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Blinded by the light
Convenient theology, that.
I've ignored Flynn, his connections would make him a hostile witness to Sanger's life anyway.
Chesler is an actual author. She wrote Woman of valor : Margaret Sanger and the birth control movement in America / c1992, Simon & Schuster. Sanger suffered four heart attacks (this before cardiac bypasses were routine), & she suffered other ailments as well - tubercular infections, gall bladder.
On p. 458 of her biography, Chesler writes:
In 1961, "Back in Tucson (AZ) a new doctor slowly weaned Margaret (age 82) of her addiction to painkillers and limited her to one drink a day."
She died of arteriosclerosis @ age 87 in Sept. 1966; a private funeral service was held in Tucson, lightly attended.
Weeks later, a memorial service was held @ St. George's Church on Stuyvesant Square in New York. Chesler, p.467:
"The city's heaviest rainfall in sixty-three years produced gale-force winds and tortuous traffic congestion that day, and many of the mourners arrived late for the service in the large and beautiful church."
If you cite authors, you might want to read what they actually say/write beforehand. Instead of merely cherry-picking scandalous material for the most damaging things you can find.
Ms. Sanger performed the will of her master - satan. Satan's will is not dependent on the will of god, IT OPPOSES the will of God in every way possible. i.e. God is responsible for giving us life, satan is responsible for death. …
The Truth About Margaret Sanger
…
As author Daniel Flynn writes: “She was a serial adulterer. Among the scores who shared her bed were some of the most famous men of her time, including novelist H. G. Wells and sex researcher Havelock Ellis. As she cheated on her husband of the moment with not-so-secret lovers, she cheated on these paramours with still other beaus. These encounters, biographer Ellen Chesler suggests, were limited neither to members of the opposite sex nor to two participants.”[2] Sanger eventually separated from her husband in 1914.
Daniel J Flynn also claims she died addicted to the painkiller Demerol and also an alcoholic. Also nobody came to her funeral.
…
Convenient theology, that.
I've ignored Flynn, his connections would make him a hostile witness to Sanger's life anyway.
Chesler is an actual author. She wrote Woman of valor : Margaret Sanger and the birth control movement in America / c1992, Simon & Schuster. Sanger suffered four heart attacks (this before cardiac bypasses were routine), & she suffered other ailments as well - tubercular infections, gall bladder.
On p. 458 of her biography, Chesler writes:
In 1961, "Back in Tucson (AZ) a new doctor slowly weaned Margaret (age 82) of her addiction to painkillers and limited her to one drink a day."
She died of arteriosclerosis @ age 87 in Sept. 1966; a private funeral service was held in Tucson, lightly attended.
Weeks later, a memorial service was held @ St. George's Church on Stuyvesant Square in New York. Chesler, p.467:
"The city's heaviest rainfall in sixty-three years produced gale-force winds and tortuous traffic congestion that day, and many of the mourners arrived late for the service in the large and beautiful church."
If you cite authors, you might want to read what they actually say/write beforehand. Instead of merely cherry-picking scandalous material for the most damaging things you can find.