|
1857
|
Dred Scott decision "Negroes
are so inferior that they have no rights which a white
man is bound to respect."
|
|
1859
|
Darwin's Origin of Species.
General Theory of Evolution defended by Thomas Henry
Huxley, "Darwin's bulldog".
|
|
1870
|
Franco-Prussian War. The participants
saw it as a race war. (George Mosse, Towards the
Final Solution, p. 90)
|
|
1871
|
The German physiologist Rudolf Virchow
conducted a study of 6.7 million children in Germany,
comparing Jewish and Christian children across a range
of physical characteristics. No differences were
found. However, the findings from the study produced
no cultural impact. (George Mosse, Towards the Final
Solution, p. 90-92). Virchow is essentially the
last major voice in Germany arguing against the idea
that there are "races" within mankind.
|
|
1871
|
Darwin's Descent of Man.
It's main thesis: man developed from a lower life form.
|
|
1883
|
Francis Galton, Darwin's cousin,
coins the word "eugenics". His early aim was
to selectively marry off the population so that poor
heredity would be eliminated. Galton begins popularizing
his ideas.
|
|
1891
|
Hans Dreisch split a fertilized
sea urchin egg which was at the two-cell division stage
by hand. Each cell subsequently developed into two small
but identical sea urchin larva. His research was carried
on by Hans Spemann in Germany and Ross Harrison in the
US.
|
|
1904
|
Francis Galton endows a chair of
eugenics at the University of London. (Bernard Schreiber,
The Men Behind Hitler, A German Warning to the World,
1971, p. 15). The Journal for Racial and Social Biology,
founded in Germany in this year, will follow Francis
Galton's work in England (Eugenics Education Society)
very closely. (Mosse, p. 75).
|
|
1907
|
The US state of Indiana passes the
world's first mandatory sterilization law. (John David
Smith, "Minds Made Feeble", p. 136-137)
|
|
1911
|
Eugenics journals are common throughout
Europe. (Mosse, p 75)
|
|
1912
|
American sociologist Henry Herbert
Goddard, director of the Training School for Feeble-Minded
Boys and Girls in Vineland NJ, publishes his account
of the Kallikaks. Deborah Kallikak was considered feeble-minded.
Her family tree was traced back six generations and
feeble-mindedness was purportedly found in every generation.
Elizabeth Kite, an assistant of Goddard who had no formal
training, did most of the research. The work demonstrated
that feeble-mindedness and a propensity towards crime
was inherited. Scientists loved the work, a Broadway
show based on the book was considered. (Smith, Minds
Made Feeble, p. 5). Years later, the data was found
to have been fabricated by Kite and Goddard.
|
|
1914
|
Goddard's book Feeblemindedness:
Its Causes and Consequences was the complete study
of the 300 families of the Kallikak line. Stories on
the Jukes and Nams of New York, the Tribe of Ishmael
in Indiana, the Hill Folk of Ohio and the Dacks of Pennsylvania
were also published about this time, however the Kallikak
study was by far the most influential. All of the above-mentioned
works were carried out by American sociologists. The
Kallikak study was published in Germany the same year.
(Smith p. 161)
|
|
1914
|
First World War. Most historians
consider this war to be a direct result of the Franco-Prussian
war.
|
|
1916
|
Margaret Sanger opens her first
birth control clinic.
|
|
1917
|
Goddard and the new IQ tests determined
that the average immigrant had a "moron-grade"
intelligence level. (Smith, p. 6) The Intelligence Quotient
was seen as immutable, fixed in the genes. (Donald K.
Pickens, "Eugenics and the Progressives",
p. 151) Margaret Sanger founds the Birth Control League,
and it's magazine The Birth Control Review. She
edits this magazine until 1938. It promotes Sanger's
idea "More children from the fit, less from the
unfit".
|
|
1920
|
The Release of Unworthy Life,
That It Might Be Destroyed by the German lawyer
Karl Binding and the physician Alfred Hoch. The book
was not avowedly racist, but was definitely utilitarian.
It asserted that non-useful people had to die so others
could use scarce resources to live. Euthanasia was based
on a common respect for "everyone's will to live".
Note the correspondance to resource preservation and
overpopulation arguments. (Mosse, p. 216)
|
|
1921
|
The Birth Control League, founded
by Sanger in 1917, changes its name to the American
Birth Control League. Lothrop Stoddard is on the board
of directors. (Elasah Drogin, Margaret Sanger: Father
of Modern Society, p. 13) In this year, Sanger wrote,
"I think you must agree ... that the campaign for
birth control is not merely of eugenic value, but is
practically identical with the final aims of eugenics...
Birth control propaganda is thus the entering wedge
for the eugenic educator." (Margaret Sanger,
"The Eugenic Value of Birth Control Propaganda.",
Birth Control Review, October 1921, p. 5)
|
|
1922
|
Lothrop Stoddard publishes The
Revolt Against Civilization. It asserts that uncontrolled
reproduction among defective families would bring the
"twilight of the American mind" and the "dusk
of mankind". (Smith, p.3)
|
|
1922
|
Margaret Sanger publishes Pivot
of Civilization. It advocates birth control and
IQ testing, mandatory for the lower classes. Philanthropy
is seen as a positive danger to society, since it allows
the lower classes to propagate. Sanger will assert that
up to 70% of the population had an intellect of less
than a 15-year old (David Kennedy, Birth Control
in America, the Career of Margaret Sanger, p. 116)
She will also promote the idea of parenthood licenses
- no one being permitted to have a child unless they
first obtain a government-approved parenthood permit.
