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Eugenics in America

Eugenics in America

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This episode traces the full history of eugenics in America from its origins in Francis Galton's Victorian-era theories through the establishment of Charles Davenport's Eugenics Record Office at Cold Spring Harbor and the rise of Harry Laughlin's model sterilization laws.

We cover the fraudulent family studies of the Jukes and the Kallikaks, the dangerously elastic diagnosis of feeble-mindedness, and the passage of compulsory sterilization laws beginning with Indiana in 1907.

The narrative follows Carrie Buck's story through the landmark 1927 Supreme Court decision in Buck v. Bell, where Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes declared that "three generations of imbeciles are enough," a ruling that has never been explicitly overturned. We examine how eugenics shaped the Immigration Act of 1924, contributed to the turning away of Jewish refugees fleeing Nazi Germany, and directly influenced Hitler's racial hygiene programs, the Aktion T-4 euthanasia campaign, and the administrative machinery of the Holocaust.

The episode documents the continuation of forced sterilization well into the 1970s across California, North Carolina, Mississippi, Alabama, Puerto Rico, and Native American reservations through the Indian Health Service, with tens of thousands of victims disproportionately drawn from poor communities, Black women, Indigenous women, and people with disabilities.

We tell the stories of Carrie Buck, Elaine Riddick, the Relf sisters, Fannie Lou Hamer, and others who lived the consequences of this movement, and we follow the thread into the present through the Bell Curve controversy, ICE detention center abuses, and California prison sterilizations that prove the underlying logic of eugenics never fully disappeared.

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Disturbing History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past.

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