The politics of reducing the African American population

Email Print Twitter Facebook MySpace Stumble Digg More Destinations
David L. Horne, Ph.D.  |   OW Contributing Columnist

Practical Politics

A short time ago, and again recently, the Planned Parenthood Association (aka, Planned Parenthood Federation) has been in the news as a “whipping boy” for Republican budgetary cuts at the national and even state levels. Among the other criticisms thrown at President Obama (‘naiveté’ concerning the intricacies of the Middle East Crisis—meaning appearing not to agree with the Israeli government position—plus the myriad of other barbs), this one too is more about ideology than fact.

The Planned Parenthood Associaton is accused of utilizing federal budget funds for abortions (remember the recently debunked and embarrassing United States senator who said up to 90 percent of those funds support abortion activities?).

In more liberal circles, Planned Parenthood has been defended as a proponent of women’s rights to protect their own health, and although PP does promote and pay for a number of abortions, those activities are called small compared to PP’s dissemination of birth prevention and other health-related information to and for American women.

Rightly or wrongly though, what does this dust-up have to do with African Americans here in California and nationally? Do we really care about Planned Parenthood’s problems when we have our own many crosses to bear?

The standard answer of course is no, at first and even second blush, we don’t. But we should.

The No. 1 group adhering to the call for more abortions in the U.S.A. is African Americans. With Blacks constituting less than 13 percent of the American populaton, Black abortions account for more than, 30 percent of all abortions done annually in this country, including in excess of 1,900 Black abortions performed daily. The latest estimate is that since 1973, more than 13 million African American fetuses have been aborted.

In spite of the common stereotype of increasingly larger Black communities of offspring of unwed welfare mothers, as the latest census has shown, African Americans are declining as an identifiable population in this country. This is the case even though the sheer numbers of Black Americans have increased a bit.

Much of that expansion has come from immigration to the U.S.A. among Caribbean and continental African populations, and the natural increase by birth has become agonizingly slower. Within the last 40 years, in fact, the rate of African American births in the U.S.A. has gone down precipitously, and not many have paid enough attention to that statistic.  

Planned Parenthood was created and established to reduce the birth rate of Black and poor Americans, and it has become uncommonly successful in doing just that. Not only is Planned Parenthood the number one abortion agency in this country, it is overwhelmingly the single most sustained agent of abortion among the Black American population. Over a sustained period of time, it has been very good at utilizing Black celebrities and famous advocates to knowingly or unknowingly promote its anti-Black agenda. It gave Dr. King a major award in 1966, and the renowned African American Faye Wattleton was Planned Parenthood’s proud president for more than five years.

As historical background, dating back to at least the 1930’s, the increasing births of Black Americans both remaining in and migrating from the South into New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Newark, Detroit, and Los Angeles, among other areas, was deemed to be a serious American problem as cited in Margaret Sanger’s organizational magazine, “The Birth Control Review.” As part of the Eugenics Movement that has been around, alive and aroused for more than a century in this country, it was labelled the “Negro problem,” and such population control meant proscribing Black births and increasing White births to the fullest extent possible (shades of Brazil).

Latinos currently need to pay close attention to this history.

Sanger, along with interested neo-Nazi members of her organization, initiated the “Negro Project” to reduce the Black population, and this effort later morphed, with Sanger’s leadership, into the American mainstream organization, Planned Parenthood. Birth control clinics created or catalyzed by Planned Parenthood began popping up in rapid succession in rural southern areas, and by the 1960’s in most urban communities, where large groups of Blacks lived. Sanger’s group paid many Black ministers to give sermons and to provide regular counsel on the need to curb Black promiscuity and especially Black pregnancies. It also paid several noted Black researchers to publish studies advocating Black birth control, and it saturated Black communities with flyers and pamphlets on that issue. Planned Parenthood has been and continues to be highly successful at convincing significant members of the Black American population to commit what some call self-genocide, i.e., using the elimination of Black pregnancies as the first and second options when considering having children.

By the 1980’s and continuing into the 21st century, three out of five abortions performed in America were on Black mothers, primarily as a result of the work of Planned Parenthood. It has been relentless in pursuing that agenda.

Out of a high of 938 known abortion/medical health clinics, PP now has, according to a 2010 survey, 785 clinics and more than 86 affiliate facilities in operation. California hosts at least 29 PP clinics and facilities, with two in Los Angeles, one in Ricmond/Oakland, others in Pasadena, Lawndale, San Bernardino, Sacramento and Fresno.

Without a doubt, Planned Parenthood has assisted many women with health issues and it should be commended for that legacy. This article is no attack on that work. However, Planned Parenthood has also been both witness to and architect of a long-term campaign to reduce, if not eliminate entirely, the Black population of the U.S.A. based on its eugenics ideology. Margaret Sanger even famously wrote a letter stating that anti-Black objective in 1939, just before her giving birth to the Planned Parenthood Federation.

The Black community needs to look at this non-profit/ for-profit entity with a very careful and rueful eye. It has indeed been and is dangerous to our well being and should be known by that fact. All of our enemies are not dressed like wolves.

