Risky Business

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Women, no doubt had it hard in America's past. It is still difficult for women today to feel as if they are treated equally to men, but nowhere near as much so as in the past. Many women have fought hard and dedicated their lives to bettering the future for women. Some even risked and gave up their freedom to demonstrate how important it was for society to change. I believe a great example of someone who risked many things for the future of women in society was Margaret Sanger.

Sanger began her journey into historical fame as a visiting nurse, someone who saw all of the pain and suffering that women went through due to the lack of birth control and the lack of acceptance of birth control in America, at that time.

"Jake Sachs, a truck driver scarcely older than his wife, had come home to find the three children crying and her unconscious from the effects of a self-induced abortion. He called the nearest doctor, who in turn had sent for me. . . ." (Woloch 355)

Sanger saw pain and worry that some of us have never seen before in our lives. These women had no form of protection, so they got pregnant often. This in itself was not a problem. The damage they were doing to their bodies during the process of a "knitting-needle abortion" was becoming fatal.

Rightfully so, Sanger thought the lack of protection and information that was being provided or even legal to provide was a crime against women's rights. The following is a clip from Sanger's "This I Believe" speech from November of 1953.

If she was going to stand up for the future women of the world, than she needed to do a few things first. As she said in her speech, she needed to prepare herself to face popular belief, ridicule, the courts, imprisonment, and indictment....

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...ing change.

Works Cited

Caplow, Theodore, Louis Hicks and Ben Wattenberg. The First Measured Century : An Illustrated Guide to Trends in America, 1900-2000. Washington D.C.: American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, 2001.

CDC. Achievements in Public Health, 1900-1999: Healthier Mothers and Babies. 1 October 1999. .

NYU. Margaret Sanger's THIS I BELIEVE, November 1953. 3 May 2010. 17 August 2011 .

Sanger, Margaret. "No Gods No Masters." The Woman Rebel March 1914.

Woman and the New Race. New York: Brentano’s, 1920.

Woloch, Nancy. Women and the American Experience. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2011.

"Margaret Sanger." 2011. Biography.com. 19 Aug 2011, 09:15 http://www.biography.com/articles/Margaret-Sanger-9471186.

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