may be targeting the unborn children of minorities for destruction by abortion. If that's not racism, I don't know what is. According to a recent Life News report by Steven Ertelt entitled, 79% of Planned Parenthood Abortion Clinics Target Blacks, Hispanics (October 16, 2012):
New research released by Protecting Black Life (an outreach of Life Issues Institute) reveals that 79% of Planned Parenthood’s surgical abortion facilities are located within walking distance of African American and/or Hispanic/Latino communities... According to the National Vital Statistics Report from June 2012, African American women experience an average of 1.6 times more pregnancies than white women, but have 5 times more abortions over their lifetime. Hispanic/Latina women experience an average of 1.5 times more pregnancies than white women, and have 2.3 times as many abortions over their lifetime. (Source: National Vital Statistics Reports, Vol. 60, No. 7, June 20, 2012, Page 6, Figure 7. Accessed at: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr60/nvsr60_07.pdf) In Fiscal Year 2009-2010, Planned Parenthood’s annual report shows it earned an estimated $154 million from the 329,445 abortions performed. An estimated 40% of those aborted were minority babies.
From a recent online article by Abort73.com entitled, Abortion and race:
According to 2010 census data, African Americans make up 12.6% of the U.S. population[2] but the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) reports that black women accounted for 35.4% of all abortions in 2009.[3] The Guttmacher Institute (AGI) puts the percentage of black abortions at 30% of the U.S. total.[4] Their most recent numbers are from 2008. Similarly, AGI tells us that Hispanic women[5] accounted for 25% of all U.S. abortions in 2008,[6] though Hispanics make up just 16.3% of the U.S. population.[7] The CDC lists the percentage of Hispanic abortions at 20.6%.[8] Compare those numbers to non-Hispanic whites, who make up 63.7% of America's population,[9] but account for only 36% of all U.S. abortions[10] (37.7% according to the CDC[11]. 2. Census 2010 Brief, “The Black Population: 2010,” http://www.census.gov/prod/cen2010/briefs/c2010br-06.pdf, September 2011. 3. The Centers for Disease Control, “Abortion Surveillance—- United States, 2009,” http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/ss6108a1.htm, November 12, 2012. 4. Guttmacher Institute, “Characteristics of U.S. Abortion Patients, 2008,” http://www.alanguttmacher.org/pubs/US-Abortion-Patients.pdf, May, 2010. 5. “Hispanic” is classified as an ethnicity, not as a race. 6. Guttmacher Institute, “Characteristics of U.S. Abortion Patients, 2008,” http://www.alanguttmacher.org/pubs/US-Abortion-Patients.pdf, May, 2010. 7. Census 2010 Brief, “The Hispanic Population: 2010,” http://www.census.gov/prod/cen2010/briefs/c2010br-04.pdf, May 2011. 8. The Centers for Disease Control, “Abortion Surveillance—- United States, 2009,” http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/ss6108a1.htm, November 12, 2012. 9. Census 2010 Brief, “Overview of Race and Hispanic Origin,” http://www.census.gov/prod/cen2010/briefs/c2010br-02.pdf, March 2011. 10. Guttmacher Institute, “Characteristics of U.S. Abortion Patients, 2008,” http://www.alanguttmacher.org/pubs/US-Abortion-Patients.pdf, May, 2010. 11. The Centers for Disease Control, “Abortion Surveillance—- United States, 2009,” http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/ss6108a1.htm, November 12, 2012.
