Dark History - 5: Let's Talk About The Dark History Of Birth Control. Buckle In.
Episode Date: July 28, 2021Birth Control is in medicine cabinets all over the world, used by millions of women. But few know its scandalous history involves mass sterilizations of Puerto Rican women, an American business tycoon..., and an activist who dabbled in eugenics. What’s eugenics? You’ll find out. And it ain’t pretty. Today, Bailey reveals the big history behind the little pill that changed family planning forever. Partners for this episode include: Apostrophe, Embark, Scentbird and Wicked Clothes. Learn more during the podcast about special offers!
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Hi friends! I hope you're having a wonderful day today. My name is Bailey Sarian and this
is the Dark History Podcast. If you're a curious cat like myself then let's go on a journey
together and learn something new. Shall we? So the other day it was like 4 p.m. my phone alarm goes off. The alarm to take my birth
control you know it's like it's annoying. It's kind of scares you and sometimes I'm just not at home
you know like for this instance this day I was at a bar and I was drinking a beer and I didn't
have any water but I like needed to take my birth control because the alarm was telling me so, you know?
So I was sitting there like, well, hey, can you take birth control with beer?
I don't know. So I googled it because I was curious and I didn't want to die or anything, right?
Great. Anyways, I guess it's like not the best idea to have beer and birth control because it can
lead to blood clots or something, but I did
it anyways because I didn't have any water. Moral of the story though. What I'm getting at
is that I went down this rabbit hole of like where the hell did birth control come from,
you know? And like you know how Google works if you're listening, you know how it goes,
you go from one thing to another, and then the next thing you know you're learning all about eugenics. Let me tell you it was a ride okay. I thought birth control had to do with women's rights
reclaiming our bodies deciding when we want to have children. Oh, nay nay. No. I guess I had really
no idea where birth control came from and as it it turns out, it was a very scandalous situation
that took place in the 50s in Puerto Rico.
Mm-hmm.
Now it has an even darker history than you think.
First of all, I know what you're thinking at home,
like what the hell is up with Puerto Rico?
Like that in itself is confusing.
Is it part of the United States?
Is it not?
It is, but it isn't.
That's a whole nother mess.
But one thing we know for sure, okay.
Is that Puerto Rico has a very dark past of its own.
Oh, let me tell you, let me tell you.
Involving masterlization of its women
and has been used as a laboratory
for the United States government.
What? Yeah. So you're thinking, okay, Bailey, like, what does this have to do with
freaking birth control? I know, shut up, shut up, you're jumping ahead. We're gonna get there.
Look, it gets even more messed up when you look into the people who created birth control
and their motives seem to be a little suspicious to say the least.
Okay? Now, if you're curious to know the story of how the birth control pill came to be,
I think it's fair to say we should know the background of birth control and how this
whole journey started. So let's go back in time. Let me bust out my dark history book here and tell you
all about birth control and it's a very complicated past.
Mm-hmm.
So birth control, it has a really long and complicated past,
okay, it's too much to cover in 45 minutes,
but for example, did you know that there is proof
that about 3500 years ago in ancient Egypt, they used honey,
acacia leaves, and lint to block sperm.
Yeah, well, moist.
You know what I'm saying?
And in the 1800s, the most popular way to stop someone
from getting pregnant was something called
voluntary motherhood, aka promoting abstinence,
aka just not having sex, you know, which it's proven,
it does work, but many people found that to just be boring and unrealistic for them.
Now, this is important to mention because at this time, contraception was considered a
moral issue and not necessarily like a public health one.
So if you were having sex at this time out of wedlock,
you were considered a sinner.
Mm-hmm.
So yeah, I had nothing to do with public health
and everything to do with Jesus.
But in the 1910s, there were no healthcare standards for women.
Many women, they were dying during childbirth
or the child would die or even both of them would die.
So just having a child was very dangerous and technically it still is.
But because of this, women just wanted to have a choice whether they even wanted to have
a kid or not.
Right?
So I'm asking too much.
No!
So, let me tell you.
In 1914, there was this revolutionary movement happening, called the birth control movement.
Now, this was intended to spread the idea that women alone should be able to control whether they gave birth or not.
