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Defunding Planned Parenthood Is a Matter of Life and Death for Black America; Black Preachers Condemn Margaret Sanger, Planned Parenthood: ‘Nothing is more racist in America’

Defunding Planned Parenthood Is a Matter of Life and Death for Black America:

The prospect that American taxpayers, who morally object to abortion, may no longer be forced to fund Planned Parenthood when President-elect Donald Trump returns to the White House, feels promising this time around. And according to Vivek Ramaswamy and Elon Musk, the newly slated Department of Government Efficiency advisory committee just might lead the charge to do so.

While Trump’s first administration had similar advantages in that Republicans held a governing majority and will soon again, previous pro-life attempts to remove the abortion stain from our federal budget could not overcome the Democratic Party’s resistance.

That resistance was tied to black support, but it no longer looks the same. Given how more blacks voted Republican in the last presidential race than in recent previous years, it seems to indicate a shift is taking place where many in black America view Democratic policies less favorably.

This makes sense. After all, try as it may to shake off its vile past, the Democratic Party has a dark history that is tied to the Ku Klux Klan founding, when it wanted to retaliate against President Ulysses S. Grant and the Republicans’ reconstruction policies meant to establish equality for blacks in the South.

Given this, it’s a wonder how Democratic leaders have kept up the facade hailing themselves as the leading defender of blacks, especially when in reality the party’s policies destroy black lives; literally, when it comes to Planned Parenthood, the Democratic Party’s Siamese twin.

Just like the Democratic Party, Planned Parenthood also has deep racist roots.

Margaret Sanger, who subscribed to eugenics and founded Planned Parenthood in 1916, did so for the very purpose of exterminating black babies’ lives. In her exact words, Sanger wrote in a widely quoted letter to Dr. Clarence J. Gamble that she [did] “not want the word to go out that [she] want[s] to exterminate the Negro population […]”

And by many accounts based on available data from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Planned Parenthood has stayed in lockstep with its founding mission, as more black unborn babies are terminated, a term derived from “exterminate” at a 3-to-5 times higher rate than white and Hispanic babies.

The same study shows that 42% of all women who had abortions in 2021 were black, while 30% were white, 22% were Hispanic and 6% were of other races, based on data reported to the CDC about Washington, D.C., New York City, and 31 states.

All human life is precious and made in the image of God, so it goes without saying that the desire to end any unborn child’s life is nothing short of evil, regardless of race. But since black women make up only 7.8.% of total U.S. population, it’s clear that many more black babies in the womb are disproportionately aborted compared to other ethnicities. —>READ MORE HERE

Black preachers condemn Margaret Sanger, Planned Parenthood: ‘Nothing is more racist in America’:

Black faith leaders featured in “The 1916 Project,” a documentary about Planned Parenthood founder Margaret Sanger and her influence on society’s views on sexual morality, urged black pastors to oppose abortion during a segment of the film highlighting Sanger’s views on race and eugenics.

White Rose Resistance screened “The 1916 Project” last Monday at the Cornerstone Chapel, one of many churches nationwide planning to screen it this year.

The documentary’s title refers to the year Sanger opened the first birth control clinic in the United States. It is also an allusion to The New York Times’ “The 1619 Project,” which critics argue presents an inaccurate, anti-American view of history.

The film featured interviews White Rose Resistance founder Seth Gruber conducted with faith leaders and historians on a series of topics, including abortion, birth control, Sanger’s history and what the documentary called “the secular moral revolution.”

Two faith leaders Gruber interviewed for the documentary were John Amanchukwu, the youth and young adult pastor at North Carolina’s Upper Room Church of God in Christ, and the church’s Bishop Patrick L. Wooden Sr.

Wooden condemned Sanger and declared that he would not endorse any politician who praises the Planned Parenthood founder. Wooden said the role of black pastors is “to preach God’s truth with power and authority and without compromise.”

“In my opinion, what we’re seeing is too many ministers being influenced by political parties,” Wooden said. “And many preachers today are more Democrat than they are Gospel preacher when it comes to things like preaching against abortion, the slaughter of the unborn.”

“Nothing is more racist in America than the abortion industry,” he added. —>READ MORE HERE

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