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July 1997
Margaret Sanger, Sterilization, and the Swastika
[article in the PUBLIC DOMAIN]
Submitted by Mike Richmond to Tetrahdron, Inc. and Dr. Len Horowitz
"
to give certain dysgenic groups in our population their choice of segregation
[concentration camps] or sterilization", advocated the founder of Planned
Parenthood, Margaret Sanger in April 1932 ("A Plan For Peace", Birth Control
Review; see 'appendix' for this full unabridged seminal article). Which
country pioneered forced sterilization in the 20th century, Germany or
the United States of America? The German program began in January 1934,
but the U.S. state of Indiana passed a forced sterilization law (for mental
defectives) in 1907 (when Adolf Hitler was 18 years old). Before the German
program began, at least seventeen U.S. states (including California) had
'forced sterilization' laws. Before 1930 there were 200-600 forced sterilizations
per year (in the U.S.A.) but in the 1930s the rate jumped to 2,000-4,000
per year. (1)
Who 'Inspired' the architects of the German Sterilization law?
"The leaders in the German sterilization movement state repeatedly
that their legislation was formulated after careful study of the
California experiment as reported by Mr. Gosney and Dr. [Paul]
Popenoe. It would have been impossible, they say, to understake
such a venture involving some 1 million people without drawing
heavily upon previous experience elsewhere." (2) Who is Dr. Paul
Popenoe? He was a leader in the U.S. eugenics movement and wrote
(1933) the article 'Eugenic Sterilization' in the journal (BCR)
that Margaret Sanger started. How many Americans did Dr. Popenoe
estimate should be subjected to sterilization? Between five million
and ten million Americans. "The situation [in the U.S.A] will grow
worse instead of better if steps are not taken to control the reproduction
of mentally handicapped. Eugenic sterilization represents one such
step that is practicable, humanitarian, and certain in its results." (3)
Who is Ernst Rudin?
Ernst Rudin was director of the foremost German eugenics research
institute (Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Genealogy, in Munich, Germany). "On
June 2, 1933, [German] Reich Interior Minister Wilhelm Frick announced
the formation of an Expert Committee on Questions of Population
and Racial Policy .... to plan the course of Nazi racial policy.
The committee brought together the elite of Nazi racial theory:
Alfred Ploetz, ..... Ernst Rudin, director of the Kaiser Wilhelm
Institute for Genealogy in Munich;...." (4) On July 14, 1933 this
committee's recommendations were made law, the sterilization law
("Law for the Prevention of Genetically Diseased Offspring"); the
start date for exercising the law was 1 Jan 1934. What was Ernst
Rudin's opinion of Adolf Hitler and eugenics ('racial hygiene')?:
Academic William H. Tucker (The Science and Politics of Racial
Research, 1994, University of Illinois Press) tells us about Ernst
Rudin (p. 121):
In an address to the German Society for Rassenhygiene [Race-hygiene]
Ernst Rudin, a professor of psychiatry who was one of the organization's
original members and now its head, recalled the early, fruitless
days when the racial hygienists had labored in vain to alert the
public to special value of the Nordic race as "culture creators" and
the danger of "unnatural" attempts to preserve the health of heredity
defectives. Now Rassenhygiene [Race-hygiene] was finally receiving
the attention it deserved, and Rudin virtually slavered over the
man whose efforts produced this change: "The significance of Rassenhygiene
did not become evident to all aware Germans until the political
activity of Adolf Hitler and only through his work has our 30 year
long dream of translating Rassen- hygiene into action finally become
a reality." Terming it a "duty of honor" (Ehrenpflicht) for the
society to aid in implementing Hitler's program, Rudin proclaimed, "We
can hardly express our efforts more plainly or appropriately than
in the words of the Fuhrer: 'Whoever is not physically or mentally
fit must not pass on his defects to his children. The state must
take care that only the fit produce children. Conversely, it must
be regarded as reprehensible to withhold healthy children from
the state.' (E. Rudin, "Aufgaben and Ziele der Deutschen Gesellschaft
fur Rassenhygiene," Archiv Fur Rassen- und Gesellschafts- biologie
28 (1934): 228-29) Who is author William H. Tucker? He is an associate
professor of psychology at Rutgers University, Camden, New Jersey.
Tucker is apparently somewhat left of center politically, since
he complains about the 'Reagan slash and burn spending cuts.'
How many Germans were 'force sterilized'? Most estimates are in
the range of 250,000-500,000. The Germans started twenty-seven
years later that the U.S. but within a few years they greatly outpaced
them.
Did Ernst Rudin advocate sterilization of Americans?