She is a strong advocate and practitioner of free love,
and considers marriage both an abomination and an assault
on human liberty. She supports compulsory education
and restriction on child labor, not because it is good
for the children, but because it would prove to be a
burden to the poor and force them to restrict family
size.
|
|
1924
|
The Immigration Restriction Act
comes into effect. This act won't be removed until 1965.
It is passed largely due to the supporting testimony
of the Eugenics Records Office, Cold Spring Harbor,
Long Island. (Smith, p. 3) The US state of Virginia
passes the Racial Integrity Act, which forbids miscegany
(sexual relations between whites and blacks). This law
will become the model for the German Nuremburg laws.
It is itself modelled on a sterilization act developed
by Harry Laughlin. The law was written by W.A. Plecker;
a eugenicist and the registrar for vital statistics
for Virginia, he also worked closely with the Eugenics
Record Office, and belonged to several eugenic organizations.
(Smith, p. 154-156). The Rockefeller Foundation begins
funding Margaret Sanger.
|
|
1927
|
U.S. Supreme Court upholds
the validity of mandatory sterilization in Buck v.
Bell. During the Nuremburg trials, a German doctor
will cite Buck vs. Bell as the precedent for
Nazi race hygiene and sterilization programs. (Smith
p. 156)
|
|
1930
|
The Lambeth Conference in England
approves, for the first time, the use of contraceptives,
albeit only within marriage and only for grave reasons.
At least one noted eugenicist, the Rev. Dr. D. S. Bailey,
was a participant in this conference.
|
|
1932
|
Aldous Huxley publishes Brave
New World. It explicitly modelled a society created
through the Marquis de Sade's version of the French
Revolution, in which the bodies of everyone were the
common property of all, and minds were purged of all
the inhibitions which society had established. In this
work, he predicts that totalitarianism will take the
form of government control in exchange for social stability.
Totalitarian governments must make their subjects love
their servitude, and this is best undertaken by allowing
hedonism. He argues that doing nothing, and the silence
which it entails, are the best weapons of propaganda.
According to Huxley, in order for totalitarianism to
take hold, four principles must be present:
- Greatly improved techniques
of suggestion. Huxley proposed drugs such as scopolamine,
and infant conditioning, but he wrote before the
effects of television were well-understood.
- A fully developed science of
human differences, so that people are placed correctly
in the social hierarchy, thus avoiding the dangerous
thoughts which people uncomfortable with their social
situation feel.
- Mental vacations from society
through drugs. Again, the effect of the electronic
drug, television, was unforeseen.
- Eugenics, in order to standardize
the human product. (Huxley, Perennial Classic, 1946,
vii-xiii)
|
|
1933
|
January 30: Hitler is appointed
Chancellor of Germany by Hindenburg.
The April issue of "The Birth
Control Review" is devoted entirely to eugenic
sterilization, with a feature article by Dr. Ernst Rudin,
the director of Germany's Eugenics institute. (Schreiber,
p. 35).
July 14: Hereditary Health Law created,
based on the Laughlin model. Germany also sets up the
first eugenics courts. Within a year 56,000 people would
be sterilized. This move was roundly applauded by American
eugenicists. (Smith p 156).
November: The Kallikak study is
republished in Germany.
Harry Laughlin puts the number of
eugenic sterilizations performed in the US at 15,000
through December 1931. Hans Spemann, the German developer
of chimeric animals, comes to the US to deliver the
Silliman invitational lecture at Yale.
|
|
1934
|
The German constitution of 1871
forbad abortion, the article which outlawed it was not
changed until this year, when the Hamburg courts declare
a "racial emergency". Abortion is permitted
in Germany for the first time since the German state
came into being. Neglect of mentally and physically
handicapped patients is encouraged. (Robert Jay Lifton,
The Nazi Doctors, p. 62)
|
|
1935
|
The Nuremburg laws are passed. An
estimated 500,000 eugenic abortions have been performed
in Germany.
|
|
1936
|
The Nazis award Harry Laughlin an
honorary degree from Hiedelburg University as part of
the university's 550th anniversary celebration, in appreciation
for his eugenics efforts. Laughlin, in his acceptance,
stated that the Germans provided the "human seed-stock
which ...founded my own country and thus gave basic
character to our present lives and institutions".
(Smith, p. 158). The American Eugenics Society has a
roundtable discussion at which Nazi eugenicist Maria
Kopp reads her paper on eugenic sterilization. Germans
based their laws on the sterilization program in California
carried out by the Human Betterment Foundation, now
known as the Association for Voluntary Sterilization.
