Showing posts with label Alveda King. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alveda King. Show all posts

Saturday, September 6, 2014

The War against Black Population Growth

Abortions’ racist foundation has been effectively concealed from the beginning and most in the Black community do not realize the war against black family reproduction began in 1916 with the founding of Margaret Sangers’ Birth Control League. By the late 1930’s Sanger, in concert with Clarence Gamble (Proctor and Gamble) launched a specific project against the Black family – The Negro Project that “… sought to bring about a major birth-rate reduction among American Negroes”.* The Negro Project enlisted ministers to aid in promoting the project,  and Gamble proposed physicians join them.  He said “There is great danger that [the project] will fail because the Negroes think it a plan for extermination. Hence let’s appear to let the colored run it.…

Not much has changed except the growing list of Blacks Planned Parenthood has convinced to join their genocidal program that is steeped in the eugenics/population control movement. Today Black ministers, entertainers and other leaders are used as tools to not only conceal this design, but to encourage its victims to participate in their own ethnic cleansing. Major corporations, many of whom support getting “rid of populations we don’t want too many of”**, fund Planned Parenthood's targeting of Black and other women of color while  increasing what they call their “ineffective outreach” ***that in some cities has resulted in more Black babies being aborted than born alive.

Tasha Smith, a Tyler Perry favorite actress, is the latest to join the growing list of Black entertainers willing to ignore Planned Parenthood’s racist history in favor pushing their sisters, cousins, daughters and aunties into the abortion centers that dot Black neighborhoods.  Tasha, Gabrielle Union, Star Jones and others ignore the reports coming out of the hood of the many women injured in the centers. They ignore the stories that reveal how Black women are writhing, sometimes on the floor, curled into the fetal position because of the pain they experience after a botched abortion. They ignore the increasing number of young, vibrant Black women dying at the hands of substandard abortionists, instead “choosing” to promote abortion over every other option.

I read a report today about a Michigan abortionist, Robert Alexander, who testified he has had a bi-polar disorder since he was 19. He was pleading to be allowed to continue his practice, citing the Americans with Disabilities Act as his shield. His abortion center had been shut down by the Fire Department after they determined it posed a “danger to human life”. This abortionist had been operating for years in this environment while his friends in high places covered for his substandard care:



Since Kermit Gosnell, the original “House of Horrors” abortionist was discovered; there has been a marked uptick in the numbers of women being injured in these centers. For years statisticians reported 3% of the more than 1.2 million abortions each year required hospitalization. Last last year they began to report it is 5%****. That is more than 60,000 women a year leaving the abortion center injured, sometimes in the back of an ambulance. Kermit Gosnell, Robert Alexander and the growing number of substandard providers around the country are the rule rather than the exception. Yet, Planned Parenthood argues that requiring these abortionists to meet ambulatory surgical center standards is a hardship that denies Black women access to abortion. They work to convince America that doctors who cannot get admitting privileges to nearby hospitals should be able to keep butchering women because doing so ensures poor women can receive “reproductive justice”.  So what that they are getting two for one, the mother and the baby die,because it moves them closer to their Nazi-like ethnic cleansing goals.

Planned Parenthood knows no boundaries as it rabidly pursues the lives of Black babies and women. Perpetuating the Black women are violent stereotype, they urge Black women to attack Black legislators that have taken the lead to protect women entering the abortion centers. One example of this is the Gulf Coast Planned Parenthood Director that urged local activist Deon Haywood of Women with a Vision, to “kick the ass” of Katrina Jackson, a Black legislator who authored Louisiana’s most recent pro-life legislation. Or they pump thousands into campaigns to defeat Black legislators who dare to stand against their abortion at all costs stance as Pennsylvania Legislator Margo Davidson did when she voted to regulate abortion mills in her state so no woman would die in the same manner as her cousin who was butchered by Kermit Gosnell.

I pray Tasha, Gabrielle, Star, Nia, Kelli and all the other Black ministers, elected officials, and leaders will come out from among those that are killing us. I pray they will join me, Alveda King, Day Gardner, Star Parker, Angela Minter, Zina Hackworth, Connie Eller, LaVerne Tolbert,  LaKita Wright, Christina Bennett, DeHaviland Ford and the hundreds of other Black women that recognize and work against the hand of death that is Planned Parenthood’s Negro Project.


