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View Full Version : North Carolina hearing explores history of forced sterilization



Arkady Renko
06-23-2011, 01:48 PM
I'm in two minds about this, cause sometimes I honestly believe that it would be good to keep certain people from having kids, but knowing that this kind of plan was a cornerstone of the nazi's racial purification agenda it makes me queasy to read about it being done as late as the 70s.

Muddy
06-23-2011, 02:47 PM
YOWWWW!!! Has anybody else ever heard of this happening here???

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(CNN) -- Deborah Chesson spoke through tears Wednesday as she addressed a North Carolina task force on behalf of her mother. "I'm writing you with hopes that you will understand the pain, hurt and emptiness I still feel inside," she read.
"A social worker convinced my mom to sign for me to undergo an operation that would prevent me from getting pregnant, not knowing all the while that I was being set up to be sterilized like I was some kind of animal."
Dozens of North Carolina citizens spoke at the public hearing against the state's five-decade forced sterilization program. The listening session, held by the governor's task force, gave victims the opportunity to share their experiences with a state task force charged with recommending compensation for victims and their families.
Eugenics is the process of selectively breeding humans and animals to rid the population of "unfit" characteristics. In 1933, North Carolina passed a revised eugenics law. The law established the North Carolina Eugenics Board, which largely targeted low-income females for sterilization procedures.
Those speaking at the hearing said social workers pressured men and women to undergo sterilization and in some cases lied and said the procedures were reversible.

After World War II, most states abolished their eugenics programs when it became clear that Nazi's used similar practices to further their ideals of racial purity. But the number of sterilizations in North Carolina peaked between 1950-1960, according to state records. Though the eugenics board was abolished in 1977, the law remained a general statute until 2003.
Roughly 3,000 of the 7,600 citizens who were sterilized are still alive. Friends and family members of those sterilized addressed the task force on behalf of their loved ones who could not be present.
In 2003, North Carolina Gov. Bev Perdue established the Governor's Eugenics Compensation Task Force to research and provide recommendations for possible compensation for victims. The task force has an August 1 deadline to submit a proposal to the governor.
State representatives considered offering $50,000 in compensation to victims, but legislators deemed the amount too high. Now they are considering whether to offer $20,000 or to pay for medical services.
At least seven other states have issued formal apologies for similar eugenics programs. So far, only North Carolina has considered establishing a program to compensate individual victims.
"What do you think I'm worth?" one victim asked. "It doesn't matter what you think I'm worth. It's what I think I'm worth."
Perdue addressed the audience after the testimonies were heard. She called the state's sterilization program "reprehensible" and thanked victims and their families for having the courage to share their stories with the task force.
"I can't believe that this has ever happened in North Carolina. I thank you from the bottom of my heart for being here," Perdue said. "This is not a good day for us. It's not a happy day for North Carolina ... and it has to be hard for you to sit in this room."

Chesson said the intervening years have turned victims into survivors who have endured despite the efforts of the eugenics board. She questioned how much longer the victims would have to wait for justice.
"It's easy to make decisions when you don't have faces of the people who have been victimized," she said.
"The eugenics board was a committee, a board. ... I'm not saying that you're just like them, but for me, until I see action, I'm still waiting."

Teh One Who Knocks
06-23-2011, 03:04 PM
TBH, I think they should bring it back :lol:

Muddy
06-23-2011, 03:15 PM
As politically incorrect as it is... I don't have a problem with it as long as it isn't forced...

Teh One Who Knocks
06-23-2011, 03:21 PM
I'd have no problem with it being forced upon certain people if they are found guilty of things like child neglect/negligence in a court of law, if it's a major violation.

Foxdana
06-23-2011, 03:24 PM
I'd have no problem with it being forced upon certain people if they are found guilty of things like child neglect/negligence in a court of law, if it's a major violation.

Absolutely agree 100%!

Muddy
06-23-2011, 03:24 PM
Sure, But I think in this program they were sterilizing people just because they were poor..

MrsM
06-23-2011, 03:26 PM
I'd have no problem with it being forced upon certain people if they are found guilty of things like child neglect/negligence in a court of law, if it's a major violation.

I agree with these - but if it's because they are poor or for other reasons then they should not be forced