Now, within the movement, there was a belief that birth control could end human misery and create equality between men and women, rich and poor.
Now, this sounds like a great idea, right? And for
the most part I was working, affordable birth control has been available in the
United States over many decades, state by state. It's been easier to access
birth control. But in order to create new medication, you have to test it on
people, right? So they did just that. And they had their eyes set on the women of Puerto Rico.
But the real question is, were they pioneers or were they just taking advantage of?
And just when you think this story is dark, girl, it gets even darker.
Okay, look.
So buckle up, get ready for this ride.
Okay, so where did birth control come from?
Well, let me tell you, okay?
None of it would have happened if it wasn't for this woman named Margaret Singer.
I'm probably wondering who the hell is Margaret Singer?
Great question.
Margaret was the sixth of 11 children.
Her mom sadly died at the young age of 49, and Margaret would go on to become a nurse,
and that's when she realized how bad the healthcare system was, especially for women.
And Margaret knew she wanted to do something about it, okay?
She used to be this badass who had her own newspaper called The Woman Rebel.
She even popularized the term birth control in it. The slogan of the
newspaper, get this, no gods, no masters. Which totally sounds like the title of a hardcore
band's album. Right? Come on. No gods, no masters. It's just very dramatic, okay? But in this
context, they meant that women's choices shouldn't be controlled by anyone but themselves.
No God, no master.
You know, it's just a kind of later in her life, she would travel to Europe where she saw that they were already big fans of birth control.
And it wasn't such a controversial topic like it was in America.
It seemed like everyone in Europe agreed on it, and it was widely practiced,
and even considered traditional, in a sense.
But in America, oh, no, no.
Birth control was obscene.
Oh my God, I would never.
But in France, it was old news.
We, we, you know, match, we, we.
But around this time, war what was happening and many of the soldiers were returning from war with STDs like syphilis or gonorrhea
Pleasant now because of this it led to
Discussions within the military educating the soldiers on how to protect themselves from getting STDs in the first place and because men or
Soldiers are getting sex education within in the first place. And because men or soldiers are getting
sex education within the birth control movement, they thought, hey, like what about helping
the women and not just the soldiers? You know? And Margaret Sanger, she saw that opportunity
and took advantage of it. Once again, only because the men were affected, did birth control
get shot into this high-apportance thing.
If the STDs didn't happen,
the movement probably would have been delayed for even longer.
But it figures, you know, if a man is suffering,
only then does change follow.
Lee-Wee.
You know?
So, through the combination of good timing and public goodwill,
Margaret would go on to become the face of good timing and public goodwill, Margaret would go on to become
the face of birth control.
Even up until the end of her life, I mean even up until last year.
If you mentioned Margaret Singer, people were like, oh my god, she's like Jesus.
You know, like they would just lose her goddamn heads over her.
People were thinking she is just a literal saint.
But hold your horses pony boy
calm down calm your tits chill okay because one of her most popular beliefs was
that there was a link between overpopulation and poverty and Margaret would
spend many years trying to help poverty, strict and minority communities across
the world to get better access to birth control.
This was her goal, get everybody birth control
and we will eliminate poverty.
Now don't give me wrong, birth control was technically
around at this time.
Women had the option to get sterilized,
but sterilization is a very permanent option
and it's just not realistic for everybody.
So Margaret, she wants something easier,
something that someone could just take at home,
like a pill.
Oh my God.
But Margaret has the idea, right?
But she needs help.
She needs help from someone who has a lot of money,
someone with a lot of power,
and someone who can make all of her dreams come true.
One of those people, well, Mr. Clarence Gamble, doesn't that sound familiar?
Well, have you heard of Proctor and Gamble?
P and G?
DuPont, remember?
Well, Mr. Clarence Gamble was quite the millionaire who also had an obsession with believing
overpopulation and poverty were linked together.
Mr. Gamble started looking into birth control as a way to control populations that he considered
had high birth rates.
Oh, Margaret and Clarence?
Oh, they go way back.
They had worked together once before.
She knew he'd be a good partner
because they both had the same beliefs.
And Clarence's gamble at this point
had already been building women's health clinics
around the world as a way to keep the population low
and poor communities.