And if you think that poverty accounts for the higher abortion rates among minorities, think again. A recent Guttmacher publication entitled, Abortion and Women of Color: The Bigger Picture (Guttmacher Policy Review, Summer 2008, Volume 11, Number 3) by Susan A. Cohen acknowledges: "At every income level, black women have higher abortion rates than whites or Hispanics, except for women below the poverty line, where Hispanic women have slightly higher rates than black women." Clearly income doesn't explain the difference in abortion rates. The same publication goes on to claim: "Black and Hispanic women have much higher abortion rates than white women—because they have much higher rates of unintended pregnancy." But if you look at the chart it uses to back up its claim, a different story emerges: according to its own figures, the unintended pregnancy rate is 2.80 times higher for black women than it is for white women, but the abortion rate for black women is 4.55 times higher. However, according to a study entitled, Unintended pregnancy in the United States: incidence and disparities, 2006, by Lawrence B. Finer and Mia R. Zolna (Contraception, Volume 84, Issue 5, Pages 478-485, November 2011), there isn't such a big difference between racial groups in the percentage of unintended pregnancies, anyway: 40% percent of pregnancies among white women, 67% among blacks and 53% among Hispanics are unintended. That's a difference of just 67.5%. The report also shows that even among unintended pregnancies, the percentage ending in abortion is higher for black women (52%) than for white non-Hispanic women (39%) or Hispanic white women (38%). In any case, the hidden assumption that a group having X times more unintended pregnancies than other groups will necessarily have X times more abortions is a fallacious one. According to the study cited above, about 43% of all unintended pregnancies in the U.S. end in abortion, and the percentage varies most widely according to marital status (61% for never married women, 22% for currently married women) and religion (32% for Evangelical Protestants, 51% for non-religious women). Among age groups, it's lowest for 18-19 year-old women (35%) and highest for 35-39 year-old women (56%). It's also anomalously high for women with some college or an associate degree (56%), compared with 49% for college graduates, 40% for high school graduates and 32% for women who never graduated from high school. In short: the Planned Parenthood myths that higher abortion rates among minorities are due to high rates of unintended pregnancy or reduced access to contraception crumble when you examine them. And the location of Planned Parenthood facilities in areas where minorities live is surely no accident. But of course, you won't hear about all this in today's mainstream media. That's because 97% of elite journalists are pro-choice, according to an article by Rich Noyes entitled, Marching for Life in the Face of a Pro-Abortion Media (January 25, 2013):
“I think that when abortion opponents complain about a bias in newsrooms against their cause, they’re absolutely right,” Boston Globe legal reporter Ethan Bronner told the Los Angeles Times back in 1990. “Opposing abortion, in the eyes of most journalists...is not a legitimate, civilized position in our society.”... Robert Lichter and Stanley Rothman’s survey of 240 top journalists, conducted in 1979-1980 for their book The Media Elite, found that “90% agree that a woman has the right to decide for herself whether to have an abortion; 79% agree strongly with this pro-choice position.” ... And in 1995, Stanley Rothman and Amy Black polled elite journalists as part of a follow-up to the earlier Media Elite survey. This time, they found that “nearly all of the media elite (97%) agreed that ‘it is a woman’s right to decide whether or not to have an abortion,’ and five out of six (84%) agreed strongly.”
It's high time someone exposed this wickedness. I'm glad Barry Arrington took the time and trouble to expose it on this Website.vjtorley
April 15, 2013
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Hm, according to plannedparenthood "Blacks, soldiers, and Jews are a menace to the race" is a fabricated quote.
This fabricated quotation, falsely attributed to Sanger, was concocted in the late 1980s. The alleged source is the April 1933 Birth Control Review (Sanger ceased editing the Review in 1929). That issue contains no article or letter by Sanger. http://www.plannedparenthood.org/files/PPFA/OppositionClaimsAboutMargaretSanger.pdf
JWTruthInLove
April 15, 2013
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Posted Without Commentary
Also posted without citation.Neil Rickert
April 15, 2013
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KN, I wish this would have been posted after Stephen Meyer's forthcoming book had been published. As you know Stephen Meyer's forthcoming book is going to be mainly on the inability of Darwinian processes to explain body plan morphogenesis in the Cambrian Explosion. You may well ask, "What does the inability of Darwinian processes to explain body plan morphogenesis in the Cambrian Explosion have to do with abortion?" Well I'm glad you asked KN. The inability of Darwinian processes to explain body plan morphogenesis not only extends to changes in body plans but also applies to the how any individual body plan is formed, including how each unique human individual is formed in the womb. The shape of any particular body simply cannot be derived by reference to physical/chemical processes but must be derived by reference to transcendent information which is beyond the capacity of material processes to generate. I'm sure this 'little fact' as well as many other precious gems will come out much more clearly in Meyer's forthcoming book in June:
