Communists love abortions and sterilizations.

India’s leftist prime minister Indira Ghandi enforced policies that required sterilization in order to access water, electricity, ration cards, and medical care. Communist China embraced the “one-child policy,” which led to upwards of 100 million forced abortions and sterilizations. Despite these atrocities, the world population continued to grow, but world hunger declined. … Al Gore continued to promote population control into the 2010s. During a speech to a New York audience in 2011, Gore disguised his advocacy of aborting African babies as “fertility management” and “educating and empowering girls and women,” but even the liberal Los Angeles Times admitted that these euphemisms served only to make the “touchy topic” of population control more palatable.

Speechless: Controlling Words, Controlling Minds, by Michael Knowles, pp 205-206

“New World Order” is today’s Communist-speak for even more Communism.

Communists and big American corporations should get a room.

Communists and big American corporations should get a room. The USSR overrode its citizens’ medical autonomy in the 20th century. The CCP does the same in the 21st century. Big American corporations are happy to continue the tradition by overriding their employees’ medical autonomy today.

Communists invert standards of beauty and behavior.

Conservatives come in all shapes and sizes, but they tend to acknowledge health and moderation as worthy goals, while politically correct radicals in recent years have peddled “body positivity” and “fat pride.” The “fat acceptance movement,” like so many other radical identity campaigns, began during the late 1960s. Every polite person eschews mocking the appearance of others or belittling them for their physical deficiencies. But the “fat acceptance movement” went further, affirming the positive good of unhealthy habits and even encouraging them. In 1967, five hundred fat fetishists gathered in Central Park to rally for gluttony. … The fat-tivists sought far more than courtesy; they demanded the inversion of standards of beauty and behavior.

Speechless: Controlling Words, Controlling Minds, by Michael Knowles, p 156