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The feminist organization plans to break, during its congress, with the notions of universalism and secularism. A worrying renunciation. Investigation.
By Marion Coquet
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Planned Parenthood is about to choose a religion. Serious choice if any, which can be summed up as follows: keep faith in the universalism of the principles that guided its creation in 1960… or give it up, in the name of “intersectionality”. This field of sociological research, born in the United States, examines how different discriminations, linked to gender, race or social class, combine. It is interesting, no doubt, and fertile. But his militant version leans sharply towards cultural relativism. End of September, Charlie Hebdo made public a working document written by Planning for its next congress, scheduled for Niort from 25 to 27 October. The intersectional movement is defined there exclusively by the rejection of universalist feminism which, with its…
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