Rapper and television star Nick Cannon isn’t shy about his feelings for Planned Parenthood.

“It’s population control,” Cannon told TMZ at LAX airport on Friday.

He likened the abortion provider to “modern day eugenics.”

The 36-year-old has two children with singing superstar ex-wife Mariah Carey and is expecting another child with Brittany Bell, a Chamorro beauty queen. Cannon’s 2005 single Can I Live centered on his own mother’s struggle with abortion, the Daily Mail reports.

Cannon’s comments at LAX follow his recent appearance on The Breakfast Club radio program, where he said his dislike for Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton is due to her close ties with Planned Parenthood.

“Think about all the stuff they did with Planned Parenthood and all that type of stuff,” he said.

“That type of stuff is to take our community and – forget gentrification – it’s real genocide,” Cannon continued. “And it’s been like that for years.

“This system is not built for us,” he said.

Statistics support Cannon’s conclusion.

American Civil Rights Union board member J. Kenneth Blackwell explained the details in a 2015 editorial for The Washington Times on the anniversary of the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision:

Black women continue to have the highest abortion rate of any ethnic group, with a gruesome 483 abortions for every 1,000 live births.

The bottom line? I’ll say it again: 138,539 black babies, nearly one baby in three, were killed in the womb in 2010. According to the CDC, between 2007 and 2010, innocent black babies were victimized in nearly 36 percent of the abortion deaths in the United States, though blacks represent only 12.8 percent of the population. Some say the abortion capital of America is New York City. According to LifeSiteNews, the city’s Department of Health reported that in 2012, more black babies were aborted (31,328) than born (24,758). That’s 55.9 percent of black babies killed before birth. Blacks represented 42.4 percent of all abortions.

Legalized abortion is working out exactly as Margaret Sanger intended. Sanger, the founder of the nation’s largest abortion provider, Planned Parenthood, was part of the eugenics movement back in the 1930s. Her goal was to use abortion to cull what she considered inferior races from the human gene pool. According to Sanger, “Colored people are like human weeds and are to be exterminated.” She opened her first abortion clinics in inner cities, and it’s no accident that even today, “79 percent of Planned Parenthood’s abortion facilities are located in black or minority neighborhoods.”