Archive for The Menace Of Eugenics

Enter the Dragon

Liberals and mainstream media are well aware of what is at stake in our nation and have been working hard to discourage us in the hope that we will stay away from the polls on Tuesday. What’s worse, sample voter polls indicate that liberal politicians could take overwhelming control of the White House, the Senate, and the House of Representatives, leaving conservatives with virtually no voice in the governing our country. For the sake of our children and grandchildren, we cannot retreat.

Bible-believing Christians can make a significant impact on the moral health of our country, the ethical character of our leadership, and the spiritual direction of our nation if we would simply live our faith and vote our values.

New Jersey Voter Guide

I cannot overemphasize the importance of the Nov. 4 election. That is why I urge you to vote. Forward this non-partisan election guide e-mail to your family members, friends, Sunday School class and church members and urge them to vote their values. America’s future - the future of your children and grandchildren - is at stake.

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Remaking Humanity

A review of Fatal Misconception: The Struggle to Control World Population, by Matthew Connelly

By Christine Rosen
When historians study hubris, they usually tell stories about the dazzling, cruel, or ill-fated exploits of specific people—presidents, dictators, revolutionaries. In Fatal Misconception, Matthew Connelly, an associate professor of history at Columbia University, looks instead at an idea: controlling human reproduction. Bold in its claims and wildly arrogant in its approach, the international population control movement of the 20th century provides a stark example of the harms that can occur in the name of benevolence. As Connelly describes in this meticulously researched and well-argued study,

Scientists and activists organized across borders to press for common norms of reproductive behavior. International and nongovernmental organizations spearheaded a worldwide campaign to reduce fertility. Together they created a new kind of global governance, in which proponents tried to control the population of the world without having to answer to anyone in particular.

As Connelly tells it, the population control movement faced the perverse challenge of trying to reverse an extraordinary human achievement: “In the last century, humanity has experienced more than twice as great a gain in longevity as in the previous two thousand centuries, and more than four times the growth in population.” But with rapid growth in population came fears of social disruption and food scarcity. The “misery and the fear of misery” caused by overpopulation that mathematician Thomas Malthus first described in 1798 remained a constant concern in Europe and the U.S. During the late 19th century, these anxieties fueled the drive to categorize and make systematic a world that seemed out of control; among the most popular ways of doing this was dividing the world up into different ethnic or racial groups, some deemed more favorable than others. In the United States, fears of “race suicide,” an influx of immigrants from Asia and Southern and Eastern Europe, and concerns about the growth of the so-called feebleminded population at home led to the embrace of eugenics, the movement to improve the human race through better breeding practices.

In the 1920s, efforts by activists to organize a birth control movement gained traction, and advocates of population control eventually supplanted eugenicists as the more effective voices for limiting reproduction, Connelly argues. By the ‘30s, the phrase “family planning” became popular, and the global economic crisis prompted more converts to the idea that overpopulation was a definite peril. As Connelly reminds us, during the Depression, “birth control was one of the few American industries to prosper, serving a $250 million market by 1938.” And with many more people relying on government assistance, the notion that the state and its experts should have a greater say in who should and should not reproduce began to gain acceptance. In other words: don’t breed if the state is the hand that feeds you. By 1937, even the staid American Medical Association had approved family planning.

One of the strengths of Connelly’s history is its global scope, and as he demonstrates, India soon became the proving ground—and often the exploitative laboratory—for many population theories in circulation. American birth control activist Margaret Sanger famously debated Gandhi in the ‘30s and traveled the Indian countryside dispensing her wisdom and hawking a contraceptive foam powder she had never bothered to have tested, even on animals, before distributing it to clinics in India. By the ‘40s, Connelly writes, “Innumerable Americans and Europeans…traveled to India, witnessed ‘overpopulation’ firsthand, and returned ashen-faced, suitably appalled, to tell others of their experience.” As one British colonial administrator bluntly put it, in India, “The people multiply like rabbits and die like flies.” Despite concerted efforts to control reproduction, however, activists were flummoxed that “even the poorest people could not be relied upon to want fewer children.” In the decades to come, population control enthusiasts willfully ignored this lesson.

The ‘50s saw the creation of a “population establishment” that adopted a more global, beneficent tone than the eugenic-minded rhetoric of earlier days. Rather than persuade developing nations such as India, Pakistan, and South Korea to limit their populations for eugenic purposes, they argued that by “rationalizing and redirecting reproduction, they could make their people modern in a single generation.” And as Connelly notes, for the leaders of this establishment, “controlling the birth of this new Third World was just part of a larger plan to remake humanity.” Nevertheless, Connelly argues that throughout the population control movement a form of “crypto-eugenics” still held sway. As one adherent described his approach, “You seek to fulfill the aims of eugenics without disclosing what you are really aiming at and without mentioning the word.” New euphemisms abounded, including talk of “population quality” rather than limiting births and birth control for “those who needed it most,” which meant “the very poorest people.”

