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Eugenics And Scientific Racism : Margaret Sanger

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Eugenics and Scientific Racism: Margaret Sanger The study or practice of attempting to ‘improve’ the human gene pool by encouraging the reproduction of people considered to have desirable traits and discouraging or preventing the reproduction of people considered to have undesirable traits; Eugenics. In the early 20th century, Eugenics grew popular among mainstream scientists, physicians and the general American public. These Eugenicists often believed blacks and other minorities were ‘unfit’ to reproduce. And as a result many privately supported practices such as euthanasia and ultimately genocide. Legally-mandated sterilization was the most radical policy supported by the American eugenics movement. A number of American physicians performed sterilizations even before the surgery was legally approved, though no reliable accounting of the practice exists prior to passage of sterilization laws. Indiana enacted the first law allowing sterilization on eugenic grounds in 1907, with Connecticut following soon after. By 1924, approximately 3,000 people had been involuntarily sterilized in America; the vast majority (2,500) in California. Carrie Buck, a seventeen-year-old girl from Charlottesville, Virginia, was picked as the first person to be sterilized. Carrie had

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