by Rebecca R. Messall, Esq. (Catalyst 7-8/2005)
This article is taken from its
fuller version in the fall 2004 issue of Human Life Review,
available in its entirety at www.humanlifereview.com.
Everyone knows that the infamous Roe v. Wade opinion legalized
abortion, but almost no one knows that legal abortion was a
strategy by eugenicists, as early as 1939, to "genetically
improve" the population by "reducing" it. In writing his
opinion, Roe's author, Justice Harry A. Blackmun, relied
directly and indirectly on the work of these British and
American eugenicists. Eugenics is easiest to describe as being
the Darwin-based theory behind the Nazis' plans to "breed" a
race of human thoroughbreds. After Hitler, eugenic theorists
advocated global control over who has babies, and how many. It
has been called "population thinking." America's richest
families promoted eugenicists and their many social initiatives,
including Roe.
One of the clearest links between the eugenics movement and U.S.
abortion policy is visible in the American Eugenics Society's (AES)
1956 membership records, which includes a Planned Parenthood
co-founder, Margaret Sanger, and at least two presidents,
William Vogt and Alan Guttmacher. The AES had an ugly history of
multiple ties to prominent Nazis in Germany. AES members
assisted Hitler in crafting the 1933 German sterilization laws.
Unbelievably, in 1956— after WWII—the AES membership list
included Dr. Otmar Frieherr Von Verschuer, who had supervised
the ongoing "science" experiments of Dr. Josef Mengele at
Auschwitz.
The AES lobbied successfully for involuntary sterilization laws
in the United States, which claimed an estimated 63,000 victims.
In 1927, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld those laws in Buck v.
Bell, which was cited in Roe. Some states have recently
extended official regret and/or apology for those laws.
The Catholic Church was, and is, the nemesis of eugenicists.
Politicians in both political parties who position themselves
against the Catholic Church and in favor of Roe, align
themselves with a host of eugenic strategies and fallout—which
include human embryo exploitation (nick-named stem cell
research), the trafficking in fetal body parts and euthanasia.
They also align themselves with the Rockefeller family dynasty,
who funded eugenic scientists decades before Hitler put eugenic
theories into practice and who supported many of the leaders of
the American Eugenics Society.
The Rockefellers' support for eugenics began early in the
twentieth century, and included support for the Eugenics Record
Office. In 1913 John D. Rockefeller, Jr. ("Junior") incorporated
a group, which became a major force in supporting birth control
clinics and played a pioneering role in the modern field of
population studies.
As early as 1922, the Rockefeller Foundation sent money to fund
German eugenics. Of Germany's 20-plus Kaiser Wilhelm Institute
science centers, Rockefeller money built or supported three
which "made their mark for medical murder" under the Nazis. One
institute was for brain research. During part of Hitler's rule,
it employed Hermann J. Muller, a Rockefeller-funded American
socialist and geneticist. It later received "brains in batches
of 150-250" derived from Holocaust victims. Another center, the
Eugenics Institute, listed its 1935 activities as follows: "the
training of SS doctors; racial hygiene training; expert
testimony for the Reich Ministry of the Interior on cases of
dubious heritage; collecting and classifying skulls from Africa;
studies in race crossing; and experimental genetic pathology."
Junior began funding Margaret Sanger in 1924. Surely he knew of
her 1922 book, The Pivot of Civilization. In it Sanger
railed against New York's Archbishop, calling his orthodoxy a
"menace to civilization." Yet she admired Sir Francis Galton,
the founder of eugenics, whose ideal she called "the rational
breeding of human beings." She said the Neo-Malthusians
considered birth control as "the very pivot of civilization."
She said, "Birth control… is really the greatest and most truly
eugenic program."
When Frederick Osborn became president of the AES in 1946, the
AES' journal, Eugenical News, published a state-by-state
report on sterilizations. It also reported on the opposition by
Catholic hierarchy, religious and laity. In Alabama: "Whenever
sterilization bills are introduced the Catholics descend upon
the capital in numbers—priests, nuns and laity—and attack the
bill as "against the will of God" and "an attack on the American
home." In Colorado, a 1945 bill failed passage due to "vigorous
Catholic opposition." In Pennsylvania: "The Cardinal's office in
Philadelphia immediately sent a letter to every legislator
directing him to oppose the bill, and they were visited by the
parish priests in their home communities."