So Clarence gambles got the clinics,
but Margaret needs someone with the brains.
The noggin, you know? So that's when she finds Gregory Pinkis, a scientist
obsessed with reproduction, and he was also quite concerned with overpopulation
affecting the world. Margaret was quite impressed with his resume and with the help of some funding,
she was able to create the pill with Gregory Pinkis. Margaret and Pinkis have the pill,
Gamble has the clinics to administer the pill to a much larger audience. Baby, we're in
business. We are in business. They're like the little trio of mean girls almost.
I don't know.
Anyways.
So again, just like any new drug in the market,
it has to be tested.
So we're gonna test it is what they're thinking.
Well, that's when they land on the idea
of testing in Puerto Rico.
Now I know what you're thinking, why Puerto Rico?
I know, why Puerto Rico? I know, why Puerto Rico?
So here's why Puerto Rico was recommended.
This is what they say.
For starters, they had no laws against birth control.
It was also one of the most densely populated areas
in the world, and Gamble already funded
a network of clinics there.
Great.
No laws, tons of test subjects,
and convenient places to test them.
Great!
During this time in 1937, the Puerto Rico government was also making the connection that overpopulation
was leading to poverty.
More poor people means less rich people in their eyes.
Doesn't that sound familiar, though?
Well, it should, if you've been listening, okay? less rich people in their eyes. Doesn't that sound familiar though?
Well, it should if you've been listening, okay?
Because that's the same belief Margaret, Pinkis, and Gamble had.
Super great!
Awesome, you know?
Another reason they wanted to go to Puerto Rico, they believed that the women there were
uneducated and they couldn't handle a simple birth control pill.
Yeah, it was going to be too complicated for them to take,
because according to them, not only are they poor,
but they're dumb as hell.
Mm-hmm.
But Pingu said this great idea.
It was like a light bulb moment to him.
If Puerto Rican women can figure out how to take this pill,
then that means anybody can do it.
Proving that this would be the simplest and easiest choice for
women. At this time, the government in Puerto Rico was pushing sterilization on women. In other
words, the women were getting their tubes tied and this was again to help with the overpopulation.
Because again, they didn't want more poor people in this area. The Puerto Rican government was really pushing propaganda that said,
if you don't have a small family, you're gonna be poor,
and you're gonna make Puerto Rico worse.
So they're like beating this into their heads from a young age.
It's literally like in their textbooks, PSAs,
it's all over the damn place.
Kind of like how they did to us, you remember,
like if you don't go to college, you're not going to succeed in life, you're not going
to get a real job, therefore you're not going to live the American dream. It was like that
to them. It was normal to them. Something you had to do in order to succeed in life,
get sterilized. And they couldn't afford it. Over half of the population was considered
poor.
Sterilization was such a normal thing for the women that clinics were literally installed
within the factories that the women worked at.
So like, you're on your lunch break, you have a little smoke, okay, you meet Dr. Bimbo,
get your tubes tied, call the kids, just a normal two-stay.
The doctors technically, they didn't lie to women about sterilization,
but treated it like it was really their only option. So when the pill came up,
the women finally felt like they had another choice. And Pinkis, remember the scientist,
he knew it made them perfect for the project. Because rather than the permanent solution
of sterilization, they had an easier option. They could just take a pill.
So around the year 1955, Pinkis, the scientist, he made the pill and started testing it in
small villages around Puerto Rico.
Now a lot of what happened at these trials was like one big secret, but what we do know
was that some of the quote, unquote, subjects were the
women that had already given birth in one of Gamble's clinics. You see, they had their
information on file so they called them up, wring, wring, wring, and all. And they're asking,
hey, would you be interested in trying a new form of birth control? It's a simple pill.
You could just take it. Doesn't that sound splendid?
And they're like, oh my god, yeah, I want to try this new thing.
That sounds so easy, I'll be right there.
In a documentary called Law Operation, a woman named Donna Maria, she tells a story of
clinic staff going door to door, asking if the woman at home would be interested in a
miracle pill that would stop you from getting pregnant.
And they purposely targeted the areas that were considered very poor and uneducated.
