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Margaret Sanger's CenturyWALTER SCHU, LCThe eugenics circle held that some races and individual members of the human species were genetically superior to others These superior members should be encouraged to reproduce, while the births of inferior members such as the poor or minorities were to be regulated.
Nearly lost amid the media buzz created by the major newsweeklies naming their various choices for "person of the century" was the fact that the 1900's saw as much infamy as progress To be sure, Time, Newsweek and U.S. News & World Report did not fail to note the rise and fall of the century's most conspicuous villains Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot. But all characterized these, in general, as unfathomable anomalies of history rather than logical products of their times and places. Who has launched the most thriving crusade against humankind? None other than the founder of Planned Parenthood, a woman who is frequently defended as a shining example of selfless sacrifice for the good of humanity. Certainly Margaret Sanger, who died in her 80s in 1966, knew what it meant to be poor. One of 11 children born to poverty-stricken Irish-immigrant parents in Corning, N.Y, she rose to affluence when she dropped out of nursing school after only three months to marry a wealthy architect. She eventually settled in New York's Greenwich Village. There Sanger became closely associated with leading figures in the eugenics movement, many of whom played a prominent role in the foundation of Planned Parenthood. The eugenics circle held that some races and individual members of the human species were genetically superior to others These superior members should be encouraged to reproduce, while the births of inferior members such as the poor or minorities were to be regulated. Their ultimate solution to the problem of poverty was simple: Eliminate the poor. In the May 1919 edition of Sanger outlined her new philosophy in her
1922 book Pivot of Civilization. In it she sharply criticized philanthropists
who provided free maternity care to poor mothers. According to Sanger, these acts
of generosity "encourage the healthier and more normal sections of the world to
shoulder the burden of unthinking and indiscriminate fecundity of others; which
brings with it, as I think the reader must agree, a dead weight of human waste.
Instead of decreasing and aiming to eliminate the stocks that are most detrimental
to the future of the race and the world, it tends to render them to a menacing
degree dominant. These are the words of a model liberal humanist? The founder
of Planned Parenthood saw contraception, sterilization and eventually abortion
as the panacea for eliminating all human suffering. In Margaret Sanger:
Father of Modern Society, author Elasah Drogin observed: "Through the 284
pages of Pivot of Civilization, there is not one word written about
fair labor laws, fair housing requirements, a more equitable distribution of wealth,
or even the simple responsibility of caring for one's neighbor." Sanger's disdain
for certain members of society was not confined to the poor, whom she often referred
to as "human weeds." It targeted minorities such as blacks. In a private letter
to Clarence Gamble dated Oct. 19, 1939, she revealed her ultimate goal toward
blacks and how it could best be attained. "The most successful educational approach
to the Negro is through a religious appeal," she wrote. "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 following lines from Pivot of Civilization allow a particularly
telling glimpse of Sanger's "compassion" and her motives. "Remember our motto:
if we must have welfare, give it to the rich, not to the poor . ... We are paying
for and even submitting to the dictates of an ever-increasing, unceasingly spawning
class of human beings who never should have been born at all." Sanger's views
naturally led her to strike out against the institution of marriage and the family.
"The marriage bed," she wrote, "is the most degenerating influence in the social
order." Sanger advocated instead a "voluntary association" between sexual partners.
She thus sought to supplant the family as the most fundamental unit of society
with relationships directed toward the sexual gratification of cooperating individuals.
How successful has been the campaign to reconstruct society launched by Margaret
Sanger and Planned Parenthood, her life's cause? A few facts reveal the pervasive
influence of Sanger's movement on humanity's course in the 20th century. As
a 1996 U.N. study predicted, by this year the United States, Canada, China, Japan
and every country in Europe will have fallen below zero population growth. (Immigration
helps boost the numbers in America.) Worldwide, at least 61 countries are failing
to replace their populations. Since the 1973 Roe v Wade abortion
decision, an average of 1.5 million unborn babies have been aborted each year
in the United States. Twenty-five percent of white women's pregnancies have ended
in abortion, while 40% of minority pregnancies have been aborted. In 1990 more
than 70% of the married women in the United States were using contraceptives.
Without exception, all the sad consequences of birth control that Pope Paul
VI foresaw in his 1968 encyclical Humanae Vitae (Of Human Life) have come
to pass. Pope John Paul II is well aware of his predecessor's prophetic foresight
when he calls the 20th century "a century of tears." Can the 21st truly become
a century of healing and wiping away tears? Tens of thousands of Americans who
marched for life in Washington, D.C., this past Jan. 24 think that it can. So
do countless mothers and fathers who still believe that a child is God's most
precious gift. And since human history has become the history of salvation with
Christ's birth, death and resurrection, there are certainly grounds for hope. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT Walter
Schu, LC. "Margaret Sanger's Century." National Catholic Register.
(May, 1999). Reprinted by permission of the National Catholic Register.To
subscribe to the National Catholic Register call 1-800-421-3230. THE
AUTHOR Father Walter Schu is author of John Paul lI: His
Thought and Mission. Copyright © 1999 National
Catholic Register.
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