Eugenicist to replace Jackson on $20 bill?
WASHINGTON (PNN) - March 24, 2015 - Illegitimate outlaw dictator President Barack Obama says a little girl wrote to him asking why there were no women’s faces on Fascist Police States of Amerika currency.
That started a movement by a group called Women on 20s, which is now conducting an Internet poll on which of 15 candidates should be the first to replace President Andrew Jackson - ironically the founder of Obama’s Democrat Party - as the face on a $20 bill.
But creating the biggest stir on the list of candidates is Margaret Sanger, the founder of Planned Parenthood, a eugenicist who advocated aborting as many black babies as possible for the benefit of society.
In Sanger’s book, Pivot of Civilization, she characterized African-Amerikans and immigrants as “human weeds,” “reckless breeders” and “spawning human beings who never should have been born.”
In Birth Control Review, she explained the purpose of the Amerikan Baby Code was to provide for a better distribution of babies and to protect society against the propagation and increase of the unfit. She also argued that women shouldn’t have the legal right to bear a child, and no man shall have the right to become a father, without a permit.
Yet, there she is among 15 candidates on the group’s website to replace the founder of the Democrat Party by 2020 - the 100th anniversary of the passage of the 19th Amendment that gave women the right to vote.
Legally it requires an act of Congress to order the Secretary of the Treasury to make such a change, but these are different times. Obama has used executive orders frequently in lieu of getting what he wants from the legislative branch of government, and that’s just what Women on 20s is urging now.
Of the seven bills in current circulation, all feature portraits of either a former president or a Founding Father.
Of the 15 candidates, the group is asking poll-takers to pick three. They include a bevy of other Democrats, radical feminists, and progressive heroines:
- Susan B. Anthony
- Clara Barton
- Rachel Carson
- Shirley Chisholm
- Betty Friedan
- Barbara Jordan
- Patsy Mink
- Rosa Parks
- Alice Paul
- Frances Perkins
- Eleanor Roosevelt
- Margaret Sanger
- Elizabeth Cady Stanton
- Sojourner Truth
- Harriet Tubman
“We at Women on 20s applaud President Obama for acknowledging that it’s time to put a woman’s face on our paper currency,” the group says on its website.
The group also let it be known it is pulling for the more radical “disrupters” on the list. Two former black slaves who went on to achieve greatness - Tubman and Truth - were also included, perhaps to compensate for the choice of Sanger.