Anonymous ID: 1ae937 July 20, 2022, 6:47 a.m. No.16768278   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>8300

>>16768251

>>16768215

It's ironic that these pigs call for population control but they'd be the last to give up their lives for their cause…

 

In the 1910s, Margaret Sanger began the family planning movement in the United States. While Sanger was not Jewish, Jews had an enormous impact on her activism, and her activism indelibly shaped the lives of Jewish women in America. Sanger opened the country’s first birth control clinic in 1916. In 1921, she founded the American Birth Control League, which subsequently became the Planned Parenthood Federation of America. In 1923, she established the Birth Control Clinical Research Bureau. Sanger hired many Jewish women doctors and social workers who could not secure professional placements elsewhere. During the 1950s, she partnered with an American Jew to produce the birth control pill. The following decade, a Jewish gynecologist became president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America.

 

https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/birth-control-movement-in-united-states

Anonymous ID: 1ae937 July 20, 2022, 6:52 a.m. No.16768300   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>8446

>>16768278

https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/birth-control-movement-in-united-states

 

The dedicated commitment of great numbers of American Jewish women to their country’s long and controversial crusade to legalize birth control had its origins in 1912, when the movement’s formidable pioneer Margaret Sanger—baptized a Catholic, and married to a Jew, but by then calling herself a socialist—was working part-time as a visiting nurse in the immigrant districts of New York City’s Lower East Side. What she came to identify as an “awakening” occurred in the service of a young Jewish woman named Sadie Sachs, whom Sanger assisted through the complications of a self-induced septic abortion. Countless times through her fifty-year career as a reformer, she would repeat the saga of Sachs’s broken plea for reliable contraception and the doctor’s callous rejoinder that she told her husband “to sleep on the roof.” Returning several months later to find Sachs dying of septicemia, Sanger resolved to pursue fundamental social change.