Professor David L. Horne is founder and executive director of PAPPEI, the Pan African Public Policy and Ethical Institute, which is a new 501(c)(3) pending community-based organization or Non-Governmental Organization (NGO). It is the step-parent organization for the California Black Think Tank which still operates and which meets every fourth Friday.

DISCLAIMER: The beliefs and viewpoints expressed in opinion pieces, letters to the editor, by columnists and/or contributing writers are not necessarily those of OurWeekly.

Related Articles

  • Obama’s job speech: will it put an end to political gamesmanship? -

    After the August employment report came and it showed the economy flatlining (at least for a month) on new jobs, President Obama’s jobs plan is coming right on time. Lazy ass Congress is back at work, after a summer of political gamesmanship, and we will now see if all the “big talk” will turn to action. Or will it be more of the ideological bickering that led to gridlock the past year, and the whining of  Democrats that the president is not fighting hard enough.

  • In the politics of cultural war, score one for Black women -

    A few weeks ago (May 15, 2011), a regularly controversial blogger who got paid for his writing, published in Psychology Today a piece on why Black women are uglier and less sexually attractive (except for exotic, freaky prostitution purposes) than any other ethnicity (his exact comparisons were with White, Asian and Native American women).

    The article was yet another pseudo-scientific polemic which insulted a group thought to be incapable of doing much more than harping a few vulgar replies before slipping back into the shadows. Hmmm.

  • The annual Congressional Black Caucus conference, 2011 -

    While Hollywood has recently been celebrating the Emmys, and speculating about Oscar nominations, the 41st annual Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s coordinating and hosting of the gathering of the nation’s Black elected officials is back on display in Washington, D.C., Sept. 21-24. This year’s event, in a bow to the new austerity sentiments, is a bit shorter by two days than previous CBC get togethers.

  • The politics of Africa on our minds -

    It is hard to keep the importance of the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial in perspective in the midst of the relentless reports of end-game, American-assisted bombing assaults on Libya, an African country, and as I ponder the deaths of another dear friend and fellow warrior in the struggle—Nzingha Heru, [head of the Association for the Study of Classical African Civilizations (ASCAC)], Nick Ashford, and way too many others. But in 2009, right after the death of Michael Jackson, President Obama made his first trip to Africa as the president of the United States.

  • ‘Mountain of Despair’ and ‘Stone of Hope’: the MLK Memorial -

    On August 28, 2011, a day chosen to celebrate the 48th anniversary of Dr. King’s famous “I Have A Dream” speech on the Washington Mall, another major milestone will occur. For the first time in American history, a centerpiece construction of a permanent stone and bronze monument will be erected in the nation’s capital for an African American who was not a former American president.

  • Across Black America

    Here’s a look at African American people and issues making headlines throughout the country.

    California
    Allied Integrated Marketing recently announced it is launching a new African American marketing division, Allied Moxy. The new division will create innovative campaigns that integrate publicity, promotions, digital and grassroots outreach to speak directly to the full diversity of African American consumers. Spearheading Allied Moxy are industry veterans Kim Walters and Gloria Jones. Walters will oversee national strategy from Los Angeles, while Jones will oversee regional/local strategy from Washington, D.C. Walters brings more than a decade of marketing experience working with entertainment companies such as Codeblack Entertainment, Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, and A&E Lifetime Television, as well as consumer brands such as KIA and L.A. Gear and awards programs such as NAACP Image Awards and Soul Train Music Awards. Jones has been with Allied for five years running publicity and promotional campaigns for clients, including Universal Pictures, Focus Features and Relativity Media, and previously worked for WBDC-TV in D.C. and MTV Networks’ Nick @ Nite and TV Land.

     

    Representing Los Angeles and Center Theatre Group, Tyler Edwards, a senior at the Orange County High School of the Arts, placed third at the national finals of the fifth annual August Wilson Monologue Competition (AWMC) at Broadway’s August Wilson Theatre in New York City. “I am thrilled . . . I’m so glad that I took it for L.A. the first time we got up . . . that’s what we’re talking about!” said an elated Edwards following the competition. Edwards, an aspiring actor, describes the soaring, lyrical monologues found in the plays by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright August Wilson as “very inspirational,” and said prior to the Los Angeles Regional Finals of the August Wilson competition, “I would love to share a bit of that inspiration with any audience, in hopes that they leave with more appreciation than they walked in with.”

     

    Georgia
    Bounce TV, the nation’s first-ever over-the-air broadcast television network for African Americans, will launch a second new original comedy series, “Uptown Comic,” on June 18, immediately after the series premiere of the just-announced sitcom “Family Time.” “Uptown Comic” is a half-hour series featuring stage and skit performances by some of the hottest up-and-coming comics in the country. The show is currently in production in front of a live studio audience at the longest-running African American comedy club in the U.S.—Uptown Comedy Corner in Atlanta. Actor and comedian Joe Torry (Russell Simmons’ Def Comedy Jam) hosts. “Family Time,” a half hour situation comedy created by Bentley Kyle Evans ( “The Jamie Foxx Show,” “Martin,” “Love That Girl”) and produced by Evans and partner Trenten Gumbs is set to launch Monday, June 18, at 8 p.m. The series premiere of “Uptown Comic” will follow and be seen weekly at 8:30 p.m. (All Times Eastern.)