(Marie Kopp Legal and Medical Aspects of Eugenic
Sterilazation in Germany; a talk delivered at the
annual meeting of the American Eugenics Society, May
7, 1936).
|
|
1937
|
North Carolina becomes the first
state to contribute money to Margaret Sanger's birth
control movement. (Diversity Magazine, March/April
1992, p 12, also see Linda Gordon, Woman's Body,
Woman's Right). The NC public health officer convinces
recalcitrant county health officers to set up birth
control clinics by telling them to check their vital
statistics, confident that they would discover a high
proportion of black births.
Two US Rockefeller grantees, Gregory
Pincus and Jacques Loeb, used parthenogenesis (instigated
by x-rays, electrical shocks, and chemicals to induce
the female into pregnancy) to ostensibly create several
pathenogenic "monsters", one of which, a rabbit,
was featured on the cover of Look magazine. Rockefeller
grants have been instrumental in advancing eugenics
and social control ideology since the end of the 19th
century. They eventually fund PP, SIECUS, The American
Right to Die Society, Alfred Kinsey's sexuality project
(see Reader's Digest, April 1997, "Sex,
Lies, and the Kinsey Report", p. 59), and the Hastings
center, among other resources.
|
|
1938
|
Thirty states in the U.S. have mandatory
sterilization laws. (Smith, p. 139). The Knauer infant,
a child born blind and having deformed limbs, is starved
to death in Germany causing a storm of controversy in
Europe. (Lifton, p. 62)
|
|
1939
|
The German T-4 program has begun.
Mentally and physically handicapped children are systematically
poisoned or starved to death. This is soon expanded
to include handicapped adults as well.
Margaret Sanger writes Clarence
Gamble, telling him to hire "three or four colored
ministers with engaging personalities...we do not want
word to get out that we want to exterminate the Negro
population, and the minister is the man who can straighten
out that idea if it occurs to any of their more rebellious
members". (Linda Gordon, Women's Body, Women's
Right, A Social History of Birth Control in America
p. 333). The American Birth Control League launches
The Negro Project.
|
|
1941
|
Hackett's Handbook for Schooling
Hitler Youth explains the Nazi eugenics program.
Ich Klage An (I Accuse), a film favorably
detailing how a doctor euthanizes his handicapped wife,
is released. (Smith p. 165 and Mosse, Towards the
Final Solution, p. 216) The Nazi regime recommends
that abortion on the mother's request should be approved
in order to reduce the surplus population.
|
|
1942
|
The American Birth Control League
changes its name to Planned Parenthood.
|
|
1944
|
Planned Parenthood hires a permanent
Negro Consultant.
|
|
1947
|
Planned Parenthood policy required
the hiring of staff at each clinic which reflected the
racial population it served, in order to make birth
control more palatable. (Diversity Magazine,
March/April p. 14)
|
|
1961
|
The April issue of Scientific
American carries the article "How Cells Associate",
which describes the cloning and hybridization of amphibian
embryos performed by Dr. Clifford Grobstein, professor
emeritus at UC, San Diego, member of the American Fertility
Society, and a member of the Hastings Center review
committee.
|
|
1968
|
Dr. Geoffery Chamberlein, a researcher
at George Washington U, obtains several liveborn babies
on the abortion schedule and attaches them to an artificial
placenta under development. Several hours later, after
the necessary data was obtained, the equipment is shut
off and the children die. At least one child, a six-month
old obtained by hysterotomy, took over 20 minutes to
die. Dr. Chamberlein won that year's prize from the
American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology for "best
experiment".
In this year, 41% of poll respondants
wanted four or more children. By 1971, the percentage
had dropped to 19%. (Celeste Michelle Condit, "Decoding
Abortion Rhetoric" p 71, and Gallup 1935-1971,
2168-2169) The Zero Population Growth movement is instrumental
in adopting the "unwanted child" rhetoric
which eventually is adopted by the pro-abortion movememnt.
(Condit, p. 187).
|
|
1973
|
RvW approved. In response to a prize
competition from the Population Institution, which wanted
television shows dealing with population matters, an
episode of the television series "Maude" shows
her having an abortion (Condit, p. 124).
|
|
1984
|
Faye Wattleton tells the Washington
Times that Margaret Sanger was "devoted to
eugenics and the advancement of the perfect race."
|
|
1986
|
Faye Wattleton tells The Humanist
Magazine "I am proud to be walking in the footsteps
of Margaret Sanger."
Planned Parenthood's definition
of abstinence: "Abstinence means making love without
having intercourse. It is the most effective form of
birth control, has been used for centuries and is still
very common. It has no pysical side effects a as long
as prolonged sexual arousal is followed by orgasm to
relieve pelvic congestion." (Boston Women's Health
Book Collective, The New Our Bodies, Ourselves,
p. 237)
|
|
1980's
|
Dr. Ann McLaren, British biologist,
a frequent researcher at Cold Springs Harbor and a member
of the American Fertility Society is appointed to England's
Warnock Committee, which is tasked to discuss whether
or not human embryo experimentation should be permitted
for the first 14 days. She introduces and popularizes
the term "pre-embryo".
|
|
1992
|
70% of Planned Parenthood clinics
are located in predominantly black or hispanic neighborhoods.
(Diversity, March April, 1992, p. 16).
|
|
|
|
|
|