Posted on 08/30/2015 9:02:16 AM PDT by Isara
Birth-control pioneer Margaret Sanger embraced some truly horrific ideas. But she also did quite a lot of good.
Senator Ted Cruz has become the first GOP presidential candidate to formally sign on to the efforts by a group of black pastors to get a bust of Planned Parenthood founder Margaret Sanger removed from an exhibit at the Smithsonians National Portrait Gallery. The participants, who held a press conference Thursday, claim that Sangers appearance in the exhibit, called, Struggle for Justice, is offensive, because it places the reproductive rights trailblazer in a position of honor alongside such icons as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Rosa Parks.
Thanks to the recent release of a series of controversial videos, Sangers link to Planned Parenthood would have likely been enough to elicit criticism of her inclusion in the exhibit. But Sanger also espoused some views about race and class that were, at times, deplorable.
So are Cruz and his fellow conservatives correct? Should black Americans find Sangers legacy, and the celebration of her legacy by the National Portrait Gallery and Planned Parenthood, offensive?
There is no question that Margaret Sanger, born in 1879, held some views that any reasonable person today would consider unconscionable. She viewed eugenics as sound policy and considered the Ku Klux Klan an appropriate ideological partner to advance her work as a family planning advocate. For these reasons, shes not someone I would call a great person, particularly speaking as an African-American woman who is not from a wealthy background, meaning Sanger likely would have deemed me unfit to reproduce.
But that does not change the fact that all reasonable people should also be able to agree that America would be far worse off had Margaret Sanger never existed. The fact is before Sangers arrest in 1916 and subsequent jail sentence for aiding women in acquiring birth control, which resulted in a landmark legal ruling, most American woman did not have access to reliable forms of family planning.
This means that most American women lacked the ability to plan the number of children they would have. As a result, families were larger, poorer, and women were more likely to die earlier. Infant mortality rates were also high. This shouldnt be particularly surprising. A woman lacking access to quality health care and nutrition is less likely to give birth to a healthy baby, or to be able to provide access to necessary nutrition or health care to a baby that was originally born healthy.
Besides the many health advantages American families experienced due to greater access to contraception thanks to the Sanger case, there have also been countless cultural benefits to society. As families have shrunk womens participation in society has increased, as has the emergence of more women in positions of power. There are more women in colleges, corporate boardrooms and Congress. This shouldnt come as a shock. After all, if a woman has eight children, the norm for 1800s America, she might have second thoughts about committing to the grueling schedule required to be a political candidate, particularly one who has to commute between Washington, D.C., and another state on a regular basis.
So with the exception of GOP presidential candidate Rick Santorum, who is opposed to birth control and has a large family, it is highly likely that Republican candidates, including Senator Ted Cruz, owe a debt of gratitude to Margaret Sanger, whether they want to admit it or not. (Cruz, it should be noted, has two children, and his wife, Heidi, is a high-powered investment banker.)
For Cruz and other Sanger critics, her sins outweigh her contributions. But my question is: Who gets to decide that? While Sangers inclusion in the Struggle for Justice exhibit has drawn protests, Henry Clays inclusion in the A Conversation About America exhibit at the same institution has not.
Clay, like many of the men that shaped our nation, including George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, owned slaves. Which means if we removed the statues and portraits of every leader who contributed to this country in a meaningful way for gross moral failings, then the walls of the White House, the Capitol and most State Houses would be empty.
As a black American, I can say that while I am troubled by some of Margaret Sangers words, I would be remiss not to acknowledge her contributions to my community. Though some conservative critics seem to hold Sanger accountable for the high abortion rates within the black community since she founded the precursor to Planned Parenthood, Sangers own attitudes about abortion were complex, and not what we might call pro-choice today.
In 1918 she wrote, While there are cases where even the law recognizes an abortion as justifiable if recommended by a physician, I assert that the hundreds of thousands of abortions performed in America each year are a disgrace to civilization. Instead, she argued that governments failure to not make contraception widely accessible to all women made the government culpable in any deaths resulting from abortion.
Sanger also railed against what she saw as the class inequality and hypocrisy evident in the multitude of family-planning options available to well-to-do white women versus what was available to the poor, many of them immigrants or black. Both of my grandmothers, born in the 1910s, were from large families. One of them was one of 14 children, the other was one of eight. They struggled in poverty as children, something they both talked about. When they decided to have families of their own, they were able to plan a size that worked for them, an option that had not been available to their mothers.
As a result, my parents became the first in their families to graduate from college, and I grew up a member of Americas middle class. This would not have been possible without Margaret Sangers contributions, which benefited millions of Americans from all walks of life. So if she doesnt belong in American exhibit titled Struggle for Justice, then who does?
Hitler was a vegan, too........He loved animals and nature, ahead of his time on environmental issues...Hitler banned smoking in his presence....what a forward thinking man......sarc on steroids
great post
Actually, Sanger apparently was a bigot and advocated exterminating black people.
And the Democrats celebrate her.
When I lived in Germanic Europe the older people always talked about people they knew who actually still said Hitler did make the trains run on time and other things positive about Hitler.
Margaret Sanger: NO MORE BABIES (for Western Europe for at least 10 years)
Pathe newsreel 1947
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ChCjgYGTL4Y
She wasn’t about personal choice and family planning. She was an anti-breeder zealot.
-— bust of Planned Parenthood founder Margaret Sanger removed from an exhibit at the Smithsonians National Portrait Gallery. -—
Start suing and/or harassing every institution with her name or image. Next up, the racist Woodrow Wilson. After that, FDR.
Add Teddy to the list, too.
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