Not sure if there's been much on the local news about it, since I live in SC, but they've been talking on NPR about the NC legislature considering giving surviving victims of eugenics and forced sterilizations in NC $50k each as an effort to "make ammends" for what happened. WHy the fuck are we not arresting the fuckers that actually did this? THAT would be the first step in "making ammends" for so blatantly violating people's basic rights.The people that should be put in jail are:the doctors who did this. no excuse for performing medical procedures on the unwilling. at a bare minimum, their medical licenses should be revoked.the social workers who went along with this and actually picked people out.the politicians who enacted and pushed this. i don't know that I'd go so far as to prosecute people who simply voted for it, but those who actively pushed this and thought it was a good idea should burn in hell rot in prison.I don't care how old any of the actors in this are. prosecute the hell out of them.
1/11/2012 2:15:26 PM
the $50,000 payout is a slap in the face
1/11/2012 2:20:12 PM
I've been studying these nazis on Western Blvd for years. To me, reparations aren't as important as prison time for any doctors or administrators still alive, all of whom were allowed to retire comfortably.I'm almost afraid for this to rise back into the political zeitgeist though, because I'm sure there are republicans that would still favor it. For example, "you can only get welfare benefits if you submit to sterilization."[Edited on January 11, 2012 at 2:34 PM. Reason : .]
1/11/2012 2:32:13 PM
most of the people involved in this are dead. Its a shame it took 30+ years for this to get mainstream attention.and some of the comments on articles about this from wral are
1/11/2012 2:49:14 PM
Like I said, it's almost better that this be a dark, forgotten secret rather than give the savages among us any ideas.I shall paraphrase and summarize the WRAL comments, in order from top to bottom:
1/11/2012 2:51:32 PM
1/11/2012 3:05:23 PM
We should start a voluntary live organ donation program in exchange for government benefits.How am I doing?
1/11/2012 3:09:48 PM
1/11/2012 3:12:23 PM
^ i mean, I understand your resistance, and I have it, too, but there's such a thing as damages, and these people most certainly suffered them. Maybe the taxpayers should be on the hook for gross violations of people's rights so that they won't elect fuckers who will do it. but there certainly shouldn't be reparations if the idiots who did this don't go to jail
1/11/2012 3:43:28 PM
There are no links in this thread.And I don't know what happened.
1/11/2012 4:22:18 PM
Up until the 1970's, doctors in North Carolina and dozens of other states could order you to be castrated or sterilized, without any legal review or recourse. Typically these people had mental problems and many of the sterilizations took place at Dorthea Dix down the street. However, the criteria for sterilization was very broad, and it could happen for reasons as silly as "promiscuity" or miscegenation. As you might expect, the victims were all poor and disproportionately black(they would be sterilized at St. Agnes Hospital, located on the campus of St. Augustine college in raleigh). The aim of the program was obviously to reduce unwanted and undesirable pregnancies in the poor population, with undertones of improving the human race. The ideas of the eugenics movement date to the 1800's, and the Nazis were the most famous executors of the policy. The US Supreme Court case Buck v. Bell specifically permits the practice of sterilizing criminals and the "feeble-minded", and was in fact cited by Nazis for their defense at the Nuremberg trials.[Edited on January 11, 2012 at 4:53 PM. Reason : .]
1/11/2012 4:44:01 PM
oh, I thought this was like some clandestine organization that operated outside the law.It sounds like the doctors were given this authority and the government allowed it.Being government means never having to say you're sorry.
1/11/2012 4:48:37 PM
1/11/2012 4:52:28 PM
The later supreme court decision Skinner v. Oklahoma banned the sterilization of criminals, but still permitted sterilizing the mentally ill. The last of 65,000 forced sterilizations in America occurred in 1981.[Edited on January 11, 2012 at 4:59 PM. Reason : .]
1/11/2012 4:56:31 PM
that is the most informative and sensible post smc has ever had. keep it up!
1/11/2012 5:15:52 PM
Sounds like a waste of money for something that happened 30 years ago.
1/11/2012 5:16:55 PM
so, fuck it, right? we fucked over some people for no reason, no need to hold anyone accountable?
1/11/2012 5:20:14 PM
Who is "we"?Various branches of the U.S. federal and state governments have fucked over a whole lot of people in a whole lot of ways. Best way to make amends is to reverse policy. I'm not willing to take responsibility for some shit I didn't do, though. The guilty should pay, and that's that.[Edited on January 11, 2012 at 5:30 PM. Reason : ]
1/11/2012 5:28:42 PM
the state of NC? would it make you happy if I said "they", instead? It was done under the auspices and direction of the gov't. Thus, the people are, at some level, responsible.
