Betty Dodson with Carlin Ross
Better Orgasms. Better World.
How perfect for mother's day weekend? Today marks the anniversary of the FDA's approval of the pill ushering in the new era of intentional motherhood.
Margaret Sanger, totally unaware that her lifelong dream had become reality, spent the day at her home outside Tucson, Ariz. Since 1914 she had battled ridicule and rigid laws, even gone to jail, all in pursuit of a simple, inexpensive contraceptive that would change women's lives-and save some as well. Now she was 80 and retired from her globe-trotting efforts.
Many women cannot tolerate the incidental effects-nausea, cramps, weight gain ... But before [the pills] become a matter of widespread practical concern the industry would have to do something about production and prices. The pills are in short supply and cost about 55 each.
No one from G.D. Searle & Co., the drug firm, thought to call the woman who had pioneered and pushed for funding to develop the world's first birth-control pill, called Enovid-10, a synthetic combination of hormones that suppresses the release of eggs from a woman's ovaries. Nor did she hear from John Rock and Gregory Pincus, the doctors who developed the oral contraceptive with $3 million that Sanger had raised from her friend Katherine McCormick, the International Harvester heiress.
Sanger got the news the next morning when her son Stuart and granddaughter Margaret read the newspaper. There they found a five-paragraph story announcing the Food and Drug Administration's approval of the pill as safe for birth control. The two, who lived next door, ran across the yard and opened the sliding glass door to Sanger's bedroom. It was 7 a.m., and she was eating breakfast in bed.
Without the least bit of elation, just a sigh of relief, Sanger said, "It's certainly about time." Then perking up, she added, "Perhaps this calls for champagne." Her son, a doctor who had patients waiting, and her granddaughter, due for class at nursing school, begged off. So Margaret Sanger, who had made a lifelong crusade of birth control after seeing her mother die at age 50, worn out by 18 pregnancies and 11 children, celebrated her victory alone-but triumphant.
A contribution that cannot be overstated
I cannot imagine a world without the efforts of Margaret Sanger. In my life, I have only ever known a world that has the freedoms of choice, whether you speak of birth control, abortion, working outside the home, never marrying or any of the countless options available to women today. I've read about what life was like before, when women had no freedom, but I know that no one alive today who, like me, has only lived in this free world, can even begin to imagine what life was like before. I don't know who or what made this world or what happens after we die, but I know this, if there is a God and there is a heaven, then surely Margaret Sanger was sent to this world to do her good work and accomplish what she did, and surely now she must still be one of God's own favorites. Thank you Margaret!
Only if you're white.
Dear Carlin and Ndlesdream,
Sanger was also a white supremacist and a racist. In addition to her love of Social Darwinism (not to be confused with Darwin's theory of natural selection) and Eugenics, she recruited many Nazi sympathisers to her cause.
So while it can be said that Sanger fostered freedom for extreme right-wing white Americans, many others were the subjects of forced sterilisation with the sole aim of not allowing what Sanger thought to be the 'inferior races' to reproduce.
It would be helpful perhaps to read some of the many well researched papers regarding the often frightening political motives behind Sanger's work before turning a monster into a saint. Hearing that some think that Sanger should be one of God's chosen people says a lot about the type of God theists love to support; as a non-white atheist I believe such views only underline how little ethics impinge upon the morality of the religious right wing.
Sincerely,
Chu
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