Tag - Culture of Death

Killer Angel Margaret Sanger!

If you want to truly stand for all women you must stand against the killing of pre-born women

Sanger established the American Birth Control League, a precursor to today’s Planned Parenthood Federation of America.

As  the  founder  of  Planned  Parenthood and the impassioned heroine of various feminist causes celebrated, Sanger was responsible for the brutal elimination of more than thirty (50) million children in the United States and as many as two and a half billion worldwide. No one in his right mind would want to rehabilitate the reputations  of  Stalin,  Mussolini,  or  Hitler.  Their

If you want to truly stand for all women you must stand against the killing of pre-born women.

Eugenicist. Immoral. Unmerciful. Bigoted. These words appropriately describe the woman revered by an organization that promotes – and then profits from – the death of innocent babies.

barbarism,  treachery,  and  debauchery  will  make  their names live in infamy forever. Amazingly though, Sanger has somehow escaped their wretched fate. In spite of the fact that her crimes against humanity were no less heinous than theirs, her place in history has effectively been sanitized  and  sanctified.  In  spite  of  the  fact  that  she openly  identified  herself  in  one  way  or  another  with their  aims, intentions,  ideologies, and movements with  Stalin’s Sobornostic Collectivism, with  Hitler’s Eugenic  Racism, and  with  Mussolini’s Agathistic Facism, her faithful  minions  have  managed  to  manufacture an independent reputation for the perpetuation of her memory. Killer Angel A Biography of Planned Parenthood’s Founder Margaret Sanger by George Grant

She believed that women wanted their children to be free of poverty and disease, that women were natural eugenicists, and that birth control, which could limit the number of children and improve their quality of life, was the panacea to accomplish this. Full article at Biography.com But it is far more sordid to find your-self several years later burdened down with half a dozen unwanted children, helpless, starved, shoddily clothed, dragging at your skirt, yourself a dragged out shadow of the woman you once were. Family Limitation by Margaret Sanger 1917

40 Days for Life Manhattan Campaign leader Jill Gadwood spoke about the need to bring 40 Days for Life to New York City, which is infamously known as the “abortion capital of America.” 92 Years Later Pro Life Comes to Margaret Sanger Planned Parenthood Center

Planned Parenthood  of New York City: 1923 – Margaret Sanger opens the Birth Control Clinical Research Bureau in Manhattan, later known as the Margaret Sanger Research Bureau, where physicians dispense contraceptives and study their health impact. …… More

Was Margaret Sanger Founder of Planned Parenthood a Racist?

Margaret Sanger’s Dark Legacy    Preview: Who Was the Real Margaret Sanger?  Culture of Life Studies Program  The truth about Margaret Sanger    Margaret Sanger: More Eugenic Than Fellow Eugenicists

A Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing Saul Alinsky!

A Wolf in Sheep's Clothing Saul Alinsky

How Saul Alinsky community organizers control human behavior and life-and-death decisions by corrupting the health care system and using religious institutions in their effort. The Big Death Lobby

A Wolf in Sheep's Clothing Saul Alinsky

Documentary about community organizer Saul Alinsky (1909-1972). Hillary Clinton described Alinksy as “that rare specimen, the successful radical.”

Where did political correctness, gender conflict, gender confusion — and so many other aspects of the Culture of Death — come from?

The answer to these, and many other questions, can be found in the  Original Documentary “A Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing,” a chilling look at the impact of Community Activist Saul Alinsky, whose “Rules for Radicals” still wields a huge influence on American culture – and the world.

“Even in the communities where there has been Alinskyian organizing, do we see less racism? Or, do we see more polarization?” asks Alinsky Biographer Stephanie Block. “Do we see less poverty, or are there problems with poverty greater now? There’s a real good argument that they’re greater.”