Three (or Four) Reasons Everyone Should Read Darwin's Doubt Casey Luskin April 9, 2013 http://www.evolutionnews.org/2013/04/three_or_four_r071001.html
As for now, all I can do is point out evidence that a fetus is in fact 'human' from as early as the baby is able to express itself:
Twin fetuses learn how to be social in the womb - October 13, 2010 Excerpt: Humans have a deep-seated urge to be social, and new research on the interactions of twins in the womb suggests this begins even before babies are born.,,, The five pairs of twins were found to be reaching for each other even at 14 weeks, and making a range of contacts including head to head, arm to head and head to arm. By the time they were at 18 weeks, they touched each other more often than they touched their own bodies, spending up to 30 percent of their time reaching out and stroking their co-twin.,,, Kinematic analyses of the recordings showed the fetuses made distinct gestures when touching each other, and movements lasted longer — their hands lingered. They also took as much care when touching their twin’s delicate eye region as they did with their own. This type of contact was not the same as the inevitable contact between two bodies sharing a confined space or accidental contacts between the bodies and the walls of the uterus,,, The findings clearly demonstrate it is deep within human nature to reach out to other people. http://phys.org/news/206164323-twin-fetuses-social-womb.html Of note: the same caring, loving, touch from the baby towards its twin is found when the baby strokes the mother's uterine wall: Wired to Be Social: The Ontogeny of Human Interaction - 2010 Excerpt: Kinematic analysis revealed that movement duration was longer and deceleration time was prolonged for other-directed movements compared to movements directed towards the uterine wall. Similar kinematic profiles were observed for movements directed towards the co-twin and self-directed movements aimed at the eye-region, i.e. the most delicate region of the body. http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0013199
Also of note:
Alexander Tsiaras: Conception to birth — visualized – video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fKyljukBE70 Mathematician Alexander Tsiaras on Human Development: “It’s a Mystery, It’s Magic, It’s Divinity” – March 2012 Excerpt: ‘The magic of the mechanisms inside each genetic structure saying exactly where that nerve cell should go, the complexity of these, the mathematical models on how these things are indeed done, are beyond human comprehension. Even though I am a mathematician, I look at this with the marvel of how do these instruction sets not make these mistakes as they build what is us. It’s a mystery, it’s magic, it’s divinity.’ http://www.evolutionnews.org/2012/03/mathematician_a057741.html One Body - animation - video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pDMLq6eqEM4
Also of note to the reality of the 'soul' which I know you don't subscribe to KN:
Blind Woman Can See During Near Death Experience (NDE) - Pim von Lommel - video http://www.metacafe.com/watch/3994599/ Kenneth Ring and Sharon Cooper (1997) conducted a study of 31 blind people, many of who reported vision during their Near Death Experiences (NDEs). 21 of these people had had an NDE while the remaining 10 had had an out-of-body experience (OBE), but no NDE. It was found that in the NDE sample, about half had been blind from birth. (of note: This 'anomaly' is also found for deaf people who can hear sound during their Near Death Experiences(NDEs).) http://www.newdualism.org/nde-papers/Ring/Ring-Journal%20of%20Near-Death%20Studies_1997-16-101-147-1.pdf
Verse and music:
Jeremiah 1:5 "Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I set you apart; "Children Of God" - Official Music Video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V6jO7xhU_Pw
bornagain77
April 15, 2013
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StephenB,
"...the cold-blooded act of tearing millions of human beings limb from limb or scalding them to death."
I think you mean reproductive rights. It's irresponsible of you not to apply the Orwellian gloss here. People don't work hard to coin phrases intended couch calloused endorsement of mass murder in faux-libertarian language, just to have such language ignored. Stick with the correct terminology and you'll avoid causing offense, particularly to individuals who have to make hard, personal choices about who lives and who dies. Reproductive rights assures that poor lifestyle choices don't lead to personal responsibility, which would be devastating to the moral evolution of modern consequence-free lifestyles.Chance Ratcliff
April 15, 2013
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Do you believe it was a statistical anomaly that the horrors perpetrated on woman and babies at Dr. Gosnell’s clinic were perpetrated almost exclusively on black people?
