Democrats Cherished Margerat Sanger – the other Hitler?
Margaret Sanger: The Other Hitler – A Racist Killer of Minorities, Exposed by the Evidence
The legacy of Margaret Sanger, founder of Planned Parenthood, is no longer a matter for debate. The evidence lays bare a chilling truth: Sanger was a racist eugenicist whose actions and ideologies targeted minorities with a zeal that echoes the genocidal fervor of Adolf Hitler. Her “Negro Project,” her consorting with the Ku Klux Klan, and the enduring footprint of Planned Parenthood in minority communities, reveal a deliberate campaign to curtail Black and Hispanic populations through birth control and, by extension, abortion. This is not conjecture, it is the stark conclusion drawn from her own words, actions, and their devastating consequences.
The Negro Project
In 1939, Sanger launched the Negro Project under the Birth Control Federation of America (BCFA, later Planned Parenthood), purporting to deliver contraception to Black Southern communities to address poverty and health disparities. The veneer of compassion crumbles under scrutiny. Sanger’s insistence on using Black physicians and ministers was a calculated ploy to mask her agenda, ensuring her project infiltrated communities wary of white interference. Her 1939 letter to Clarence Gamble is damning: “We do not want word to go out that we want to exterminate the Negro population.” This is not a misunderstood plea for optics—it is the confession of a woman whose eugenic vision saw Black reproduction as a societal ill to be curbed. The project’s failure to establish Black-led clinics, with funds diverted to white-run facilities, exposes her “aid” as a sham, designed to control rather than empower. Sanger’s motives were clear: to reduce the Black population under the guise of benevolence, a tactic as insidious as any totalitarian scheme.
The Ku Klux Klan: Sanger’s Vile Alliance
Sanger’s 1926 address to the women’s auxiliary of the Ku Klux Klan in Silver Lake, New Jersey, is not a footnote but a cornerstone of her moral depravity. This was no mere misstep—she willingly lent her voice to America’s foremost purveyors of racial violence, not to challenge their bigotry but to advance her cause. Her readiness to parley with Klansmen reveals a woman whose obsession with population control trumped any ethical boundary. Like Hitler’s alliances with ideologues of hate, Sanger’s engagement with the KKK was a strategic pact, her eugenic mission aligning seamlessly with their racist ethos. Her motives were not just pragmatic—they were complicit, a betrayal of humanity itself.

Planned Parenthood: The Legacy of Minority Targeting
Sanger’s vision lives on in Planned Parenthood, whose clinics disproportionately occupy minority neighborhoods, a chilling echo of her eugenic ideals. A 2015 study found 79% of Planned Parenthood’s surgical abortion facilities are within walking distance of Black or Hispanic communities. While some argue this reflects service to underserved areas, the numbers tell a grimmer tale: in 2016, Black women, just 13% of the female population, accounted for 38% of abortions, according to the Centers for Disease Control. This is no accident but the fruition of Sanger’s dream to suppress minority populations. Her opposition to abortion does not absolve her; her advocacy for birth control as a tool to limit the “unfit” laid the groundwork for Planned Parenthood’s abortion practices. Like Hitler’s systematic targeting of “undesirables,” Sanger’s ideology has sculpted a system where minority fetuses are disproportionately extinguished, a silent genocide rooted in her racist principles.
Sanger’s devotion to eugenics was not a peripheral flaw but the driving force of her life’s work. She championed birth control to weed out the “unfit,” using terms like “human weeds” and endorsing forced sterilizations for those she deemed inferior. Her 1922 assertion, “The most merciful thing that a family does to one of its infant members is to kill it,” reveals a callousness rivaling the Nazis’ disdain for life. Sanger was no passive disciple of her era’s social Darwinism—she was a fervent architect of a world where the poor, non-white, and disabled were culled for the “greater good.”. Her motives mirror Hitler’s: a ruthless quest to purify society by eliminating those she despised and Planned Parenthood targets minority communities with surgical precision.
The human cost of Sanger’s vision is staggering. According to the Guttmacher Institute, approximately 900,000 abortions are performed annually in the United States. Since Planned Parenthood began performing abortions post-Roe v. Wade in 1973, estimates suggest over 2.8 million Black fetuses have been lost at its facilities alone. These numbers are not mere statistics—they are the grim harvest of Sanger’s racist ideology, a death toll that rivals the scale of history’s darkest atrocities. Her legacy is not just eugenic but genocidal, a systematic assault on minorities that continues to this day.
Margaret Sanger was a racist killer of minorities, her eugenic crusade a calculated effort to suppress Black and Hispanic populations. Her Negro Project was a trojan horse, her KKK speech a pact with the Devil, and Planned Parenthood’s clinic placements are a continuation of her genocidal intent. Like Hitler, she cloaked her agenda in the language of progress, but her actions have shown a vision of control and extermination. The annual loss of 900,000 fetuses, with minorities being mostly affected, is the enduring fruit of her poisonous tree. To honor Sanger is to honor an architect of demographic destruction, a figure whose shadow looms as large and malevolent as the Führer’s. Let us tear down her statues, strike her name from history’s ledger, and confront the truth: Sanger was no hero—she was The other Hitler.
Sanger died on September 6, 1966, in Tucson, Arizona.
Planned Parenthood, located primarily in low income (African American) neighborhoods, remains the largest abortion provider in the United States.
Despite this damning record, Sanger remains a celebrated icon among Democrats, who champion her as a pioneer of women’s rights while ignoring her blood-soaked legacy. This article exposes her crimes, the staggering toll of abortions, and the troubling Democratic endorsement.
In March 2009, while accepting the Margaret Sanger Award from Planned Parenthood, then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton praised Margaret Sanger, stating: “I admire Margaret Sanger enormously, her courage, her tenacity, her vision … I am really in awe of her.” She highlighted Sanger’s work in Brooklyn, noting her efforts in challenging societal norms and advancing women’s reproductive rights.
Itis worth mentioning that Hillary Clinton spoke positively about Democrat Senator Robert Byrd, a former Ku Klux Klan member in the 1940s emphasizing his growth, mentorship, and legislative contributions. In her June 28, 2010, statement after Byrd’s death, she called him a “true American original, my friend and mentor,” praising his eloquence, dedication to West Virginia.