—Kerry Hill, B1Daily

Since the legalization of abortion in 1973, the United States has seen an estimated 100 million Black babies aborted, a staggering loss that has reshaped the demographic, economic, and cultural landscape of Black America. Planned Parenthood, founded by eugenicist Margaret Sanger, disproportionately targets Black neighborhoods, with 79% of abortion clinics located in majority-Black communities.

The Economic Devastation of Abortion

Had these 100 million Black lives been allowed to flourish, the Black community today would be economically stronger, politically more influential, and socially more resilient. Consider the economic impact:

– Workforce & Innovation: Millions of potential entrepreneurs, scientists, artists, and leaders were erased before birth. Black-owned businesses, already underrepresented, would have had a much larger consumer base and talent pool.

– Political Power: The Black voting bloc, currently around 14% of the electorate, could have been closer to 30%, enough to sway national elections without reliance on Democratic policies.

– Family Wealth: Abortion disrupts generational wealth-building. Two-parent households (more common before Roe v. Wade) create financial stability, today, 72% of Black children are born to single mothers, a direct result of abortion normalizing fatherlessness.

The Democratic Party’s Role in Forcing Abortion on Black America

The Democratic Party, under the guise of “reproductive rights,” has pushed abortion as the primary solution for Black poverty, instead of economic empowerment. Key facts:

– Planned Parenthood receives over $500 million annually in government funding, much of it funneled through Democratic-backed legislation.

– Black women are 3x more likely to abort than white women—a statistic pro-choice activists ignore while calling themselves “allies.”

– Abortion is the leading cause of death in the Black community, surpassing crime, disease, and accidents *combined.

A Future Without Abortion Dependency

Imagine a Black America where:

– 50 million more Black professionals entered the workforce.

– Black voting power forced both parties to compete for their support, rather than being taken for granted.

– Stronger families rebuilt community cohesion.

Abortion didn’t “liberate” Black women, it robbed Black America of its future. The road to true empowerment begins by rejecting the lie that abortion is healthcare and rebuilding a culture of life.

The question remains: Who benefits from a smaller, weaker Black population? The answer speaks volumes.

—Kerry Hill, B1Daily

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