Charlie Daniels writes in his July 22 CNSNews.com column:
A small quiz:
[…]
Who do you think made the following statement about blacks, immigrants and indigents?
“Human weeds … spawning class of human beings who never should have been born at all.”
Who said that they should enlist black ministers to sell black women on the prospect of abortion and the use of contraceptives in what was dubbed “The Negro Project”?
“We should hire three or four colored ministers, preferably with social-service backgrounds, and with engaging personalities. The most successful educational approach to the Negro is through a religious appeal. We don’t want the word to go out that we want to exterminate the Negro population, and the minister is the man who can straighten out that idea if it ever occurs to any of their more rebellious members.”Actually, it was Margaret Sanger, a woman, hailed as a hero in the ranks of feminism, who has coveted awards named after her, is revered by many prominent people in Washington and who founded the nation’s largest abortion mill, Planned Parenthood.
Margaret Sanger’s views on the controlled birth of children bordered on Nazism, and her views on religion and marital fidelity were akin to hedonism.
She made this statement: “The most merciful thing that the large family does to one of its infant members is to kill it.” And she was a closet advocate of black genocide.
Charlie Daniels is lying.
Planned Parenthood points out that “Sanger never described any ethnic community as an ‘inferior race’ or as ‘human weeds.'” We’ve caught WorldNetDaily repeating the dubious “human weeds” quote and falsely claiming Sanger was talking about blacks.
While the “spawning class of human beings who never should have been born at all” quote comes from Sanger’s book “The Pivot of Civilization” — and is actually a defense of the eugenics ideas she believed in, which were unfortunately popular at the time the book was written, and references to “blacks, immigrants and indigents” appear nowhere near it in the book — and not the term “human weeds” appears nowhere in the book, making Daniels a further liar for making up a quote.
Meanwhile, FactCheck.org reports that anti-abortion activists like Daniels love to take a certain Sanger quote — “We do not want word to go out that we want to exterminate the Negro population” — out of context to portray the “Negro Project” as some nefarious “black genocide” operation instead of the birth-control campaign it was. According to the Margaret Sanger Papers Project at New York University, states FactCheck, “No serious scholar and none of the dozens of black leaders who supported Sanger’s work have ever suggested that she tried to reduce the black population or set up black abortion mills, the implication in much of the extremist anti-choice material.”
Daniels’ rant on how Sanger’s views on birth control “bordered on Nazism” is simply bizarre. So if you take birth control, you’re Hitler? Please.
Being a famous entertainer like Daniels certainly grants him a soapbox, but he it doesn’t mean he has the right to lie.