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But Planned Parenthood disputed Cain's claims, citing a study by the Guttmacher Institute that found that fewer than one in 10 abortion clinics are in in predominantly African-American neighborhoods. "Herman Cain is wrong on the facts and clearly out of the mainstream in his attack on Planned Parenthood," spokeswoman Veronica Byrd said in a statement. "It is simply unacceptable for those who oppose legal abortion to use inflammatory and divisive language based on race to push an ideological agenda." Still, Cain's view has gained currency in the anti-abortion movement, which has backed several state measures to ban abortions based on race. In Cain's home state of Georgia, dozens of provocative billboards popped around Atlanta last year labeling black children an "endangered species" in an effort to use race to rally support against abortion within the black community.
[Associated
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