The flood of immigrants into America created a rise in new customs and religions that lead to racial bitterness from natural born citizens. From this arose nativism[8] that some Americans adopted with the rejection of immigrants because they did not fit their local customs. The fear of immigrants grew throughout the 1920s to a degree that laws were passed to limit the immigrants allowed into the country. The Ku Klux Klan was in major support of these laws because they felt that immigrants were threatening white supremacy. The Klan did not direct all of its racial hatred towards the immigrants because they felt as if they had a threat within their own borders with African Americans. This view was clearly seen through the movie The Birth of a Nation[9] that upset many African-Americans and the NAACP for being so historical incorrect. Mary Childs Nerney wrote to a local censor about taking out certain scenes that were creating harm to colored people that could not be estimated[10] and was very frustrated that nothing was being done about it. Her words became true after the film with the renewal of attention in the Ku Klux Klan that had been dormant since the end of the Reconstruction. Though tensions were felt in these social issues it did not stop women from taking advantage of the era. In this time the fight that Progressives were pushing for women were finally being won and the irony was that the Progressive Era was growing less intense once women were allowed to vote. After women gained their right to vote they felt as if they had accomplished what they set out to do and wanted to engage in the new morality [11]of the era. Margaret Sanger saw this and believed women should have a choice to be able to be involved in the permissive culture and be able to have