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Kelly, Maria, Amanda, Lee, Marisa and Jimmy
Forced Sterilization Kelly, Maria, Amanda, Lee, Marisa and Jimmy
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Reasons for sterilization
Eugenics: Prevent those with mental handicaps and mental illnesses from reproducing. Disadvantages of long-term contraception: administering the medication and supervising the administration. Costs and risks. Inability of the woman to care for a child. Financial and emotional burdens on family. Dysmenorrhea: easing trauma and physical changes associated with a woman's menses. Unable to care for her own hygiene.
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Physical Characteristics
Anyone was was considered to be hereditarily ill with: Congenital feeblemindedness Schizophrenia Manic depression Hereditary epilepsy Huntington’s chorea Hereditary blindness Hereditary deafness Serious physical deformities In addition, anyone who suffers from chronic alcoholism can be sterilized
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Public policy in the US Phase 1: eugenics movement in the beginning of the twentieth century Encouraged sterilization of persons who are mentally handicapped Phase 2: growing disapproval of mandatory sterilization. 1942 Supreme Court declaration that reproduction is a fundamental human right. Phase 3: Different viewpoints about which cases that laws permits sterilization and which cases that laws do not permit sterilization. Raises the question who has the right to make the decision.
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American Eugenics Society
1926 "[Sterilization could] be applied to an ever widening circle of social discards, beginning always with the criminal, the diseased and the insane, and extending gradually to types which may be called weaklings rather than defectives, and perhaps ultimately to worthless race types." From The Passing of the Great Race by Madison Grant, co-founder American Eugenics Society
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Carrie Buck First woman sterilized by court order Buck vs. Bell, 1924
U.S. Supreme Court ruled 8-1 in favor of sterilization for the “feebleminded” Oliver Wendall Holmes said, “It is better for all the world if, instead of waiting to execute degenerate offspring for crime or let them starve for their imbecility, society can prevent those who are manifestly unfit from continuing their kind.”
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“Law for Protection Against Genetically Defective Offspring,"
Harry H. Laughlin of Virginia formed the initial draft and was awarded for his "services on behalf of racial hygiene." Early 1930’s, over 30 states adopted this mandatory sterilization law This model was also used by other countries, for example, Nazi Germany
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Mandatory Sterilization for Black Youth During WWII
During World War I, black African soldiers were brought in by the French during the Allied occupation. Some of these black soldiers married white German women that bore children referred to as "Rhineland Bastards" or the "Black Disgrace“ In Mein Kampf, Hitler wrote that he would eliminate all the children born of African-German descent because he considered them an "insult" to the German nation. The Nazis set up a secret group, Commission Number 3, to organize the sterilization of these offspring to keep intact the purity of the Aryan race. In 1937, all local authorities in Germany were to submit a list of all the children of African descent. Then, these children were taken from their homes or schools without parental permission and put before the commission. Once a child was decided to be of black descent, the child was taken immediately to a hospital and sterilized. About 400 children were medically sterilized
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Forced Sterilization Today
US Money donated to Peru for relief is believed to be used for sterilization Sweden accused of forcing sterilization in order to maintain a ‘beautiful’ population Philippine women receiving vaccination for tetanus containing Human Chorionic Gonadotrophin (HCG), an anti-pregnancy agent. In order to enforce the ‘one child’ policy, China often forces women breaking this law to undergo forced sterilization.
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