Interesting….
A good example of joo-zionist-illuminati- brain-washing which leads many (like
her) to insanity—i.e., mind-controlled-slaves. Sounds too much like a fractured fairy
tale to get too upset about; after all, she had help from the “good Christian
people” in getting things done and no matter what you say, no ONE person is to
blame for ANY ONE atrocity… however, we can always vilify a Hitler or a Sanger,
especially when we don’t want to take responsibility for our own beliefs and
actions…. We only get what we want in this existence… we can change it any time
we want… but to do that, one has to leave the
sheepfold….
Slither
It's
2002: NO FEAR THIS
YEAR!
Blessed
are the pure in heart for they shall be
gods!
Abraham-Hicks: Reality Creation
For Happiness, Prosperity, and Health in Abundance
-----Original
Message-----
From:
pray2understand [mailto:pray2theast4truth@hotmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, February 21, 2002 8:44
PM
To: Friends of Wisdom;
Conspiranoia@yahoogroups.com; Conspiracy Pen Pal; Biophilos;
john@thebirdman.org; Round -- Table; SLITHER
Subject: Truth About Planned Parenthood's
Margaret Sanger
SATAN'S LITTLE
HELPERS
EXPOSED REPORT:
MARGARET SANGER
UNVEILED!
Margaret Sanger:
Planned Parenthood's Patron Saint
"to live...to love...
to be lazy...to be an unwed
mother...to
create
(life)...to destroy
(life)."
These are the rights
Margaret Sanger, founder of Planned
Parenthood,
claimed
for herself in 1914
when she published Woman Rebel and
passed herself
around
to men like a party
favor. This is the confused woman
who rambled
from
socialism to
Rosecrucianism to racism to astrology.
Touting "freedom",
she
ended her life a drug
addict and alcoholic.
Proverbs tell us that
if the foundation is rotten, the
structure will
be
unsound.
Planned
Parenthood, founded by
Margaret Sanger, is an ideal case
in point. Despite
the
patina of
respectability, PP still retains the unstable
character of
its
beloved
"saint."
Margaret Sanger born in
1879 (she later claimed 1883),
was one of
eleven
children with an
oppressive, atheist father who denied
Margaret's mother
the
right to attend church.
Sanger escaped the prison
atmosphere of her
childhood
home and started nurses
training. But self-discipline was
not one of
her
strong suits and she
dropped out. She did however,
continue to claim that
she
was a
nurse.
Early
Socialist
Sanger's interest in
birth control sprang from her early
"radicalization"
in
the socialist movement
where she met and became a
follower of Emma
Goldman, a
"voluntary motherhood
advocate." About this time , the
two main threads
that
were to dominate her
life seemed of have jelled for
Sanger-- the desire
for
absolute sexual
freedom, and her disdain for what she
referred to
as
"humanweeds".
Repeatedly, Sanger vaunted the glories
of sex as the
golden
path to paradise. In
Pivot Of Civilization, Sanger states,
"Through
sex,
mankind may attain the
great spiritual illumination which
will transform
the
world, which will light
up the only path to an earthly
paradise."
(1)
Sexual
Libertine
All her life, Sanger
seemed distressed by the idea that
men could engage
in
sexual promiscuity
freely, without worrying about
becoming pregnant;
whereas
woman were forced to
take precautions and exercise
sexual restraint
because of
the risk of pregnancy.
But this distress apparently did
not stop
Sanger
herself from attempting
to fulfill her own theories on
sexual
experimentation.
Sanger's sexual
exploits were the talk of the
intellectualoids of the
day. The
infamous "Wantley
Circle," a coitre of sexual libertines
and perverts
viewed
her as "love
incarnate." Noted sex-advocate Havelock
Ellis was one
of
Margaret's many lovers.
Her first marriage to William
Sanger was eventually
sacrificed on the altar of her
promiscuity; her
second,
to wealthy businessman,
J. Noah Slee, was a
convenience marriage in
which
Sanger insisted on a
separate house. Noah could see
her by appointment
only
and did not interfere
with her other liaisons.
For a woman who had
said that
the marriage bed was
"the most degenerating influence in
the social
order,"
(2) it was not
surprising that Sanger admitted marrying
Slee merely to
"insure
the financial success
of my cause."
Racial
Elitist
Sanger's racial-elitist
tendencies were clear as well.
She was
deeply
motivated to eliminate
"inferior classes," even if it
meant "possibly
drastic
and Spartan
methods...forced upon American
society."(3) She called
for the
government to issue
permits for parenthood in much the
same spirit that
the
modern Panned
Parenthood supports the forced one-child
policy of Communist
China.
