Sanger’s Racist Legacy Lives on in New York City Schools
In 1930, Margaret Sanger’s Birth Control Clinical Research Bureau allied with
the Urban League to bring birth control services to the women of
Harlem. By 1939, Sanger had raised thousands of dollars to support an
expansion of the initiative she named “The Negro Project.” Targeted
toward reducing an African-American population described in Sanger’s
June, 1932 edition of Birth Control Review as “breeding
carelessly and disastrously,” these early birth control clinics seem to
have provided a model for New York City’s School Based Health Centers.
Today, New York City’s public school students—underage and without
parental knowledge—are given access to birth control pills, Depo-Provera
injections, and the insertion of plastic IUDs to prevent pregnancy. In
an analysis of the records of 40 school based health centers in New York
City—most of them in schools with large minority populations, the New York Post revealed that about 22,400 students sought reproductive care from January, 2009 through 2012.
In addition to these routine contraceptives, the City’s schools are
providing students with Plan-B, the “morning-after pill” to prevent
pregnancy. The Post reports that “handouts of the morning-after
pill to sexually active students have skyrocketed” from 5,039 doses
given to teenage students during the 2009-10 school year, to 12,721
doses given in 2011-12. Under New York State law, minors can obtain
reproductive services without their parent’s permission.
Margaret Sanger, who founded Planned Parenthood, was the inspiration for Adolf Hitler’s program of doing away with what they called “social undesirables.” Her legacy of eugenics lives on in our nation, where well over 55 million pre-born children, the majority of whom are black or of other ethnic backgrounds, have been killed through abortion since 1973. (See link below)
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