  * http://bit.ly/1tduQlp
 **http://nyti.ms/1lHtPTT
***http://bit.ly/1iwUJqw
****http://bit.ly/1bZJLuQ


Monday, August 18, 2014

Taking It To The Streets – Getting Planned Parenthood Out of Our Communities

This weekend I was privileged to serve with Arnold Culbreath, Dean Nelson, Alveda King, and Ryan Bomberger in Cincinnati, Ohio at the 26th Annual Black Family Reunion that was held at Sawyer Point. A number of vendors, organizations and entertainers gathered to inform, educate, feed and entertain attendees. Protecting Black Life, Arnold’s organization, hosted a booth and we were able to interact with a number of Cincinnati Black Families, informing them of the genocidal impact abortion has had on the Black community. After settling in at the booth, we took time to visit one or two others including the both hosted by Planned Parenthood. Three beautiful, vibrant young ladies were there distributing the organizations’ materials. At first I was heartbroken. I was told this was the first time the booth was staffed by blacks. In previous years it had always been staff by white women. Seeing these beautiful young ladies reminded me of the steps Planned Parenthood has taken in their multi-year campaign to reach Black and other women of color. After quizzing the young women I realized the volunteers  had little or no knowledge of Planned Parenthood’s continuing Negro Project launched in 1939 to control the Black birth rate. The paid staffer seemed to have been given a script which she faithfully tried to execute, including telling us she would ask us to leave.

Alveda and Ryan both gave the women something to think about. Alveda spoke of her uncle Martin Luther King, Jr. and how she believes he would never have supported aborting Black babies. She respectfully requested they no longer use her uncle, his image or his words in support the organization's Negro Project. Ryan shared how he had been conceived in rape, and his mother chose to give him life rather than death. He celebrated her decision that allowed him to achieve the possibilities life has placed before him. A number of people came to collect their information, most unaware that women were dying in abortion centers around the country and that many abortionists do not operate their centers under reasonable standards of medical care. In fact, most did not know the doctors cannot get admitting privileges to local hospitals because they have such a poor record of treating women. For these women our information was eye opening to say the least.

I do not know how many of those we spoke with challenged the Planned Parenthood volunteers and staff.  I do not know how many of those we spoke with refused Planned Parenthood’s materials because they had learned of Planned Parenthood’s multi-year campaign to draw women of color into the many unsafe abortion centers that are located within a two mile walking radius of a Black or Latina neighborhood. Maybe it was the reports, from all over the nation, of the women that have been injured and required hospitalization because the abortionist did not exercise care when doing the surgery that slowed the flow of those visiting the Planned Parenthood booth.  Uterus perforations, bowel punctures, infections from unsanitary instruments, hysterectomies, infertility, the list is growing each year as the so called doctors continue in their unsafe practices and very few of those with whom we shared had any idea of the havoc women are facing because of poor medical standards employed within the abortion centers in their neighborhoods. 


I do not know how many of those we spoke with challenged Planned Parenthood about the many women that have died in Planned Parenthood clinics. Women  like Tonya Reaves who was left bleeding in a Chicago Planned Parenthood  for more than five hours before they sought the emergency medical care their “doctor” was unable or unwilling to provide. I do not know how many of those we spoke with reminded the workers of Planned Parenthood’s penchant for covering for pedophiles – as was the case in Arizona when they failed to report a serial rapist to authorities. They have refused to report these rapists that are preying on young girls. Perhaps it was our discussion of the filthy conditions found in a Delaware Planned Parenthood after five botched abortions injured five different women in about a month’s time. We may never know which of our discussions had the greatest impact. What we do know is that Planned Parenthood did not return for day 2 of the Reunion.  And for that we thank God. For that I am no longer heartbroken, but rejoicing.  On day 2 of the Reunion, Blacks and women of color were spared the lies Planned Parenthood spins to lure them into their abortion dens and I can’t help but believe we saved lives.


Friday, September 2, 2011

Abortion in the Hood, A Matter of Choice or Survival?

Those are strong words. They are words of truth. The black community has been targeted by the abortion industry and we have been targeted to such an extent that choice has been erased. Don’t believe it? Look at the facts. Just this week Life Dynamics issued this report: Racial Profiling by Planned Parenthood and the American Abortion Lobby Documented (http://bit.ly/ploVH0), that clearly and irrefutably shows that race is a factor in the location of abortion clinics around the nation. Take a look at the data from almost every state that reports abortion data by race – there is a clear pattern of black babies being aborted at two to four times the presence of blacks in the population of each state (http://bit.ly/piswfK).

For more than thirty eight years, the abortion industry has preyed upon those found in urban neighborhoods, feasting off blood of the more than twenty million black babies that have died in abortion chambers across the nation. And still they clamor for more, arguing that their targeting is a matter of choice when in fact it is a matter of genocide. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a sitting Justice since 1993, told us so two years ago in her interview with the New York Times Magazine (A Place of Women on the Court http://nyti.ms/3fbv4f) .
Clearly there is and was a need to do something different to shine a light on this dark agenda of the abortion industry. And we did. Several black prolife leaders joined me in an initiative to reach an untapped, but influential sphere of influence in the black community – the barber and hairstylist. Arnold Culbreath of Protecting Black Life, Dean Nelson of CareNet, Christina Martina of Bound for Life Atlanta, Alveda King of Priests for Life and other leaders convened at the Bronner Brothers Hair Show at the Georgia World Congress Center to participate in the Sampson Project – an outreach to those in the hair care field. We did not go to talk politics. We did not go to debate using the abortion rhetoric of today. We did not go to spin a yarn based on hype. We went to call attention to the leading cause of death in the black community. We went to awaken these influencers to the depopulation effect of abortion in America’s oldest minority community. We went to call attention to the loss of our legacy, our strength in abortion clinics across America. We went to enlist the aid of those who can make a difference in the fight while bringing clarity to the issue of abortion’s eugenics roots.

