Since the US was still industrializing in the early 20th century, the commercial relations were fairly new, so the cultural exchange that accompanies the process was only just beginning. Due to this slow diffusion of ideas, earlier advocates of birth control, like Margaret Sanger in the 1910s, were seen as “sex radicals” because they undermined the idea that procreation was the only reason for sex (Johnson 8-9). However, shortly after, the eugenics movement that originated in Great Britain gained extreme popularity in the United States; eugenics was a “newcomer in America” in 1911 (Field 33) and then its follower base grew drastically. Once eugenics became integrated into the American medical profession, doctors joined earlier advocates, like Sanger, to try and increase access to birth control in order to ensure that they stopped the “unfit lower classes” from reproducing (Johnson 13). Thus, racism and classism through eugenics allowed the earlier birth control movements to gain traction (Powderly S9). After the spread of the eugenics movement due to the increased ties to foreign nations, birth control became…