Frederick Osborn was put in charge of the Population Council, a
group organized and funded by John D. Rockefeller III. In 1956,
Osborn addressed the British eugenics society. Osborn affirmed
his belief in "Galton's dream" and proposed what he called
"voluntary unconscious selection" by changing laws, customs and
social expectations. To accomplish this voluntary unconscious
selection, he advocated an appeal to the idea of "wanted"
children.
In 1968, when many people wrongly believed that the eugenics
movement had disappeared, Osborn published a book, The Future
of Human Heredity: An Introduction to Eugenics in Modern
Society. Osborn asserted that "less intelligent women" could
be convinced to reduce their births voluntarily, in order to
"further both the social and biological improvement of the
population." He utilized a euphemism for racial minorities by
urging that contraception be targeted to people "at the lower
economic and educational level." Osborn recommended disguising
the reason for making birth control "equally available." He
said: "Measures for improving the hereditary base of
intelligence and character are most likely to be attained under
a name other than eugenics."
Writing his Roe opinion five years after Osborn's book,
Blackmun's first four introductory paragraphs mention nothing
about the newly decreed right of privacy in support of abortion,
but he does state: "population growth, pollution, poverty, and
racial overtones tend to complicate and not to simplify the
problem." Blackmun directly cited the two men closely connected
to the British and the American eugenics societies. Glanville
Williams is cited twice. Christopher Tietze is cited three times
and Lawrence Lader's book, Abortion, is cited seven
times.
The mystery of Blackmun's curious opening paragraphs in Roe
may be solved by Lader's book, Abortion, which contains
panicked rhetoric such as the following:
"The frightening mathematics of population growth overwhelms
piecemeal solutions and timidity. No government, particularly of
an underdeveloped nation, can solve a population crisis without
combining legalized abortion with a permanent, intensive
contraception campaign."
Glanville Williams (1911- 1997) was a Eugenics Society Fellow in
England. Before citing Williams in Roe, Blackmun would
have seen Williams' explicit reference to eugenics:
“Contraception and Eugenics: The problem does not only concern
the limits of subsistence, though this in itself is one of
sufficient magnitude. There is, in addition, the problem of
eugenic quality. We now have a large body of evidence that,
since industrialization, the upper stratum of society fails to
replace itself, while the population as a whole is increased by
excess births among the lower and uneducated classes.”
Before Roe, Ireland's future cardinal, Cahal B. Daly, had
exposed Williams’ anti-Catholic rhetoric:
"Examples of the technique occur on every alternate
page…Christian moral teaching is 'reactionary,' 'old-fashioned,'
'unimaginative,' 'primitive if not blasphemous,' 'restrictive,'
'irrational,' 'out-moded,' 'dogmatic,' 'doctrinaire,'
'authoritarian.'
"Contrasted with it are 'enlightened opinion,' 'interesting
medico-social experimentation,' 'progressive statutes,'
'empirical, imaginative humanitarianism.'"
Blackmun acknowledged the Catholic scientific view that life
begins at the moment of conception, but thereafter Blackmun
relied on books and articles espousing the science of eugenics.
In fact, one book contains a subheading titled, "The New
Eugenics," and cites two men who can be described as maniacal
eugenicists who were seemingly paranoid about a deteriorating
human heredity. Blackmun cited an article, "The New Biology and
the Future of Man", which speaks for itself:
"Taken together, [artificial gestation, genetic engineering,
suspended animation]...they constitute a new phase in human life
in which man takes over deliberate control of his own evolution…
There is a qualitative change to progress when man learns to
create himself…a reworking of values is required…Submission to
supernatural power is not adaptive to a world in which man
himself controls even his own biological future...What counts is
awareness of the unmistakable new fact that in general new
biology is handing over to us the wheel with which to steer
directly the future evolution of man."
In March 1973, two months after Roe was handed down,
Osborn's American Eugenics Society changed its name to the
Society for the Study of Social Biology. The announcement said:
"The change of name of the Society does not coincide with any
change of its interests or policies." The group had already
changed the name of its journal in 1968 from Eugenics
Quarterly, to Social Biology. Commenting on the new
title, Osborn remarked: "The name was changed because it became
evident that changes of a eugenic nature would be made for
reasons other than eugenics, and that tying a eugenic label on
them would more often hinder than help their adoption. Birth
control and abortion are turning out to be great eugenic
advances of our time. If they had been advanced for eugenic
reasons it would have retarded or stopped their acceptance."
This, then, is the ideological basis of the abortion industry.
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