They were kind of like the Mormons, you know, going door to door knock-knock.
Who's there?
And like instead of offering salvation, they're offering a new form of sterilization.
But let's be clear, they said yes to this because of the fear and propaganda that was pounded into their noggin
Which conditioned them to agree and this was such an easier option than getting your tubes tied all you're saying is
I have to swallow a pill
Fuck yeah sign me up, you know like hello
Now this sounds too good to be true. How do you qualify for this new form of sterilization?
Well, you had to be a woman under 40.
Most were in their 20s, and they also had to have at least two children of their own.
Reason being, they wanted to stop these women from having more children and cut them off
at just two.
Don't you be brain more poor children into this world?
Nene. Eh. How could you? The first trial went on for months and 22% ended up
dropping out. Now they were dropping out because 17% of them were experiencing
some pretty serious side effects. Bloting, weight gain, dizziness, nausea, vomiting, bleeding, stomach aches, oh my god, yeah,
really bad headaches.
Now I'm sure some of you listening at home are like, hmm, that's what I experienced
today.
But the first bill had huge amount of hormones which made the effects way worse than you and
I have probably ever experienced.
Now, Pinkis, the scientist, and his other scientist friends,
they brushed off the side effects saying
that the Puerto Rican women were being too stupid
to follow directions.
No, I'm not making this up.
In official documents, it was said
that the women were unreliable,
and the effects were just in their head.
Ugh, yeah, they did that.
This was actually a really big deal, because the pill was going to be sold in the United
States, ignoring the side effects, not only were they putting women in Puerto Rico at risk,
but now they were putting women everywhere at risk.
On top of that, they weren't even telling the women that the pill was experimental in
the first place.
So many of the women didn't even know what they
were getting themselves into. If Pinkis, the scientist, pulled this shit in
mainland United States, his ass would be arrested for hiding this little truth
from his subjects. But because this is Puerto Rico, I guess it's fair game.
Many residents of Puerto Rico were Catholic and talking about sex and sterilization,
it wasn't just like a comfortable conversation you have with friends and family.
Getting an abortion was considered a forever sin in their eyes,
but taking birth control or getting sterilized was like a one-time offense in God's eyes.
So a lot of them said nothing at all. They weren't even sure what the hell to do.
Plus on top of this, the press was calling these trials racist because they were using
women of color as their guinea pigs for white medicine.
So the women of Puerto Rico are just being pulled in like every direction.
The Catholic church is telling them, you know, it's a sin, the press is saying it's racist,
the government is saying you have to do this or you won't succeed.
I mean what the fuck?
Like what are they supposed to do?
I don't know, they're being pulled in so many directions.
The pill trials continued on and then in 1960 the official birth control pill was released
to the public.
Ground breaking moment, but back in Puerto Rico, they continued these trials up until 1964.
Now it seems a little questionable
why they would continue these trials
if the pill was already released.
So we looked a little deeper.
And friends, this is where it takes a very,
most most serious part of these trials
is that while they were happening, three women died,
and nobody knows why.
There was no autopsy done on these
women, and to this day, there's no other information out there is like what happened to them. All we know
about the trials comes from the testimony of women who took part in them. One of the survivors we
mentioned earlier, Donna Maria, mentioned in the documentary, La Operation, said the nurse told her about
a magic pill that would stop her from getting pregnant.
All she had to do was sign up for the trial and she could get free health care on top of
that.
So she did.
And one day she took the pill on an empty stomach and said everything started spinning and she
felt like she was going to pass out or even die. Yeah, and like the worst thing of all when Donna Maria asked if she knew she was a test subject,
she went on to say she didn't know. So I'm pretty sure that's not cool.
There were other women who felt they were misled and also confused as to why they weren't told
they were test subjects in the first place, and others wanted to know why no one was allowing them
to make the decision for themselves,
meaning, you know, informed consent, telling them,
hey, this is an experiment in like your test subject.
They just wish they had been told the truth,
so they had the opportunity to actually choose
if they wanted to participate in this.
This is where we figure out that the scientists during the trials, they weren't necessarily
lying to the women.
They just weren't exactly telling them the truth, you know?