Sanger's depopulation
targets included semites, latins,
blacks, and others
who
were deemed "unfit" by
pauperism (poverty), insanity, or
even epilepsy.
She
despised charity works
among the poor because
they helped minority
classes
survive when she felt
they should perish. "My criticism,
therefore," she
said
in a chapter of Pivot
of Civilization called, 'The Cruelty
of Charity,' "is not
directed at the 'failure of philanthropy,
but rather its
successes."(4).
She added that the type
of programs for the poor "being
more insidiously
injurious than any other" were those that
concern themselves
"directly with the function of
maternity, and aim to
supply gratis(free) medical and
nursing facilities by
Planned Parenthood's founder,
it is not surprising to
see a much higher abortion rate
among
minorities.
Later Sanger complained
about the efforts of foreign
missionaries to save
lives by preventing infanticide. Her
bitter hatred of
Christianity was well
know and her opposition
to charity and missionary efforts
merely reflected that
fact.One of her complaints was
that philanthropy
lavished on the "unfit" what might be
better uses to pamper
the elite.
Nazi
Parallel
In the 1920's and
1930's, her eugenics fervor was picked
up by a small, but
growing, movement in Germany and
America which favored
the elimination of
lives "not worthy to be
lived." The German eugenics
movement, culminating
in the Nazi party, designed a
national policy of
eugenics with a friend and
correspondent of
Margaret's, Dr. Ernst Ruden, as its head.
Sanger also appointed
Lothrop Stoddard as one of the
board members of the
fledgling Birth
Control League (later
renamed Planned Parenthood).
Stoddard was the author
of
the book, The Rising
Tide of Color Against White World
Supremacy.
In her campaign to
eliminate "human weeds," she
promoted birth control
among
blacks. Sanger wrote of
her plans to her friend Clarence
Gamble that she would,
"...Hire three or four colored
minister, preferably
with social service
backgrounds, and with
engaging personalities."
She claimed that "the
most
successful educational
approach to the Negro is through a
religious appeal We do
not want word to go out that we
want to eliminate 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"(6)
Sanger's striving for
happiness through sex never brought
her the paradise she
sought. Her final years were lived as a
drug and alcohol
addict. Today's PP Honors Sanger
Does Margaret Sanger's
desire to manage human fertility
and control world
population to create a "race of human
thoroughbreds" (the
credo of her early
publications) live on
in today's Planned Parenthood?
Planned Parenthood
leaders unashamedly honor their
founder.
Katharine Hepburn states: Planned
Parenthood is not
losing sight of Margaret Sanger: "..an
American pioneer in the
truest and noblest self-sacrificing
sense... Sanger's
memory is honored
throughout the world by
men and women who
understand her
monumental achievements for
humanity."(8)
Wattleton declared that
she is "proud" to be walking in
the footsteps"
of
Margaret Sanger.(7) She
further states: I believe that
Margaret Sanger
would
have been proud of us
today if she had seen the directions
that we have
most
recently in this
organization taken. Sanger's promotion
of absolute
sexual
hedonism and racial
elitism lives on today behind the
benevolent public
facade
of Planned
Parenthood.
Footnotes
1.Margaret Sanger,
"Pivot of Civilization", Brentano's
New York, 1922,
p.271.
2. David M. Kennedy,
"Birth Control in America: The
Career of
MargaretSanger", Yale Univ. Press, New
Haven and London, 1970,
Quoted in Intercessors
for America pamphlet,
"The Monstrosity of Planned
Parenthood", Gary
Bergel.
3. "Pivot of
Civilization", p 25.
4. Ibid p
108.
5. Ibid p.
114.
6. Linda Gordon, "A
Woman's Body. A Woman's
Right: ASocial History
of Birth Control in America",
Grossman, New York,
1976, Quoted in
Intercessors for
America pamphlet, "The Monstrosity of
Planned Parenthood",
Gary Bergel.
7. "Margaret Sanger:
The Woman Rebel" by Jo Ann
Gasper in Concerned
Women of
America March 1989. p
18,23.8.
8. "Inside Planned
Parenthood" in Action Line. Vol. X111.
No 2 Feb. 28, 1989.
Christian Action Council. Falls
Church,
Va.
9. "The
Wattleton-Sanger Tradition: Deception" by
J. Brown in A.L.L.
About Issues. 5/88.
Visitors since August 7, 1998