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The Difference One Racist Made: Margaret Sanger’s World

“On the other hand, the mass of ignorant Negroes still breed carelessly and disastrously, so that the increase among Negroes, even more than the increase among whites, is from that part of the population least intelligent and fit, and least able to rear their children properly.

~From Sanger’s Birth Control Review

W.E.B. DuBois, Professor of Sociology, Atlanta University. “Black Folk and Birth Control.” Birth Control Review, Volume XXII, Number 8 (New Series, May 1938, the “Negro Number”), page 90.

Born into an impoverished family of eleven children (plus several miscarried), Margaret Sanger was left an orphan when her mother died at an early age. Though the cause of death was listed as tuberculosis, Margaret always attributed her early death to her mother’s weakness from bearing so many children. This deep-seated disdain for large families would encompass her life and contribute to a belief that women should limit—or be limited—in the number of children they have.

And she particularly desired to limit the fertility of black people and others she saw as inferior.

margaret sanger racist planned parenthood founder

Brief Biography of Margaret Sanger

Sanger was born in 1879 in New York to a Catholic mother and atheist father. She eventually went to nursing school, then married and had three children. Sanger and her husband became immersed in the bohemian world of Greenwich Village, where they lived. It was at this time that she joined the Women’s Committee of the New York Socialist’s Party [6] and began to advocate for the sexual education of women. Though she never finished nursing school, Margaret began working as a nurse in a poor immigrant section of NYC, where she grew to believe in—and teach—the importance of birth control. She also began to write about these beliefs in a column entitled “What Every Girl Should Know.”

Then, in 1914, she started her own publication which advocated for women using birth control. Because she mailed out this publication, she was in violation of the Comstock Act, which made it illegal to disseminate immoral materials through the mail. Facing possible jail time for her actions, Margaret fled to England, where she continued to do research on birth control and contrive a plan to disseminate it.

In 1915, knowing that the charges in the US had been dropped against her, Margaret returned to the US and, a year later, opened the first birth control clinic in the states. A little over a week later, she was arrested and spent 30 days in jail for again being in violation of the Comstock Law. Sanger would later appeal the conviction, which would not be overturned. However, the judge in the case did make an exception to the law that would allow doctors to prescribe contraception for medical reasons. This opened the door for the future legalization of birth control.

To advocate for birth control, in 1917 Sanger began to publish The Birth Control Review [7], which she edited until 1929.

cover the birth control review

In 1921, Sanger established the American Birth Control League, which would eventually become Planned Parenthood.

planned parenthood clinic indiana

It didn’t take long for Sanger became a public voice at the forefront of a reproductive revolution. Not only a powerful driving force in the legalization of birth control, she advocated and spread eugenics in the spearheading of the birth control mentality—with the ultimate goal of eliminating unwanted people.

Sanger’s Racist Philosophy

“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.”

Letter from Margaret Sanger to Dr. C.J. Gamble, December 10th, 1939

After reading all 5,631 pages of the Birth Control Review, HLI’s Dr. Brian Clowes wrote [7]:

Sanger associated with racists and anti-Semites, people who despised everyone who was not a Nordic god or goddess, and those who demanded coercive eugenics programs to eliminate ‘lesser’ humans. The whole bunch, of course, participated in continuous vicious attacks on the Catholic Church…. The malignant influence of Sanger and similar thinkers not only has ruined the West to the point that it is dying, but seems Hell-bent on corrupting the rest of the world as well.”

Clowes’ massive library compiled at HLI contains thousands of texts, including many of Sanger’s. And as he goes on to say, The Birth Control Review often emphasized the American Birth Control League,’s mission: “To promote eugenic birth selection throughout the United States so that there may be more well-born and fewer ill-born children―a stronger, healthier and more intelligent race.’”

We saw this eugenic philosophy in the extermination of six million Jews during WWII. And Sanger had people with known Nazi connections and sympathies writing for The Birth Control Review.

According to Clowes [8]:

The Birth Control Review is larded with articles written by such “luminaries” as Lothrop Stoddard, American Birth Control League board member and author of the books The Rising Tide of Color Against White World-Supremacy and The Menace of the Under Man, and Ernst Rudin, Adolf Hitler’s Director of Genetic Sterilization and founder of the Nazi Society for Racial Hygiene—the organization behind the master plan to exterminate Jews during World War II. Stoddard traveled to Germany to be welcomed by Heinrich Himmler and Adolf Hitler himself. In fact, he was so popular in Germany, his writings were incorporated into Nazi school books.

black lives matter in the womb sign - san francisco walk for life 2019
San Francisco Walk for Life, 2019

We can thus say with certainty that Planned Parenthood honors a person (Margaret Sanger) who not only befriended authentic racists and Nazis, but gave them a widespread platform to spread their poison. In fact, PPFA names its most prestigious award [9] after Margaret Sanger, allowing her eugenic legacy of hatred and intolerance to live on.

