FORCED STERILIZATIONS UPDATE: A History of Eugenics in the United States: Rockefeller Foundation, IBM, Bill Gates Jr & the Subsequent WHO-Sponsored Genocides
A new report from the National Women’s Law Center lays out the laws, some passed as recently as 2019, around an overlooked aspect of reproductive justice.
Over the weekend the history of American eugenic was published:
A critically important article on current forced sterilization laws sheds more light on the ongoing democidal horror show which should remove any doubts the the illegitimate Federal government and the majority of captured American states want you and your unborn progeny dead:
31 states have laws that allow forced sterilizations, new report shows
A new report shows that 31 states and the District of Columbia have laws allowing permanent forced sterilizations. Little discussed and largely unmonitored, the issue grabbed national attention last summer when the pop star Britney Spears testified that she was forced to use birth control by her father. While Spears was not subject to surgical sterilization, her testimony started a conversation about reproductive rights and conservatorship.
According to the report from the National Women’s Law Center, 17 states allow the permanent, surgical sterilization of children with disabilities. The report is written in plain language, designed to be understood by at least some of the people impacted most by these laws.
The majority of people in the United States impacted by forced surgical sterilization — permanent procedures such as hysterectomies and tubal ligation — are under guardianship. Guardianship, called conservatorship in some states, is a legal arrangement designed to account for an individual’s incapacity to make legal and health decisions. The guardian, usually a family member or professional, acts as a proxy decision-maker for the person under guardianship. In many states, people under guardianship cannot refuse medical treatment or vote.
Historically, people of color were among the most impacted by forced sterilization laws, which around the turn of the 20th century were being used in eugenics movements. Even after eugenics fell into disrepute after World War II, eugenic thinking has persisted in American law. During the 1970s, the forced sterilization of Black women was so common in the American South that it was sometimes referred to as a “Mississippi appendectomy.”
While many think of forced sterilization as a relic of the past, some of the laws are quite recent: The two most recent state laws regarding forced sterilization were passed in 2019. An appendix in the report lays out the specific laws in every U.S. state and territory.
“These are very current laws,” said Ma’ayan Anafi, senior counsel for health equity and justice at the National Women’s Law Center and author of the report. “There’s still this narrative that disabled people, especially disabled people of color, are a burden on their families and to the public, that their having children is a threat to society,” they told The 19th.
The new report “advances disability justice in several critical ways” said Jasmine Harris, a professor at University of Pennsylvania’s Carey Law School and expert on disability and reproductive justice. In particular, she praised the report’s use of plain language, or writing designed to be understood by a general audience, rather than restricting information to legal experts and academics.
The National Women’s Law Center used plain language to make the information in the report accessible to at least some with intellectual disabilities.
“When people talk about forced sterilization, and are often talking as if disabled people are not there and don’t have a right to be part of the conversation,” Anafi said.
Anafi noted that this is especially true for those with intellectual disabilities.
“There’s this idea that people with [intellectual disabilities] can’t understand sex and pregnancy, so someone has to make that decision for them. But the truth is, when we give disabled people the right tools and support, more people can engage in the public conversation and make their own decisions,” they told The 19th.
To produce a plain language report, the National Women’s Law Center partnered with the Autistic Women and Nonbinary Network, a nonprofit run by and for women and nonbinary people on the spectrum. They also recruited national leaders with intellectual disabilities like Tia Nelis and Max Barrows to help review and ensure that the writing was understandable to people who aren’t policy experts.
“Lawyers can also understand plain language,” Lydia X. Z. Brown, director of policy, advocacy and external affairs at the Autistic Women and Nonbinary Network, told The 19th.
Anafi and Brown both hope that the report will empower more advocates to understand the laws in their states — and, by extension, change them.
“Bringing attention to these laws in an accessible way is step one towards a policy change,” Anafi told The 19th. “Ultimately, we want policies that ensure that everyone has the tools and supports they need to make decisions about their own bodies,” they said.
These articles should convince even the most brainwashed genetically modified Americans that the entire political system is being run by an out of control 4th Branch of Government (i.e. the Intelligence Industrial Complex), which is nothing more than an extension of the One World Government.
“Reproductive justice” a la “The Patriot Act” a la any scam government program with a pro American title is quite literally total reality inversion; in other words, all of these color of law “laws” are designed to subvert not only the Constitution, but, also, natural law and your natural rights.
These globalist sociopaths and their various installed puppets are hellbent on decarbonizing = depopulating the planet, and the average middle class American is in their crosshairs just like every other demographic, if not more so.
Do NOT comply.
Forced sterilization. That's exactly what Buck v. Bell is all about. Standing Supreme Court case law. The landmark SCOTUS 8-1 decision that said "three generations of imbeciles is enough" to uphold eugenics practices. Never overturned, only slightly tweaked in Oklahoma v. Skinner, still the law of the land, upheld as recently as the early 2000's. And even cited in many cases that have challenged pandemic mandates along with Jacobson.
Buck v. Bell: Due Process of Law?
Political Research Quarterly, Walter Berns (1953)
https://sci-hub.se/https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/106591295300600409
Buck v. Bell was even cited by defendants in the Nuremberg Trials, "You Americans practice eugenics, said it was lawful, what was the big deal with us practicing it in Germany?"
The movie Judgement at Nuremberg even contains an emotional scene lifted from the actual trials where the defense counsel for the German jurists recites Buck v. Bell in the trial:
https://archive.org/details/movie-judgment-at-nuremberg-1961
(full, uncut movie, free to view, scene citing Buck v. Bell's begins at 00:34:01 timestamp)
A case that influenced and was influenced by the eugenics movement in Nazi Germany:
Useless Eaters: Disability as Genocidal Marker in Nazi Germany
Catholic Culture, 2003
https://www.catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?recnum=7019
A case that gave cover to the many medical professionals who practiced eugenics and supported the rise of the Nazi Party from its earliest days:
Why did so many German doctors join the Nazi Party early?
International Journal of Law and Psychiatry, September 22, 2012
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23040706/
And the case offers both a warning and guidance on how we move into Newgenics, transhumanism, all of the latest biotechnology that is altering our genetics:
Buck v. Bell, American Eugenics, and the Bad Man Test:
Putting Limits on Newgenics in the 21st Century
Minnesota Journal of Law & Inequality, January, 2020
https://scholarship.law.umn.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1622&context=lawineq
Buck v. Bell, one of the worst SCOTUS decisions of all time, sterilization eugenics:
https://bioedge.org/uncategorized/buck-v-bell-one-of-the-supreme-courts-worst-mistakes/
Don't ignore Buck v. Bell. It's even more relevant 100 years after it was decided. Never being overturned (unlike Roe v Wade was after 50 years) is very instructive.
Been going on too damn long by people too damn rich and too damn influential: https://www.thenewatlantis.com/publications/the-population-control-holocaust