1/11/2012 5:30:21 PM
1/11/2012 9:45:59 PM
1/11/2012 11:07:27 PM
1/12/2012 12:15:59 AM
I don't know why any of you are bothering to argue with d357r0y3r. He will respond that he has not agreed to any "social contract" by which he consents to the government (both as an institution and the people involved in it), and therefore has no responsibility for anything that the government does. And there's really nothing you can say to a person who renounces the authority and legitimacy of his own government, except maybe that he's a coward for not actively attempting to overthrow it. (Though, for all I know, he may be attempting to do precisely that and is just bad at it. Can't blame him, though. Imagine what a cabal of his sort would be like. "Why do I have to pay dues to contribute to buying the fertilizer and renting the van? I voted against the plan to blow up the courthouse. I said we should blow up the DMV. I'm not going to pay for something I didn't vote for. If the courthouse deserves to get blown up, I'm sure the free market will handle it.")---Other than that, I don't see anything to disagree with in this thread. Pay a settlement to those affected and hang everybody who was involved and is still breathing. I wouldn't be completely opposed to desecrating the remains of the ones who have already died, but it isn't a dealbreaker or anything.
1/12/2012 3:10:30 AM
1/12/2012 8:07:50 AM
No amount of facepalms can do WRAL Golo comments justice. The only thing reading them does is erode any remaining faith in humanity that you had left.
1/12/2012 10:03:59 AM
can somebody define "Forced Sterilization"were these people just rounding up women and kidnapping them?? haif so, time to gtfo out of nc!! now i know where some of you got your genetic 'logic' from. ha
1/12/2012 10:22:44 AM
"I don't see the problem here"
1/12/2012 11:52:41 AM
1/12/2012 12:09:46 PM
1/12/2012 12:29:40 PM
1/12/2012 12:59:50 PM
the doctors who preformed these should NOT be prosecuted... it was legal and approved of by the state. (not saying it was RIGHT but not illegal.)and current taxpayers should not be held responsible. This shit happened before most of us WERE taxpayers. [Edited on January 12, 2012 at 1:56 PM. Reason : ]
1/12/2012 1:54:39 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hippocratic_Oath
1/12/2012 2:08:52 PM
is that a north carolina state law?and still, one could argue they were attempting to help these folks who would be worse off having kids to raise.
1/12/2012 2:14:56 PM
I don't know if they should be prosecuted, but they should lose their medical license if any of them still practice. And should be open to lawsuits.
1/12/2012 2:23:36 PM
the hell they shouldn't be prosecuted. Seems to me like a basic rule for doctors is "Don't perform operations on people who did not actually consent to said operation." Fuck them if they can't follow that basic rule. The "I was following orders shit" doesn't apply to a doctor in the US who had every opportunity to say "fuck off, that's immoral"
1/12/2012 2:35:49 PM
1/12/2012 2:47:06 PM
1/12/2012 3:03:06 PM
^I said "one" could argue... not that I believe that.
1/12/2012 3:04:02 PM
and the leaders in Nazi germany weren't breaking any laws in their nation at the time when they exterminated millions of Jews. Yet we still prosecuted them after the war. I understand your point, and I'm not particularly down with ex-post-facto laws, but I imagine there must have been some law at the time that tended to say "doctors can't operate on people without their consent."
1/12/2012 3:08:25 PM
1/13/2012 12:26:58 PM
What is there to prosecute for? They were obeying the laws of the State of North Carolina and as such are untouchable.We just can't go back in time and make what they did illegal. That would violate the fundamental basis of Due Process.
1/13/2012 12:32:15 PM
1/13/2012 12:35:50 PM
#1 They weren't prosecuted for violating the laws of Germany. They were prosecuted for violating international laws of war.#2 In many instances they were in violation of the laws of Germany#3 After the initial spurt of activity, the allies eventually backed away from the prosecutions and executions.#4 There was a lot of uneasiness involving those tribunals and as such, international treaties have been established to make crimes such as those punishable by the international community.[Edited on January 13, 2012 at 12:41 PM. Reason : .]
1/13/2012 12:39:15 PM
and I understand your point, but you don't think there should be any punishment for people blatantly violating the rights of others in such a heinous way?
1/13/2012 12:52:58 PM
because they violated no laws as such they cannot be punished. The only outlet available is for the State to recompense the people who were the victims of the State's eugenic policies.
1/13/2012 12:59:40 PM
you'll forgive me if I think there is a basic law called "violating someone's civil rights" that we prosecute people for all the time that says you can't, well, you know, violate someone civil rights. And I'd say that cutting someone's reproductive organs out of their body or ordering someone else to do so is a violation of a person's civil rights
1/13/2012 1:02:30 PM
What law are they accused of violating and what criminal charge comes with it?When people are accused of violating Civil Rights, it is largely a civil violation and not so much a criminal violation unless expressly stated as such.[Edited on January 13, 2012 at 1:21 PM. Reason : .]
1/13/2012 1:11:03 PM
It would probably have to be a civil suit, but I imagine you could argue a violation of the 14th amendment and cite Skinner V. Oklahoma for some precedent.
1/13/2012 1:26:40 PM
A civil suit that would go no where on a lot of grounds. After all, the State has to authorize these payments, else wise the state would have immunity from having to pay anything.
1/13/2012 1:35:31 PM
set em up
1/13/2012 4:58:08 PM