Today, Planned Parenthood does everything it can to eliminate the unfit of society and to profit off women in crisis pregnancies. It builds abortion facilities in impoverished and ethnic neighborhoods [10], targets blacks and Hispanics, and worms its way into our schools so that it can increase its client base by corrupting our children.

Yes, the legacy of this one woman is alive and well. The insidiousness has left an indelible mark.

Sanger’s Push for Eugenics

Eugenics [11] is the “practice or advocacy of controlled selective breeding of human populations (as by sterilization) to improve the population’s genetic composition.” Eugenics goes even deeper than racism, because it claims the right to determine who should live, who should reproduce, and who should die.

In her articles and speeches, Sanger gave evidence time and again that she considered there to be a close link between birth control and eugenics. As the author of articles entitled “The Eugenic Value of Birth Control Propaganda [12]” and “Birth Control and Racial Betterment [13],” Margaret showed the world her true colors and the underlying reasons why she thought the world needed birth control.

In Birth Control and Women’s Health [14], Sanger writes:

In the early history of the race…. The weak died early or were killed. Today, however, civilization has brought sympathy, pity, tenderness and other lofty and worthy sentiments, which interfere with the law of natural selection. We are now in a state where our charities, our compensation acts, our pensions, hospitals and even our drainage and sanitary equipment all tend to keep alive the sickly and weak, who are allowed to propagate and in turn produce a race of degenerates.

Margaret Sanger. “Birth Control and Women’s Health.” Birth Control Review, Volume I, Number 12 [December 1917], page 7.

Does the term “a race of degenerates” remind you of a recent quote by Hillary Clinton, the 2009 recipient of the Margaret Sanger Award? A supporter of New York’s Reproductive Health Law allowing abortion till the day of birth, Clinton called Trump supporters a basket of deplorables [15]. The remarks are nearly a century apart, and the contexts are different; yet a similarity in the raw hubris is undeniable. It’s not difficult to see the mentality that connects these two women.

Who’s “Unfit” to Reproduce?

In “Birth Control and Racial Betterment,” Sanger writes: “We who advocate birth control, on the other hand, lay all our emphasis upon stopping not only the reproduction of the unfit but upon stopping all reproduction when there is not economic means of providing proper care for those who are born in health.”

In Sanger’s mind, those who are sick or weak should not be allowed to live. She asserts that these people could not possibly ever be happy. And she states that those babies who might be born into families not well off economically should not be allowed to live and that adults with a lack of financial means should not be allowed to have children.

Who is Margaret Sanger to say who might or might not be sick, weak, rich, poor, happy, or unhappy? Who is she to tell a couple that their child will be a burden? This is a violation of basic human rights.

birth control review advertisement july 1920
The Birth Control Review advertisement, July 1920

Sanger goes on to say:

While I personally believe in the sterilization of the feeble-minded, the insane and syphilitic, I have not been able to discover that these measures are more than superficial deterrents when applied to the constantly growing stream of the unfit. They are excellent means of meeting a certain phase of the situation, but I believe in regard to these, as in regard to other eugenic means, that they do not go to the bottom of the matter. Neither the mating of healthy couples nor the sterilization of certain recognized types of the unfit touches the great problem of unlimited reproduction of those whose housing, clothing, and food are all inadequate to physical and mental health. These measures do not touch those great masses, who through economic pressure populate the slums and there produce in their helplessness other helpless, diseased and incompetent masses, who overwhelm all that eugenics can do among those whose economic condition is better.

The Takeaways

We were created out of love by a Creator who knows only love for us and who wants what’s best for us. We all have different abilities, but we are made in His image, and as such every human life is sacred. Sanger does not look at the sanctity of a human life, but only at “utility.” But Sanger’s not-so-subtle messages sadly resonated with many then, and now. In “The Eugenic Value of Birth Control Propaganda,” she writes: “The eugenic and civilizational value of birth control is becoming apparent to the enlightened and the intelligent.”

So, in her opinion, it is only the “enlightened and the intelligent” who can see the value of birth control. And those of us who understand that birth control harms women [16] and that it can kill babies [17] prior to their implantation are simply stupid.