4.8 • 5.7K Ratings
🗓️ 21 May 2023
⏱️ 50 minutes
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On this week’s Sunday Special of Human Events Daily, Jack Posobiec is joined by Ashley St. Clair to discuss a multitude of topics all revolving around the societal war against women. The pair take on the history of Planned Parenthood and its founder, as well as the inconsistent messaging being pushed by third wave feminists. Next, Poso and St. Clair discusses population theory as birth rates continue to fall across the United States. To end the conversation, Jack and Ashley discuss her recent Twitter activity with Elon musk and what his stance might be on the topics discussed above. All this and more on Human Events Daily!
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0:36.6 | Margaret Sanger was born in 1879 in New York. She was one of 11 children born into an |
0:41.9 | impoverished family. Sanger's mother died at an early age. Though the cause of death was |
0:46.9 | listed as tuberculosis, Margaret always attributed her mother's early death to the fact that she |
0:51.6 | was weak from bearing so many children. This deep-seated disdain for large families would |
0:56.5 | encompass Margaret's life and contribute to a belief that women should limit or be limited |
1:00.9 | in the number of children that they have. In 1914, Sanger started her own publication |
1:05.6 | to advocate for birth control. In 1916, she opened the first birth control clinic in the United |
1:10.7 | States in Brooklyn's Brownsville neighborhood. She was soon arrested and spent 30 days in |
1:15.1 | jail. Sanger appealed the conviction, which was not overturned. However, the judge did make |
1:19.9 | an exception to the law. This allowed doctors to prescribe contraception for medical reasons. |
1:24.9 | This decision opened the door for the future legalization of birth control. In 1917, Sanger began |
1:31.0 | publishing her famous journal The Birth Control Review, which would run until 1940 and would |
1:35.4 | be a haven for racist, eugenicists and even Nazi writers. Then, in 1921, Sanger founded |
1:41.5 | the American Birth Control League. In 1942, the board of directors voted to change the |
1:46.3 | organization's name to the Planned Parenthood Federation of America. The birth control |
1:51.0 | review frequently highlighted the mission of its parent organization, quote, to promote |
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