In God We Trust

DO BLACK ABORTIONS MATTER?

 

By Maj. Gen. Jerry R. Curry (Ret'd)
CurryforAmerica.com

Until recently, African Americans were the nation’s second largest ethnic group. Now, over a thousand black babies are aborted every day with no protests or signs of outrage emanating from the Congressional Black Caucus, the NAACP or the nation’s black churches and communities. If abortions continue at the present rate, by the end of the century there won’t be many black Americans left in the nation.

Since its founding, abortion has become an American multi-billion dollar industry run by white doctors and nurses in or near black neighborhoods.  Some estimates claim that these doctors gross up to $60,000 a week. The abortion industry has become a source of new millionaires for America’s white population and, at the same time, a scourge to the black American race. It tears the guts out of black families and communities.

It is partly why black America and its families are in such crisis; why black communities are not working; why black families and churches are not working, part of the reason why the  black entertainment industry is encouraging vulgarity, thuggery, and the peddling of crude, course, evil, drug soaked hip-hop-rap which today passes for music. Its message is clear, human life is unimportant.

More than any other person, the current occupant of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue is responsible for much of the moral decay and destruction that we Americans face, especially black Americans.  So if in future years, our children and grandchildren are forced to grapple with the insidious problems we have left them to solve, they may continue to conclude that perhaps abortion is not such a bad choice after all.

Planned Parenthood was founded in 1916 by a white woman named Margaret Sanger, under the guise of the “Negro Project,” which was supposed to provide American women with “birth control for health.”  Sanger’s real purpose was to reduce the number of black babies being born in the United States, thus shrinking the size of the nation’s black population.

Because Sanger and Planned Parenthood started off targeting pregnant black women, it caused them to build most of their abortion clinics in or near black population centers, which is still the case today. In Detroit there are eleven abortion clinics. According to Michigan Right to Life, nine of these clinics have mostly black clientele or are located within black neighborhoods. Census reports show that African American women are 4.8 times more likely to have an abortion than white women, and that 73% of black children are born into female, single parent households.

Clearly black men have failed black women, black families, and black communities.  They impotently stand idly by while their women and children are ravaged by black-on-black crime and rampant drug sales and use. These evil failures cannot solely be blamed solely on absentee fathers.  Some of the blame must be absorbed by the women who want the good feel of sex without having to accept its inevitable consequences and responsibilities. So for them, as well as for the absentee fathers, abortion is an easy way to escape the responsibility of establishing a home and raising children.

Sanger viewed Negroes as being racially tainted and inferior to whites. In her 1932, “Plan for Peace,” she wrote that concerning Negroes she was in favor of, “A stern and rigid policy of sterilization and segregation to that grade of population (Negroes) whose progeny is already tainted.” That is, she felt about Negroes the same way many Muslims feel about Israel’s Jews today, that the world would be better off if they were all dead.

These problems are further exaggerated by the conduct of both white and black political leaders whose only purpose seems to be finding new ways to raise and spend taxpayer money, expand the bureaucratic regulatory process, and by unfairly taking money from America’s hard-working middle class families and distributing it to those who choose not to work.

Dr.  Martin Luther King, Jr. wasn’t just speaking to black Americans when he said, “There is no black problem … There is only an American problem.”  And it will take both white and black Americans working in harmony to solve them, because with the passage of time the evil effects of these problems become more and more exaggerated.  Dr. King would be horrified to see the degenerative state of today’s black and white families. This is not the kind of America that he gave his life to build.

Yes, black abortions matter . . .  so does the wanton, senseless killing and dismembering of all human babies.