
Priest Sounds Alarm Over Melinda Gates’ Multi-Billion-Dollar Depopulation Agenda
by Frank Bergman
A prominent Catholic priest is sounding the alarm over a multi-billion-dollar effort by Melinda French Gates to depopulate some of the world’s most vulnerable populations.
Father James Altman is accusing Bill Gates’s ex-wife of helping advance a global population control agenda while claiming to remain faithful to Catholic teaching.
Gates is accused of pumping $4 billion into plans to sterilize women in third-world nations in an effort to reduce human population numbers around the world.
However, Gates is reportedly arguing that her depopulation efforts are supported by the Catholic Church, prompting outrage from religious leaders.
Gates insists that culling populations through reduced birth rates comes under the banner of the “pro-choice” movement, despite allegations that women are being forcibly sterilized.
Altman has forcefully rejected suggestions that support for abortion, contraception, or sterilization can be reconciled with Catholic doctrine, responding to reports that Gates has justified her “pro-choice” views by citing guidance she allegedly received from a priest.
The controversy comes as critics continue to raise concerns about billions of dollars directed toward family planning programs in developing nations, particularly across Africa and India.
Questions Raised Over Population Programs
For years, Melinda French Gates has promoted access to contraception and reproductive health initiatives through her philanthropic work.
Critics, however, argue that such programs often target poor and vulnerable populations while being funded and directed by wealthy Western elites with little accountability to the communities affected.
The concern, they argue, is not simply about access to birth control, but whether massive financial incentives and power imbalances can turn supposedly voluntary programs into forms of social engineering.
Opponents have long warned that population control initiatives frequently operate under the banner of public health while advancing broader efforts to reduce birth rates in developing nations.