Now to understand this, we have to go back a bit to talk about Mr. Clarence Gamble.
You remember him.
He was the one who opened up the clinics, the trials, took place in.
Great.
Well, why did he open these in the first place?
And what were his intentions?
Cause I didn't know.
Do you know?
Well now I know, let me tell you.
Okay, great.
Mr. Gamble believed that there were less fit members
of society, and these less fit members needed to be wiped out
to make room for people he deemed worthy of society.
So Mr. Gamble created these clinics with the full focus of sterilizing as many women
as possible.
That way he could weed out those he considered less fit.
He even went as far as flying doctors from Puerto Rico to New York to learn more efficient
ways to sterilize women. Then he would fly him back and they would perform their new
techniques they just learned, all again with the goal of sterilizing as many
women as possible to prevent overpopulation. In the 1950s while the
trials are happening in Puerto Rico, Mr. Clarence Gamble over here, he was quite
the busy man.
He founded this non-profit called the Pathfinder Fund, which I learned has nothing to do with a car.
But it actually is still a thing today, and it's now called Pathfinder International.
Still nothing to do with a car though. The company's goal was meant to focus on better
reproductive health for lower
income territories, which sounds amazing, right? Like, wow, who doesn't want that? But,
this is a big but Pathfinder International released a statement this year 2021 admitting
that Gamble's motivation for this company was racially biased and actually
unscientific. Yeah, they also go on to say that Clarence Gamble without a doubt
was a eugenicist. Well, you're probably wondering what the hell is a eugenicist?
I know. Look, I'm gonna put myself on blast here and show you how dumb I am.
Well, tell you how dumb I am because I personally thought it had to do with plants.
It has nothing to do with plants.
It's actually much worse than plants, okay?
Eugenicists.
They kind of played Dr. Frankenstein trying to create the perfect society by breeding out
people with less desirable traits like the poor, uneducated, and the mentally ill.
In mind you, less desirable is debatable,
but to the more extreme eugenicist,
it was anything that wasn't blonde hair,
blue eyes, and light skinned.
If this all sounds familiar,
this is similar to what the Nazis did in World War II.
And I heard that that didn't go over so well.
So when somebody like Gamble is bringing something
we now know to be rooted in eugenics
to exclusively places where people of color live.
To put it bluntly, it seems like they're trying
to get rid of poor people of color.
Remember when Clarence Gamble was deciding
who was fit and not fit?
Well, that's actually considered eugenics babe, and it ain't a good thing.
Remember at the beginning when I mentioned Clarence Scamble and Margaret Singer?
They both shared this interest and population control over population.
You get it.
Well, it turns out Mr. Gamble and Margaret, they had worked on a project once before.
It was a program called
the Negro Project. Was this also based off Eugenics you ask? Question mark? Were they just trying
to get rid of a certain type of person you think? Are you seeing a pattern here? Or is it just me?
We're back. So it's funny, let me tell you why it's funny, because today's episode started off with
me just being a curious cat that I am, you know.
And I wanted to know where breath control came from.
And I think beer was involved too.
Anyway, then we did some digging around, and the next thing you know, we're just like
lost in a sea of races.
It's just like a plot twist.
I really didn't see coming.
Did you see it coming?
Okay, well, shit, I'm sorry you're so smart.
Oh my god.
Anyways, with that being said, let's learn a little bit more about the Negro project,
which took place in 1939.
So this was the project that gamble and Margaret did together with the goal of helping black
communities get affordable birth control, which again sounds like, hey, you know, like this isn't so bad, Bailey, what's wrong with that?
But when you take a little moment to look at the project and the memo sent while it was being made,
oh girl, it's bad, it's real bad. I'm gonna read you a few highlights from the proposal.
Again, I didn't write this. Margaret and Mr. Gamble wrote this, okay?
Mm.
Mm.
Mm.
Mm.
Mm.
Mm.
Mm.
Okay.
They wrote that Southern black people
breed carelessly and disastrously.
These are not my words.
It's in the proposal.
But maybe, you know, she was just quoting one of the founders of the NAAP when she wrote
that.
So that leads us to the memos.
