In 1902, 22-year-old Sanger graduated as a practical nurse from White Plains Hospital in Westchester County, NY. It was a two-year program. She had planned to go on for a third year to become a registered nurse, but her plans changed. That spring she met the architect and painter, William Sanger. They were married that August (Chesler, 1992, 47–48). Within a year, two events occurred that set the stage for the dramatic struggle between Sanger and the government that would last her lifetime — Englishman Havelock Ellis published his landmark Studies in the Psychology of Sex (Ellis, 1942 [1903]) and President Theodore Roosevelt made the eugenicist declaration that it was “race suicide” for white, Protestant, Anglo- Saxon women to use birth control (Roosevelt, 1905, 4).
today, it's abortion for blacks, especially in NY where 50% of all black pregnancies end in abortion. their % of the population is dropping year by year. it doesn't help that the great society replaced the black male as head of the household and destroyed the notion of the virtue of work.