Three months before the German 'sterilization law' was passed,
Rudin's "Eugenic Sterilization: An Urgent Need" article was published
in the journal (BCR) Margaret Sanger started and continued to influence
until its demise in 1940.
In addressing an American audience Rudin is much more circumspect
with his choice of words:
The following essay is concerned only with sterilization as a
a voluntary practice, that is, when undertaken with the consent
of the patient himself or his statutory guardians......
But as the essay wears on, the mask begins to slip: My experience
has led me to the conclusion that systematic and careful propaganda
should be undertaken where sterilization is advisable. Such propaganda
should, of course, be gradual and and should be directed in the
first instance at the medical directors in institutions and schools,
medical officers of health, and finally at private practitioners.....
Margaret Sanger corresponded with Ernst Rudin and never once renounced
his eugenic views.
The Planned Parenthood connection - Who is Lothrop Stoddard?
Margaret Sanger appointed Lothrop Stoddard as a board member of
the Birth Control League (the forerunner of Planned Parenthood).
What did Stoddard think about Nazi eugenics? Author Stefan Kuhl
writes (5): When the Nazis came to power, argued Stoddard, they
started to increase "both the size and the quality of the population." They
coupled initiatives designed to encourage "sound" citizens to reproduce
with a "drastic curb of the defective elements." (7) Stoddard personally
witnessed how the Nazis were "weeding out the worst strains in
the Germanic stock in a scientific and truly humanitarian way."
Lothrop Stoddard and the "Jews Problem" -
It is no secret that Adolf Hitler and the Nazis favored Jews be
more subject to induced abortion and sterilization than other groups.
Stefan Kuhl writes (pp. 61-62): He [Lothrop Stoddard] even met
personally with Adolf Hitler. William L. Shirer, an American colleague
who had been in Germany since 1934, complained that the Reich minister
for propaganda [Joseph Goebbels] gave special preference to Stoddard
because his writings on racial subject were "featured in Nazi school
textbooks." (8) Kuhl continues: Stoddard claimed in 1940 that the "Jew
problem" is "already settled in principle and soon to be settled
in fact by the physical elimination of the Jews themselves from
the Third Reich."
Margaret Sanger, founder of Planned Parenthood, made Lothrop Stoddard
a board member of the forerunner to PP (the Birth Control League).
Why was the Birth Control League reconstituted as Planned Parenthood?
The 'Nazi smell' of BCL was so bad, that some 'cosmetics' were
required.
High Praise from Adolf Hitler
Margaret Sanger was a prominent proponent of eugenics and forced
sterilization. Stefan Kuhl writes: In 1934 one of Hitler's staff
members wrote to Leon Whitney of the American Eugenics Society
and asked in the name of the Fuhrer for a copy of Whitney's recently
published book, The Case for Sterilization. Whitney complied immediately,
and shortly thereafter received a personal letter of thanks from
Adolf Hitler. In his unpublished autobiography, Whitney reported
a conversation he had with Madison Grant about the letter from
the Fuhrer. Because he thought Grant might be interested in Hitler's
letter he showed it to him during their next meeting. Grant only
smiled, reached for a folder on his desk, and gave Whitney a letter
from Hitler to read. In this, Hitler thanked Grant for writing
The Passing of the Great Race and said that "the book was his Bible." Whitney
concluded that, following Hitler's actions, one could believe it.
(unpublished autobiography of Leon F. Whitney, written in 1971,
Whitney Papers, APS, 204-5) (6)
Sanger's Siren Song of Sterilization
This article started with a Sanger quote, "to give certain dysgenic
groups in our population their choice of segregation or sterilization." To
assure yourself that this is NOT an 'out of context quote', read
the full article (A Plan For Peace) in the 'appendix'. Although
Margaret Sanger may have been unaware of it, one possible side-effect
of an induced abortion is sterility. If only 4% of women undergoing
an induced abortion suffer sterility as a side-effect, then the
U.S. has had over one million sterilizations (from induced abortion
alone), easily topping the Nazi 'record'.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) The Surgical Solution, Philip R. Reilly (2) Legal and Medical
Aspects of Eugenic Sterilization in Germany, American Sociological
Review, Marie E. Kopp, 1936:763 (3) Eugenic Sterilization, Birth
Control Review, Dr. Paul Popenoe, April 1933 (4) Racial Hygiene,
Robert N. Proctor, p. 95 (5) The Nazi Connection (Eugenics, American
Racism, And German National Socialism), Stefan Kuhl, Oxford University
Press, 1994, p. 62 (6) The Nazi Connection, p. 85 (7) Into The
Darkness: Nazi Germany Today, Lothrop Stoddard, 1940, pp. 190-191
(8) Berlin Diary: The Journal of a Foreign Correspondent, William
L. Shire (New York: Alfred Knopf, 1941):257
Healthy Choices for Women, Mike Richmond email: newscan@vcn.bc.ca
'Appendix'
A. Dr. Paul Popenoe
B. A Plan For Peace*
A. Dr. Paul Popenoe
Author William H. Tucker also identifies Paul Popenoe as a researcher
favored eugenics. Says Tucker:
The biologist Paul Popenoe, author of the most widely used American
eugenics text and editor of the Journal of Heredity, also reviewed
the new German law. Noting that Hitler had read the definitive
German work on heredity by Baur, Fischer, and Lenz, Popenoe judged
the fuhrer's program to be based "solidly on the application of
biological principles to human society." (p. 123)
In the April 1933 BCR Paul Popenoe tells us:
Eugenic sterilization is one of the many indispensable measures
in any modern program of social welfare. It is an integral part
of a general system of protection, parole, and supervision, for
those who by reason on mental disease or deficiency are unable
to meet the responsibilities of citizenship.