No, I believe that the poor, immigrants, and otherwise marginalized people are far more vulnerable to the depredations of the wicked. (And I also think that the legacy of racism in this country is largely responsible for the correlation between race and poverty, as there is also between also race, poverty, and incarceration.) And there's rarely any public outcry over what happens to poor people, particularly poor people of color, and particularly poor women of color -- which is part of why Gosnell was able to get away with it for so long. In the United States, the super-affluent and the middle-class have their defenders -- the media, the politicians -- but below the poverty line, you're an outcast, an untouchable, and not enough people care about what happens to you, and very few with the power to do anything about it, because the powerful are usually not interested in doing anything for the powerless. But Gosnell is irrelevant to the discussion of Planned Parenthood, because what Gosnell did was illegal under existing laws -- as is eugenics -- and what Planned Parenthood does is not. Discuss the ethics and politics of abortion, if you wish, but bringing in eugenics and Gosnell's clinic just muddies the waters.Kantian Naturalist
April 15, 2013
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Here’s a question for your KN. Do you believe it was a statistical anomaly that the horrors perpetrated on woman and babies at Dr. Gosnell’s clinic were perpetrated almost exclusively on black people?Barry Arrington
April 15, 2013
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KN, I am astonished that a person of your obvious parts would respond to the challenge of the OP with a casual dismissal that is just this side of a simplistic tu quoque argument. I make no excuse for Luther’s anti-Semitism. I am appalled by it. Still, he lived half a millennium ago, and as you rightly say his views are not relevant to assessments of contemporary Lutheranism. You’re a smart guy. I’m sure you can tell me the difference -- insofar as assessments of the organizations they founded go – between the noxious spewings of a man who died 500 years ago and the noxious spewings of a woman who was active in her organization within living memory (See JW's post @ 5). You can also tell me the difference between an organization that has repeatedly repudiated its founder’s racism and an organization that leads a movement that last year killed black unborn babies far out of proportion to blacks’ representation in the population.Barry Arrington
April 15, 2013
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@KN
In 1957, the American Humanist Association named her Humanist of the Year.
[wiki]JWTruthInLove
April 15, 2013
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Kantian Naturalist
Of course Luther’s anti-semitism is irrelevant to assessments of contemporary Lutheranism — but if that’s so, then why isn’t Sanger’s racism irrelevant to assessments of reproductive rights?
Since when is misplaced zealotry the moral equivalent of willful murder. The hot-blooded resolve to drive Jews out of the temple or burn their books cannot compare with the cold-blooded act of tearing millions of human beings limb from limb or scalding them to death.StephenB
April 15, 2013
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KN (and BA): Antisemitism -- despite some very stringent rebukes to such even in the New Testament (try things like that the holy olive tree supports you and not you wild olive branches the tree . . . ) -- is one of the deep rooted problems of our civilisation. And, sadly, not just our own civilisation. That Luther indulged is a shame not only for Lutheranism, but for all of us. Even more sadly, it seems to be an unfinished challenge, especially now that there is an utterly irresponsible but widespread rhetoric of Israel running an alleged Apartheid state. One of the sins of Christendom/Western Civilisation that I think Bernard Lewis (and yes, I am quite aware of his ethnicity) provides a good balance to:
. . . The accusations are familiar. We of the West are accused of sexism, racism [--> including of course that directed at Jews as well as that directed at people of my own race], and imperialism, institutionalized in patriarchy and slavery, tyranny and exploitation. To these charges, and to others as heinous, we have no option but to plead guilty -- not as Americans, nor yet as Westerners, but simply as human beings, as members of the human race. In none of these sins are we the only sinners, and in some of them we are very far from being the worst. The treatment of women in the Western world, and more generally in Christendom, has always been unequal and often oppressive, but even at its worst it was rather better than the rule of polygamy and concubinage that has otherwise been the almost universal lot of womankind on this planet . . . . In having practiced sexism, racism, and imperialism, the West was merely following the common practice of mankind through the millennia of recorded history. Where it is distinct from all other civilizations is in having recognized, named, and tried, not entirely without success, to remedy these historic diseases. And that is surely a matter for congratulation, not condemnation. We do not hold Western medical science in general, or Dr. Parkinson and Dr. Alzheimer in particular, responsible for the diseases they diagnosed and to which they gave their names. [The Roots of Muslim Rage, 1990]
