Category: history
Crash Course: History of Suffrage, Feminism, and the Pro-Life Movement
Lily Gilliland | September 8, 2020
The Women’s Suffrage Movement is historically regarded as beginning with the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848 (with some saying it began earlier in 1820), and ended with the ratification of the 19th amendment granting women the right to vote in 1920. The Seneca Falls Convention is seen as the force which propelled the women’s suffrage movement into its success in
Margaret Sanger is Being Whitewashed in High School History Books
Jessica Nardi | September 8, 2020
You’d think the foundations of the birth control movement would be explored in history classes when studying its impact on the sexual revolution. At a surface level, teachers may chalk it up to sexual decadence–they might even celebrate it as “sexual liberation”–but the history of the organized eugenics movement driving the nation’s largest abortion machine remains buried. A recent
A History Lesson: Abortion & the African-American Community
Toni McFadden | February 14, 2020
February is Black History Month. And for black pro-life advocates, it’s a month of renewed vigor. Why? Because we know that abortion is history repeating itself, that the racist madwoman who founded Planned Parenthood is getting exactly what she wanted, and that this is a fight for our lives and our dignity. Abortion and the Black Community Abortion has always