And we succeeded. More than a thousand make-up artists, nail technicians, hairstylists and barbers from 34 states and two nations (England and Canada) agreed to talk about the real purpose of abortion in America. Each one agreed to watch the documentary MAAFA 21 and to talk about it and the facts as presented in the packet of information we gave them. We showed them these statistics while having real life talks with them:

As they searched for their states' numbers looks of unbelief and sometimes horror flooded their faces. They began to understand the real impact abortion is having on the black community and we could see a new determination to get a better understanding of abortion and its roots in the American culture.

Many of those that stopped at the booth had their own story to tell. There were some that came to have prayer because they had urged an abortion upon their child. There were others that had abortions themselves and finally, could talk about it. There were those whose family members had abortions, one man reported his sister had eleven! There were those who called themselves pro-choice, but came away from the booth with a clearer picture of how abortion was being used as an instrument to control the black birth rate rather than an agent of a woman’s right to choose. There were pastors and bishops that were able to see that abortion in the black community is no civil right, but is a population control tool that is successfully decimating communities of color.

The three days that many sacrificed to participate in this outreach immediately bore fruit as more than a thousand new voices have been added to the great awakening, the third wave of advocates that now know abortion is no friend of women, especially women in communities of color. You may know barbers and hairdressers that would like to have this information in their hands. Contact the Restoration Project at Presidenttlrp@gmail.com to request more information.

Monday, August 2, 2010

A Stain on The Dream, Part 2

While the National Park Service was busy violating our first amendment right to peacefully assemble, the ‘protestors’ were loudly chanting their dissent through their megaphone. Ignoring the fact that a significant number of those on the Freedom Ride were black, the protesters acted as if those present were all white and they were angry and offended that we sang We Shall Overcome. Despite the presence of Naomi and Alveda King (wife and daughter of A.D. King) they were angry and offended that we sought to show our respects at the tomb of MLK. They were defiant in their anger, believing we had no “right to co-opt” the civil rights legacy.

Co-opt the civil rights legacy - what does that mean?! The civil rights movement that I remember brought attention to the horrific impact of slavery and Jim Crow. Martyrs like Emmet Till put a face on the inhumane treatment of blacks in the south and around the nation. It demanded an end to government sanctioned institutionalized racism. The prolife movement has drawn similar attention to the abortion industry. As clearly documented in the annals of history, abortion is cloaking government sanctioned institutionalized discrimination. The location of the clinics and the numbers of abortions performed on blacks bear this belief out. Yet these protestors condemned us for "stepping on their rights" as they accused us of perpetuating the discrimination.

In my mind I had thought that once the abortion industry was exposed, there would be an uprising all across the nation to stop it. When Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg acknowledged her understanding “…that at the time Roe was decided, there was concern about population growth and particularly growth in populations that we don’t want to have too many of” I had no idea that abortion was so deeply rooted in our community. I believed everyone would recognize that the group we "don't want too many of" is African American. Even with this revelaton many black women override our history of racism and discrimination in order to participate in abortion’s killing fields.

There was a time in the black community when it would have been unconscionable for a black woman to even consider killing her children in this way. Despite being raped by slave or KKK masters of the south, black women bore their children with a dignity that surpassed the day to day obstacles of race. My memories of being black in America are of strong black men and women that defied the odds and kept and raised their children despite massive social justice concerns that sought to make it otherwise. Many black women suffered the indignity of being considered the mammy of the white child when it was her own child. Blacks suffered the indignity of being shuffled aside when whites passed, or when they were made to sit in the backs of buses and other transportation, in order to make a way for their children to live.

The civil rights era I remember draped itself in the principles expounded in the Bible. It did not subordinate itself to the political dogma of ungodly principles, such as those found in today’s Democrat Party. Never were we defined by whether or not we supported ungodly principles over all others – until now. Many blacks are so busy being Democrat we have forgotten our roots and what it means it be black. We no longer protect one another and our interests. We have succumbed to a dogma that has true racists shouting with glee because we participate in our own destruction.

I am sure that had we arrived earlier, we would have seen the white women of Planned Parenthood doling out the signs and other protest paraphernalia to their black “sisters”. We would have seen who is really behind these protests to keep killing black babies in the womb. We could have observed for ourselves how the puppet masters pulled the strings of those unfortunate women that were dancing the macabre dance of a woman’s right to choose.

The stakes have changed in the fight for rights. At stake are not civil rights, but the lives of millions of babies, little human beings the abortionists don’t want America to recognize or think about. At stake is the very legacy of the African American community. Without babies there is no African American community, there is no heritage, there is no lineage, and there is no life.