I have long since concluded that the mark of greatness in a civilisation is not perfection [there are none who could meet that test, as we will learn if we look in the depths of our own hearts], but instead openness to genuine reform. Sadly, in the case of Germany and of Lutheranism, to great shame, it took unspeakable horrors for the evil of racism to be seen for what it is, especially when multiplied by the notions of the fittest surviving as predators on the less fit. I need not more than allude to Herr Schicklegruber's remarks on Foxes and geese and cats and mice in Mein Kampf. Unfortunately, in the case of Sanger et al, they were caught up in the wave of enthusiasm for Eugenics, which flew the flag of applied evolutionary science, through the self direction of human evolution. So, the vision at the heart of her movement was to suppress the breeding of those she saw as less fit, which swept the educated elites of the day and was taken far and wide as practically axiomatic. Not all that flies the flag of being the consensus of the scientific and educated elites, is sound. In the aftermath of WW II, there seemed to be some recoiling, but unfortunately much of the movement went underground and relabelled itself. As we speak, some of it is actually re-emerging. I would be a lot more comfortable with your parallel KN, if there were clear signs that all traces of eugenics were exposed, identified as evil to be turned from decisively, then rooted out and removed. That has not happened, and too often I see a tendency to want to cover up the truth about Eugenics and its links to both racism and genocide. I need not elaborate on its roots in evolutionary ideology dressed up in the lab coat, just point out that they are plainly, demonstrably, irrefutably there. If you doubt me, cf this picture of the logo from the 2nd Int'l Congress on Eugenics. (I have long since given up on thinking that mere reasoned words will suffice for things like this. Look at the logo, look at the slogan that gives a definition, look at the claimed roots, and the claimed triumphant synthesis. Then ponder, long and hard.) However, I am left to be concerned not only about he manipulation of perceptions on rights that have led to the death of 53 millions in abortion clinics etc in forty years, but also the sometimes remarked on troubling disproportion of my race in the statistics. I am even more troubled by the general erosion of the understanding of rights, starting with the very first one, the ground for all other rights: life. And, I am troubled that much of this is associated with manipulation of perceptions of science and what it tells us about our roots and our basic nature. So, I do think that there are some serious issues to be thought through, complex troubling and emotionally charged issues. And, I do not think moral equivalency or turnabout accusation tactics are going to help. One thing that I make no secret deeply disturbs me in this general context, is the following from prof William Provine at the Darwin Day celebration in U Tenn, 1998:
Naturalistic evolution has clear consequences that Charles Darwin understood perfectly. 1) No gods worth having exist; 2) no life after death exists; 3) no ultimate foundation for ethics exists; 4) no ultimate meaning in life exists; and 5) human free will is nonexistent . . . . The first 4 implications are so obvious to modern naturalistic evolutionists that I will spend little time defending them. Human free will, however, is another matter. Even evolutionists have trouble swallowing that implication. I will argue that humans are locally determined systems that make choices. They have, however, no free will . . .
I know, I know, Provine tried to put a brave face on and turn that to his rhetorical advantage, but without freedom to choose, we do not have the capacity to choose the right, and we do not have the minds to know and follow the sound to the true and the right. This opens the door wide to outright nihilism and its notorious view that might and manipulation make 'right.' And, it undermines the very foundations of morality, the very grounds on which we look at antisemitic racism -- for just one example -- and say, this is evil. This, it seems to me is a major, clear and present danger to our civilisation, and too many are blind to it; are in denial and are dismissive or even abusive when others point it out. That is why the IOSE has in it this unit. I am sure that some things are wrong, and it gives me a basis for saying that any worldview that undermines that knowledge is itself wrong and potentially utterly destructive. For, sadly, it opens the doors wide to the ruthless, manipulative cynical and conscience benumbed misanthropes among us. KFkairosfocus
April 15, 2013
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One possible difference: The notion of "planned parenthood" follows quite naturally from the philosophical underpinnings behind eugenics. The same cannot be said about Luther's racist views and the philosophical underpinnings of the Reformation. All men and women are created equal (with equal propensity toward violence or racism), but all philosophies are not.Phinehas
April 15, 2013
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From Martin Luther's On the Jews and Their Lies:
My advice, as I said earlier, is: First, that their synagogues be burned down, and that all who are able toss sulphur and pitch; it would be good if someone could also throw in some hellfire...Second, that all their books-- their prayer books, their Talmudic writings, also the entire Bible-- be taken from them, not leaving them one leaf, and that these be preserved for those who may be converted...Third, that they be forbidden on pain of death to praise God, to give thanks, to pray, and to teach publicly among us and in our country...Fourth, that they be forbidden to utter the name of God within our hearing. For we cannot with a good conscience listen to this or tolerate it…The rulers must act like a good physician who, when gangrene has set in proceeds without mercy to cut, saw, and burn flesh, veins, bone, and marrow. Such a procedure must also be followed in this instance. Burn down their synagogues, forbid all that I enumerated earlier, force them to work, and deal harshly with them. If this does not help we must drive them out like mad dogs.
Of course Luther's anti-semitism is irrelevant to assessments of contemporary Lutheranism -- but if that's so, then why isn't Sanger's racism irrelevant to assessments of reproductive rights?Kantian Naturalist
April 15, 2013
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