Gamble and Margaret sent each other during this time where Mr. Gamble wrote that black
people are less intelligent and fit.
There's that word again, fit.
Gamble seems to really like that word.
Now this innocent disguise of wanting to help the Black community get birth control completely
fell off and revealed the truth.
A truth that historian Linda Gordon even refers to as white supremacy wrapped up in a pretty
bow called the Negro Project.
And to be fair, Margaret did lose control over the project, and outside force says,
decided against setting up clinics run by local black doctors and instead gave funding to clinics run by white doctors.
But members of the black community supported this project, and they wanted to be part of it because they believed in what it stood for.
So if you're going to come into this community, call this the Negro project, you're gonna involve us in the project.
And that's something a lot of historians say that Margaret wanted to be more supportive.
That might be true.
But Margaret, Margaret, Margaret, other historians point out she didn't want to give them any leadership roles
because she didn't think anybody would be able to do a better job than her at running the project,
or maybe she just didn't want anyone hijacking her project.
The truth is that there's a lot of proof that Margaret was into some sketchy shit,
and there's also a lot of proof that maybe she wanted to do good things.
If there's one thing we can all agree on, at least,
it's Mr. Clarencece gamble is a massive dick.
And black activists were super suspicious
of these types of family planning programs anyway.
I mean, it's smelled of eugenics,
especially given our country's history.
And they believed that like this link meant the programs
were designed to destroy their race.
Even if they weren't designed to do that,
the lack of representation just reaffirmed that belief.
So they spoke out.
And because none of the leadership roles were given to members of the Black community,
people lost interest in the Negro project, which just led to it falling apart and coming to an end.
And Margaret was just crushed because the house she was trying to build just went up in flames.
Aww poor Marg.
But the Black community, I mean, there's suspicions about Margaret's intentions weren't necessarily
wrong because Margaret had shown time and time again what her true beliefs were.
For example, she was a big fan of eugenics.
Oh my god, there was this one time in 1921 when Margaret wrote an article that quote,
the most urgent problem today is how to limit and discourage the overfertility of the mentally
and physically defective.
What does that even mean?
Well, according to Margaret and Gamble, some people were just a little dumb, and if you
give dumb people birth control
then they won't be any more dumb people. Great, you know? God, I'm rolling my eyeballs if you are
not watching this over on YouTube. I am rolling my eyeballs. Eh, Margaret was basically saying
they're needed to be a way to make sure that dumb people stop breeding, okay? Problem solved.
And yeah, she said
that she didn't believe this about people of color, but to be honest, this next part
is going to make her saying that look really incorrect, I should say. Because the hits
keep coming with Margaret. She spoke at a women of the Clue Clux clan rally in 1926.
Yeah, I know shocking.
There's a woman of the Clue Clux clan, get that.
And that's some shit.
It's the wives of the actual clan members, but not actually the KKK.
You know, it's like racism with less calories, diet racism, I guess.
Because women couldn't technically join in the KKK during the 1920s, so they had their
own little version.
I'm not sure if there were hoods involved, but same shit different day, you know.
So wait a minute, wait a minute.
If Margaret's involved in all this bullshit, does that mean the whole Puerto Rico project
maybe wasn't really there to help anybody?
What was this all about?
Women's rights?
This doesn't sound like women's rights.
I don't hear any mention about women's rights.
Okay, I don't know about you guys, but all I heard was about how Margaret, Mr. Campbell,
and even Mr. Pinkie, the scientist, were all about population control, and how racist their
ideology was.
So it's making sense now, ain't it?
Today's epic Puerto Rico was making that connection between overpopulation and poverty.
They put a bill in place that legalized sterilization in Puerto Rico.
Not only was it inspired by the United States government,
but it was also inspired by Margaret Bunkin's singer!
Yeah!
And what comes with Margaret's singer?
Her beliefs about eugenics, and who loved eugenics?
Clarence Campbell, Ampinkus babe, Pinkus darling, meh!
We ain't forget about you. You're a part of this too.
Mmm-hmm.
So when you look at eugenics, the whole goal is to breed out the unfit,
which makes this whole birth control trial look a lot darker.
Doesn't it?
I mean, come on.
What the hell are they really doing?