It promotes eugenics by cutting off some of the lines of descent
that are spreading mental disease and mental defect throughout
the population. It is conservatively estimated that there are approximately
5,000,000 people in the United States who will at some time be
committed to state hospitals as insane and that there are approximately
5,000,000 more who are so deficient intellectually (with less than
70% of average intelligence) as to be, in many cases, liabilities
rather than assets to the race. The situation will grow worse instead
of better if steps are not taken to control the reproduction of
the mentally handicapped. Eugenic sterilization represents one
such step that is practicable, humanitarian, and certain in its
results.
B. A Plan for Peace*
The following (A Plan for Peace, Margaret Sanger) was published
in Birth Control Review (April 1932, pp. 107-108):
A Plan for Peace* by MARGARET SANGER
First, put into action President Wilson's fourteen points, upon
which terms Germany and Austria surrendered to the Allies in 1918.
Second, have Congress set up a special department for the study
of population problems and appoint a Parliament of Population,
the directors representing the various branches of science: this
body to direct and control the population through birth rates and
immigration, and to direct its distribution over the country according
to national needs consistent with taste, fitness and interest of
individuals.
The main objects of the Population Congress would be:
a. to raise the level and increase the general intelligence
of population.
b. to increase the population slowly by keeping the birth
rate at its present level of fifteen per thousand, decreasing
the death rate below its present mark of 11 per thousand.
c. to keep the doors of immigration closed to the entrance
of certain aliens whose condition is known to be detrimental
to the stamina of the race, such as feebleminded, idiots, morons,
insane, syphilitic, epileptic, criminal, professional prostitutes,
and others in this class barred by the immigration laws of
1924.
d. to apply a stern and rigid policy of sterilization and
segregation to that grade of population whose progeny is tainted,
or whose inheritance is such that objectionable traits may
be transmitted to offspring.
e. to insure the country against future burdens of maintenance
for numerous offspring as may be born of feebleminded parents,
by pensioning all persons with transmissible disease who voluntarily
consent to sterilization.
f. to give certain dysgenic groups in our population their
choice of segregation or sterilization.
g. to apportion farm lands and homesteads for these segregated
persons where they would be taught to work under competent
instructors for the period of their entire lives.
The first step would thus be to control the intake and output
of morons, mental defectives, epileptics.
The second step would be to take an inventory of the secondary
group such as illiterates, paupers, unemployables, criminals, prostitutes,
dope-fiends; classify them in special departments under government
medical protection, and segregate them on farms and open spaces
as long as necessary for the strengthening and development of moral
conduct.
Having corralled this enormous part of our population and placed
it on a basis of health instead of punishment, it is safe to say
that fifteen or twenty millions of our population would then be
organized into soldiers of defense---defending the unborn against
their own disabilities.
The third step would be to give special attention to the mothers'
health, to see that women who are suffering from tuberculosis,
heart or kidney disease, toxic goiter, gonorrhea, or any disease
where the condition of pregnancy disturbs their health are placed
under public health nurses to instruct them in practical, scientific
methods of contraception in order to safeguard their lives---thus
reducing maternal mortality.
The above steps may seem to place emphasis on a health program
instead of on tariffs, moratoriums and debts, but I believe that
national health is the first essential factor in any program for
universal peace.
With the future citizen safeguarded from hereditary taints, with
five million mental and moral degenerates segregated, with ten
million women and ten million children receiving adequate care,
we could then turn our attention to the basic needs for international
peace.
There would then be a definite effort to make population increase
slowly and at a specified rate, in order to accommodate and adjust
increasing numbers to the best social and economic system.
In the meantime we should organize and join an International League
of Low Birth Rate Nations to secure and maintain World Peace.
*Summary of address before the New History Society, January 17th,
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