Monday, May 24, 2010

Eugenics, Margaret Sanger now part of Texas textbook controversy

Eugenics, Margaret Sanger now part of Texas textbook controversy

    
texas board of education (new york times)

Backstory, from TheNewAmerican.com, May 1...

    The TX State Board of Education is embroiled in a battle over textbook content that, media reports claim, could dictate public school curricula nationwide. As the single largest textbook purchaser in the country, TX is a major decision-maker regarding content of books available on the market, since publishers naturally cater to their most lucrative client.

... and from Fox News, May 20:

    The TX Board of Education has 5 Democrats, and 10 Republicans, 7 of whom vote as a conservative block.

    What does that mean? They control what happens here....

    
Texas board of education

    [W]hen Democrats enjoyed an identical majority, they too manipulated the curriculum to fit their agenda.

    The debate began when a review group of teachers recommended replacing Christmas with a Hindu holiday and removing partially or entirely Alexander Graham Bell, Albert Einstein, religious references, and Christopher Columbus....

... which brings us to yesterday and today, from MyFoxNY.com...

    The TX Board of Education is putting the finishing touches on a final set of proposed social study standards. For months the 2 sides have been far apart on a number issues ranging from race to religion.

    
Sanger

    The divide grew with the introduction of new amendments Thursday, including one that says high school books should outline the practice of eugenics - the sterilization of a selected group of people.

    The idea supported by early progressives like Planned Parenthood founder Margaret Sanger [pictured above left]....

    The board is set to vote Friday.

Here was one of the 2 changes proposed yesterday, the insertion of one little but potent word into the curriculum:

recommended change

The justification given for the curriculum change is compelling. I don't know why anyone would oppose educating our children about this sordid component of U.S. history:

    [F]rom War Against the Weak, by Edward Black, 2003:

    In the first 3 decades of the 20th Century, American corporate philanthropy combined with prestigious academic fraud to create the pseudoscience eugenics that institutionalized race politics as national policy. The goal: create a superior, white, Nordic race and obliterate the viability of everyone else.

    How? By identifying so-called "defective" family trees and subjecting them to legislated segregation and sterilization programs. The victims: poor people, brownhaired white people, African Americans, immigrants, Indians, Eastern European Jews, the infirm and really anyone classified outside the superior genetic lines drawn up by American raceologists.

    
Eugenics book

    The main culprits were the Carnegie Institution, the Rockefeller Foundation and the Harriman railroad fortune, in league with America's most respected scientists hailing from such prestigious universities as Harvard, Yale and Princeton, operating out of a complex at Cold Spring Harbor on Long Island.

    The eugenic network worked in tandem with the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, the State Department and numerous state governmental bodies and legislatures throughout the country, and even the U.S. Supreme Court.

    They were all bent on breeding a eugenically superior race, just as agronomists would breed better strains of corn. The plan was to wipe away the reproductive capability of the weak and inferior.

    Ultimately, 60,000 Americans were coercively sterilized - legally and extra-legally. Many never discovered the truth until decades later. Those who actively supported eugenics include America's most progressive figures: Woodrow Wilson, Margaret Sanger and Oliver Wendell Holmes.

This is all just simple, sad, documented truth. Who would argue against teaching it? What would their arguments possibly be?

Contact: Jill Stanek
Source: JillStanek.com
Publish Date: May 21, 2010
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