Republicans HILARIOUSLY 'Celebrate' Dems Choosing Governor In Name Only Spanberger to Give...
See If You Can Spot a Shift in Tone on The View After...
Booker Tease Washington: Democrat Senator Flirts With Possible 2028 Presidential Run
Middle Man: Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear Wants Voters to Know He’s Not the...
Irish Band U2 Release Song 'American Obituary' Honoring Renee Good
Detroit Police Officer and Sergeant Face Firing for Breaking Policy and Tipping Off...
America Owns Hockey: US Women Win OT Gold, Leave Canada Spiraling and Seething
Absentee Mom's Illegal Stay Leads to Daughter's Disney Visit Ending in 4-Month ICE...
Renee Good Memorial Burned in Fiery but Mostly Peaceful Incident
Absurd Tara Palmeri Goes Nuclear: Accuses Michael Tracey of Being Paid to Smear...
Wife of Illegal Who Killed Georgia Teacher Says What Happened, Happened
WaPo: Some Say Atlantic Story ‘Felt Misleading’ Once They Learned It Was Made...
Elmo Wishes Ramadan Mubarak to All of His Friends
Brian Stelter: ABC News Has Admirably Insulated The View From Equal Time Rules
China's 'Killer Robots' Terrify Americans on X — Until Everyone Realizes It's Just...

FiveThirtyEight says the fight to ban abortion is rooted in the great replacement theory

We knew not to take FiveThirtyEight seriously when we read the text of the tweet … then we clicked on it and found they’d used a photo of the “Patriot Front” in their blue shirts and khakis to bolster the argument because those guys really represent conservative America. We’re not sure why FiveThirtyEight decided to wade into this pool, but it took two writers, Alex Samuels and Monica Potts, to put this piece together. Apparently, bans on abortion will only apply to white women.

Advertisement

They write:

It may not be immediately obvious how the fight over abortion rights is tied to the “great replacement” theory — the debunked conspiracy theory promoted by some Republican politicians who claim that Democrats support more immigration to “replace” white American voters. But the explanation for, say, an alleged gaffe that overturning the constitutional right to an abortion is a “historic victory of white life” or a concern that not enough white babies are being born in the U.S. can be found in the history of the anti-abortion movement.

The movement to end legal abortion has a long, racist history, and like the great replacement theory, it has roots in a similar fear that white people are going to be outnumbered by people believed to hold a lower standing in society. Those anxieties used to be centered primarily around various groups of European immigrants and newly emancipated slaves, but now they’re focused on non-white Americans who, as a group, are on track to numerically outpace non-Hispanic white Americans by 2045, according to U.S. Census projections.

Declining white birth rates, along with the rising eugenics movement — a now-discredited pseudoscience focused on the genetic fitness of white Americans — were connected to the practice of abortion, and this helped bolster flawed, racist arguments for a total ban of the procedure. “The physicians trying to pass these anti-abortion laws were concerned about how abortion was a ‘danger’ to our society and the ways we want our country to be,” said Shannon Withycombe, a professor of history at the University of New Mexico who studies 19th-century women’s health.

Advertisement

Hold up … as things stand, non-white Americans are on track to numerically outpace non-Hispanic white Americans by 2045. So non-white Americans aren’t the ones getting abortions, right? And eugenics, the “now-discredited pseudoscience”? Hello … has anyone at FiveThirtyEight read anything about Margaret Sanger, founder of Planned Parenthood? Eugenics was kind of her thing. Planned Parenthood is still handing out Sanger Awards to women like Nancy Pelosi and Hillary Clinton.

Advertisement

Advertisement

“Throughout colonial America and into the 19th century, abortions were fairly common,” they write. It was only when those dirty Irish started showing up that bans on abortion became popular. Right.


Related:

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement