Sunday, February 7, 2010

Sean James/Al Joyner Abortion Commercial: Wither Whitey?

As a feminist deeply committed to social justice to the poor, I'll admit to being sensitive to the stink of reduce-the-undesirables-Margaret Sanger racist tripe from "Planned Parenthood". But, one of the things that struck me when I watched the abortion commercial is that there were no white men "celebrating families" who support the "wise" decision to leave one member of their family dead at an abortion clinic.

I couldn't think of a single reason why any woman in her right mind would be opposed to the empowerment of the Tebows' message so I was anxious to see where Planned Parenthood/NOW would go with it.

Watching these two black men trying to sell abortions as "respect for women" caught me so off-guard, it took my breath away.


The racist mission of Planned Parenthood is well documented. Sanger, a white woman who loathed her tax money being wasted on the poor, advocated Nazi-style exterminations of undesirables.

She was in cahoots with the Klu Klux Klan

Sanger's strategy for Planned Parenthood includes using blacks as props:

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." Margaret Sanger's December 19, 1939 letter to Dr. Clarence Gamble, 255 Adams Street, Milton,


Planned Parenthood is always claiming to be empowering women when they are actually dis-empowering them.



"There's a lot of talk leading up to the Super Bowl about an ad focused on sports and family," James says. "The ad features a great football player, Tim Tebow and his loving mother, discussing a difficult medical decision she made for her family," he says. "I respect and honor Mrs. Tebow's decision."

"I want my daughters to live in a world where everyone's decisions are respected," adds Joyner.


Why are we afraid to empower women with the knowledge that any man who had "respect" for the women they were sexually intimate with would step up to the plate and be a responsible father?

Why not empower adolescent girls with the kind of traits to look for in a well-balanced responsible loving and committed man?

Could it be Joyner is in the bunker with men who's wallets would cease to benefit them if casual sexuality were tied to child support payments with the realization that a woman can raise a talented, responsible, loving child when she's declined the invitation to be force-fed abortion?


James continues: "My mom showed me that women are strong and wise. She taught me that only women can make the best decisions about their health and their future."

"We're working toward the day when every woman will be valued; where every woman's decision about her health and her family will be trusted and respected," says James. Joyner concludes: "We celebrate our families by supporting our mothers, by supporting our daughters, by trusting women."

If his mom "showed" him "that women are strong and wise" then we can certainly overcome any obstacle society places in our way when somebody or something threatens the livelihood of her children.

That's what the Tebows are trying to get across.

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