Eugenics in the South Targeted Young Black Girls

Susanne Posel
Occupy Corporatism
May 6, 2012

 

 

 

 

A thirteen year old girl in North Carolina in 1967 became pregnant after being raped. The state mandated she be given a tubal ligation after giving birth.

According to Eliane Riddock’s medical records, she was labeled “feebleminded” and promiscuous” by an eugenics board in Raleigh, North Carolina.
North Carolina, along with 31 other states had a government funded eugenics program that had sterilized tens of thousands of Americans by the 1960’s.

Eugenics is an unscientific theory of the global Elite that gained footing in the early 1900’s. Eugenicists believe that poverty, promiscuity and even alcoholism are family genetic traits that can be curbed by sterilization. To make sure certain types do not procreate, and to keep the gene pool of society pure, if a person exhibited those traits, they would be sterilized.

America’s Elite were proponents of this theory.

Margaret Sanger, co-founder of Planned Parenthood was a eugenicist that believed that contraception could be used to manipulate the poor masses to voluntarily choose not to procreate. Yet, in the even that those undesirables did become pregnant, Sanger promoted abortion as a cure. She was hailed in the public’s eye as a courageous woman who stood up for women’s rights however Sanger’s goal was to assist the global Elite in depopulating the planet as quickly as possible. Her contribution was the successful Planned Parenthood.

Dr. Clarence Gamble of Proctor and Gamble and James Hanes of the Hanes hosiery corporation were also supporters of eugenics.

Hanes founded the Human Bettement League that was solely devoted to the furtherment of the eugenics cause.

In North Carolina, the focus of the eugenics program was poor blacks. Sanger believed that blacks and Hispanics were to be the main focal point of the eugenics agenda because she believed their genetics were the most unclean. Black girls as young as 9 – 13 were victims of this sterilization program.

During 1929 – 1974 more than 7,600 people were sterilized in North Carolina. The elected officials have been working since 2003 to compensate those who were forcibly sterilized. They have received apology letters from the state, yet nothing further.

A staggering 85% of these victims were female and 40% of those were non-white.

The state estimated that 2,000 victims are still alive.

State Representative Larry Womble has been working since 2001 to have the eugenics law repealed. He feels that is the government is “powerful enough to perpetrate this on this society, they ought to be responsible, step up to the plate and compensate.”

Eugenics and its believers have become more elusive since their stent in the spotlight in the early part of the 1900’s.

However, there still exists a depopulation agenda, although the faces that support it may surprise some people.

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