So, hmm.
By 1968, Puerto Rico was on record
as having the most sterilizations of anywhere on Earth.
And it gets worse because today,
today Puerto Rico has the sixth lowest fertility rate on earth.
There was also a report that came out this year
that said the entire population of Puerto Rico
has dropped over 11%.
A huge part is why this happened is said to be
because of the low birth rates.
It's not really clear if this is because of the sterilizations
or because of the trials. No one seems to want to admit the truth around here.
Ever, huh? I know. If they did, I wouldn't have this podcast.
Get this. It's proven that there are little planned animal work.
51% of their population is still experiencing poverty today. And even if the poverty level was less, was it even worth sterilizing a third of your women? I think this is further proving
that this wasn't about birth control. It was maybe about something else. Maybe it was like
something to do with racism? I don't know. Many still, too, this day don't consider Margaret Singer as overtly racist, but most historians agree 100%
she was eugenicist.
And Margaret darling, Margaret, pay attention.
Okay, your actions are saying something else.
Like, what are you doing at a KKK rally?
Handing out treats?
Come on, girl.
We know what you're doing.
Something questionable.
In 1998, a very famous, the most famous American feminist,
Gloria Steinem, she wrote about Margaret in an essay.
What did she say?
It was like Margaret was just trying to fit in,
even if that meant accepting these eugenics ideas
because she knew it was a way to get what she wanted
and that being birth control for everyone. Who cares if a few people have to die in the name of eugenics?
This is for the greater good. So if Clarence Gamble is saying we need to breed out a few of the Puerto Ricans to get birth control,
she was like, yes, dude, it's fucking rage, man. She did. You know, she did it.
So many are truly confused by Margaret Sanger because these actions are maybe kind of sort of
racist, I don't know. And she seemed to have all these bad intentions. But there's this other side.
The side that says she just wanted to get birth control to those who needed it most. What is the truth? And did the gang regret any of this? Margaret Gamble and Pinkis?
Huh. Wish we could ask them.
So where's the gang now? Pinkis. Remember the scientist? Yes. He was so proud of the
pill. It was his pride and joy and up until his dying day in 1967
He had no regrets. The evidence shows he thought he was doing a good thing
Then you have Margaret Sanger who up until her death denied denied denied that she was any kind of racist
She claims she wanted to help and let me just say this in my personal opinion,
because I know I know.
Margaret did a lot of good shit, a lot of really good shit.
I wouldn't have been able to Google whether it was okay
to take my birth control with beer in the first place
because duh, she basically made the damn thing, right?
But, and again, this is my opinion.
Margaret Darling, Margaret, your actions speak louder than words.
And it's just not lining up, girl. For many, many, many years, Margaret was an icon,
the face of birth control. But once you start peeling back these layers, you start to uncover some
sketchy-ass shit. At minimum, it's a spash girl.
We even asked Linda Gordon, author of the moral property
of women, if she thought Margaret Singer had any regrets
about any of this.
And she basically said, not a fucking chance.
OK?
I mean, not really.
But when we asked her that, she asked us in response,
why would Margaret feel any regret?
By the end of her life, Margaret expected people
to honor her because of her birth control work.
But anyway, she died in 1966 from heart failure.
Bye, Margaret.
Thanks.
And then Clarence, Mr. Gamble, you little devil, you.
Clarence died of leukemia, thank God.
What in my opinion, he was legit the devil.
He wanted to get rid of people of color.
Anyone who had a thought in their damn mind was a target for Mr. Gamble.
I mean, yes, Margaret and Pinkis were definitely like wrapped up in all this bullshit, but
I think it's safe to say that Mr. Gamble over here.
He was like the real puppet master.
Remember when I mentioned Proctor and Gamble over here. He was like the real puppet master. Remember
when I mentioned Proctor and Gamble in the DuPont episode? And how did that end up for us?
Okay? I'm seeing a theme here, Mr. Gamble. Like what the hell is your end goal here? Oh
wait, he's dead, so I can't ask him. But I wonder what it was? Well, the trial and
portarico technically ended when the pill officially came out in 1960,
so I say.
But then there was an interview given in 2004 that said the trials in Puerto Rico were going
on up until like 1964.
