Princeton and Woodrow Wilson

Watch it, next he'll be telling you that you're an example of why women shouldn't have been given the vote. ;)

we would 100% be better off as a nation if women couldn't vote. Women are the primary takers. They operate on feels and hate guns cause they are scary.
 
I have been reading up about Margaret Sanger and she wasn't the most savoury of characters, to be honest. She used to speak at KKK rallies and it would seem that a number of black ministers want her bust removed from the Smithsonian Institution. I recognise that they are biased because they are against abortion but there is no doubt that she was an enthusiastic supporter of eugenics as were many other prominent people at the time. People that included H G Wells, Winston Churchill, Helen Keller, Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr, John Maynard Keynes, Edward Franklin Frazier (the most important African-American sociologist in the last century) and Clarence Darrow.


http://cns7prod.s3.amazonaws.com/attachments/ministers_letter.pdf
 
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I have been reading up about Margaret Sanger and she wasn't the most savoury of characters, to be honest. She used to speak at KKK rallies and it would seem that a number of black ministers want her bust removed from the Smithsonian Institution. I recognise that they are biased because they are against abortion but there is no doubt that she was an enthusiastic supporter of eugenics as were many other prominent people at the time. People that included H G Wells, Winston Churchill, Helen Keller, Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr, John Maynard Keynes, Edward Franklin Frazier (the most important African-American sociologist in the last century) and Clarence Darrow.


http://cns7prod.s3.amazonaws.com/attachments/ministers_letter.pdf

One of Sanger's greatest influences, sexologist/eugenicist Dr. Havelock Ellis (with whom she had an affair, leading to her divorce from her first husband), urged mandatory sterilization of the poor as a prerequisite to receiving any public aid. The Problem of Race Regeneration, by Havelock Ellis, p. 65, in Margaret Sanger: Father of Modern Society, p. 18. Ellis believed that any sex was acceptable, as long as it hurt no one. The Sage of Sex, A Life of Havelock Ellis, by Arthur Calder-Marshall, p. 88
 
we would 100% be better off as a nation if women couldn't vote. Women are the primary takers. They operate on feels and hate guns cause they are scary.

Who's we? You and philly rabbit?


Either you are fake red pill twit or you are a fake libertarian. You can't be both. Pining for the days when minorities were oppressed and the welfare state was designed for the sole benefit of white males is not a call for more liberty.
 
we would 100% be better off as a nation if women couldn't vote. Women are the primary takers. They operate on feels and hate guns cause they are scary.

Guns are only scary when they are in the hands of idiots and children. When you are instructed about handling guns you don't fear them you respect them because if you don't follow the rules you could end up dead.
 
Who's we? You and philly rabbit?


Either you are fake red pill twit or you are a fake libertarian. You can't be both. Pining for the days when minorities were oppressed and the welfare state was designed for the sole benefit of white males is not a call for more liberty.

Doesn't mean he advocates it. While he could just be trolling the women, Grind might just have the feels for something he doesn't actually promote politically.

:cof1:
 
Who's we? You and philly rabbit?


Either you are fake red pill twit or you are a fake libertarian. You can't be both. Pining for the days when minorities were oppressed and the welfare state was designed for the sole benefit of white males is not a call for more liberty.

or i am trolling you fucking tard
 
It might be for the best overall to not have statues of political figures on university campuses anyway.
 
It might be for the best overall to not have statues of political figures on university campuses anyway.

Why not?

A lot of political figures have started and/or contributed to a slew of universities and colleges throughout our history.

Why not honor them for their contribution(s)?
 
Why not?

A lot of political figures have started and/or contributed to a slew of universities and colleges throughout our history.

Why not honor them for their contribution(s)?

I guess that makes sense. I'm just not a big fan of statues of people.
 
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