Margaret Sanger, a woman celebrated by the left as a pioneering feminist, founded Planned Parenthood with the deeply disturbing ambition to control which races and classes should be allowed to reproduce. Her legacy isn’t one of progress but of eugenics, thinly veiled as a push for women’s rights. She was not just a key figure in the birth control movement but an active proponent of reducing so-called undesirable populations, particularly African-Americans, whom she viewed as breeding carelessly. How is this woman still idolized by those who claim to champion equality and anti-racism?
The Sanger saga only further exposes the hypocrisy of liberalism. The same voices that decry racial injustice today once heaped praise on a woman who saw African-Americans as a problem to be managed away. Sanger even collaborated with the Ku Klux Klan and sought black ministers to push her birth control agenda, ensuring it wouldn’t seem like an attempt to wipe out a population. The left loves to ignore these uncomfortable truths.
But Sanger’s disturbing ideas weren’t limited to race. She advocated for the compulsory sterilization of those she deemed unfit to reproduce. Yes, liberals still hold her up as a figure of inspiration. Meanwhile, they label those who oppose federal funding for such programs as bigots and backward thinkers. Even today, Sanger’s philosophy haunts the policies promoted by globalists who view population control as a solution to all societal ills.
On Margaret Sanger and ‘Plan B’
Never forget this ZPG zealot is Shillary Clinton's "idol" 🤬https://t.co/Tq38o8m0eA
— Rebel Routt (@routt67429) June 10, 2025
Today, we still see echoes of Sanger’s ideology in society. Take a look at pop culture, where irresponsible behavior is glamorized and rewarded. A viral video features a young woman boasting about skipping contraception in favor of indulging in drug use, giving flippant disregard to the consequences. How would Sanger feel knowing all her work to manage black fertility has resulted in a society where life is so cheapened and devalued?
Why do we continue to exalt the planners and not the traditional family values that strengthen our communities? The liberal doublespeak on racial justice and empowerment becomes glaringly obvious when we remember who they have built their narratives upon. Are we ready to face these contradictions, or will the worship of flawed heroes continue to lead us down a dark path?