Now this might not sound super revealing to you, but why are they still running these
trials until 1964 if the pill was already out?
That's the real question a lot of the unwilling participants still have.
The woman in that interview didn't really talk about what exactly happened in the trials,
but she said the experience was so bad she can't even speak to her kids about it.
Who are our grown adults now?
And honestly, there are no answers, because there's absolutely no records as to what the
real intentions were with this whole situation.
And the cherry on top of this whole story is that sterilizations are still being pushed
to this very day.
We don't know what the true intentions of creating the pill was, but based up everything we learned
together on this journey,
it seemed like it wasn't so much about women's rights.
And I think it's pretty safe to say.
On one hand, the birth control pill is around
and widely available, but on the other hand,
to this day Puerto Rico is still struggling.
The United States has always seemed to treat
Puerto Rico as its guinea pigs long before this birth
control story. This is like nothing new. Margaret, Gamble, and Pinkus are just a small piece in this
larger puzzle that we call dark history. This goes to show that the government often uses the most
vulnerable to experiment on, to make life more comfortable for the upper class.
The Women of Puerto Rico are actually the most important part of the story.
They're the ones who have to live through it. They're the ones still suffering to this day.
And it was their lives that were taken advantage of to create this pill that we don't even think twice
about. Look at me and my dumbass drinking it with beer like come on Bailey, get your shit together,
you disrespect the little bitch.
Honestly, I wish I could tell you more
about the woman of Puerto Rico and their experience,
but for the most part, we can't really find their records.
You can easily find out more about Margaret,
Pinkis and Gamble than you do the actual
unwilling participants in this story,
or just the frickin' files on this story.
You can't find any of them.
Hmm.
So, why were these trials so mysterious?
What were they hiding?
Why are there so few records?
What's the big secret, you guys?
You know, why didn't they try this on men?
Well, they have Dix, that's why they don't have a reproductive system like we do, but okay, still.
I think these are great questions, but I think here the point has been about power.
Who has it and who is going to abuse it?
Because it doesn't stop with just clearance,
Margaret, and Pinkas, and it never will. So this episode isn't necessarily about the birth control pill.
Because as we
know it today, it's pretty great for what it does, and it's available to everybody, but
it's important to know where it came from and what sacrifices had to be made to make
it happen. So don't go throw in your birth control out the window because you need it.
Well, you don't need it, but you know what I'm saying? Like, it's not, it's different
now. It's different now. Anyways, two truths can exist at once.
The birth control pill is great,
but the way they created it, super fucked up, okay?
We didn't seem to learn much in the way of changing
how we do things.
Drug testing still goes on with some of the poorest
communities of the world as participants.
And many of the same reasons motivate people to participate,
like access to health care that otherwise they couldn't get.
With fewer alternatives, these communities are less likely to quit trials and are less
likely to demand answers when compared to people in richer nations.
If you feel like this isn't much of a conclusion, that's, they're kinda isn't one.
It's hard to feel closure when there's still
a lack of research into so much of women's health.
I wish I just had something happier to end this with,
but hey, at least, you know,
maybe you'll learn something with me today.
Let's continue the conversation over on social
using the hashtag dark history.
Oh, also, you can join me over on YouTube
where you can watch these episodes on Thursday,
like after the podcast airs.
And you can see how cute I look today
because my hair is like lifted and wearing pink.
I look cute, my tits are out, gorge.
Also, you can catch murder mystery and makeup
which drops every Monday on my YouTube.
Oh God. Anyways, I hope you have a really great rest of your day today.
You make good choices.
Talk to you next week.
Goodbye!
Dark History is an audio boom original.
This podcast is executive produced by Chelsea Durkin from Slash Management and Ed Simpson from Wheelhouse
DNA, producer Lexi Kiven, Darrell Kriston, and Spencer Schrasmore. Research provided by
Jed Bookout and Elizabeth Hyman, writers, Jed Bookout, Michael Obers, Joey Skaluzzo, and me,
Bailey Sarian. And I'm your host, Princess of the Dark, Bailey Sarian.
And a big thank you to today's historical consultant, Linda Gordon.