Money began flowing into the coffers of population control organizations during these years. The Ford Foundation emerged as a party with deep pockets and deep interest in controlling world population growth: by the early 1960s, “The number of Ford personnel in Delhi rivaled the American embassy staff.” The Rockefeller Foundation also spent lavishly, and the Khanna Study, for example, funded Harvard University researchers who fanned out across villages in Punjab to record how often villagers were having sex and keep track of women’s menstrual cycles. Yet even this richly funded, meticulous (and intrusive) effort proved a failure. As Connelly reports, “After five years, the birth rate of those provided with contraceptives was higher than that of the control group. After a follow-up study featuring even more intensive efforts, it was still higher.”

During its period of professionalization in the ‘50s and ‘60s, as the movement grew in power and influence, it also launched an intensive media campaign. Direct-mail solicitations from organizations such as the World Population Emergency Campaign subtly stoked Western fears by distributing images of starving hordes in the Third World.

Money translated into action. In places like India, movement money funded “mobile vasectomy camps” where, during one five-week period in 1960, nearly 15,000 people were sterilized. Alan Guttmacher, president of Planned Parenthood-World Population, launched an intense effort in the early ‘60s to place IUDs (intrauterine devices) in the wombs of as many women as possible, despite reports showing risks of infection and other complications. The appeal of the IUD was clear to people like Guttmacher: “No contraceptive could be cheaper, and also, once the damn thing is in the patient cannot change her mind.” The International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF) soon issued a press release endorsing the use of IUDs as a safe and effective means of birth control. The practice of sending questionable contraceptive devices overseas continued for decades. In the late 1960s, when the manufacturers of the Dalkon Shield IUD began facing lawsuits over the safety of its device in the U.S., it offered to sell the devices, unsterilized and at half price, to the U.S. Agency for International Development. USAID bought them and by the time the Dalkon Shield recall order was issued in 1975, nearly half a million women in 42 countries were using them.

Also by the 1960s, population workers spoke of “targets” who must be made to become “acceptors” of birth control. Urged on by the Ford Foundation, U.N. agencies, and the IPPF, clinics in India began paying people who submitted to IUD insertion or sterilization as well as “motivators” who convinced others to be sterilized. The movement had transformed from a catch-all group of activists into a “jet set of population experts”—with all of the attendant entitlements. Activists like Alan Guttmacher traveled first class at the IPPF’s expense. He was known to write breezy letters with opening salutations such as, “This is written 31,000 feet aloft as I fly from Rio to New York.”

Opposition from the Catholic Church (which was formulating its own policies on natural family planning during the 20th century) was a significant force, particularly in the early years of the movement, but Connelly argues convincingly that although religious challenges were important, the movement was its own worst enemy. “Growing disarray at the top, grassroots opposition from below, and a continuing tendency to remove all checks and balances would send it careening out of control.” The movement suffered from a lack of transparency about its goals and practices. It bore a striking resemblance to the very act it sought to control: lots of fumbling and groping in the dark, and often questionable alliances. Perhaps the most damning evidence Connelly presents about the population movement is the simplest: it didn’t work. As he notes, “Birth rates were actually falling in the 1960s in most of the world, at virtually the same rate as literacy was increasing among women.”

By the 1970s, despite the fact that Paul Ehrlich’s best-selling book The Population Bomb (which began with a description of the crowded conditions on a “stinking hot night in Delhi”) had sold two million copies, the movement was a mess. India was once again the proving ground. After launching an intense, coercive population control policy that was viewed as a model by the movement, Indira Ghandi was resoundingly rejected by her people during elections in 1977. Population control, it turned out, “had no mandate.”

Although the movement soon shifted its attention to pursuing a broader campaign for women’s rights rather than merely controlling fertility, it did not entirely reject coercive measures. International aid money from the U.N. and from non-governmental organizations such as the IPPF helped China establish the eugenics and one-child policies that have led to forced abortions and infanticide of girl babies. In the ‘80s, pro-life groups in the U.S. launched an effective campaign to convince the Reagan Administration to withhold funding to the U.N. Population Fund unless it took a stand against such “coercive family planning.”

Connelly manages well the challenge of pulling together the many threads of his story; the only weak part of his narrative is the vague call for a “reproductive freedom” that is both “pro-life and pro-choice, combining forces to oppose population control of any kind” he makes in his conclusion. But this is only a minor flaw in an otherwise impressive study.

After taking it all in, one is tempted to invoke the hackneyed warning about the road to hell being paved with good intentions. To be sure, many of these activists sincerely wanted to help other people, and thought that fitting them with diaphragms or sterilizing them was the way to do it. But one of the consistent themes that emerges from Connelly’s book is just how many of the people intent on controlling others’ reproductive lives actually had less elevated intentions. Many of them simply wanted to prevent the wrong sort of people from ever being born. “Population control presented itself as a charity like any other, helping less fortunate people,” Connelly writes, “But it was the only one that promised to make them go away.”

Today, population control is discussed as a global environmental problem or a women’s rights issue. Activists argue about “population stabilization” and the optimum number of people the planet can support. The message is deceptively simple: have fewer children, invest more resources in them, and modernity will soon follow. Yet the population control movement’s slogan—”every child a wanted child”—proves hollow in a context where its target audience of women often lack access to education and medical care. As Connelly’s history shows, individual reproductive practices are extraordinarily difficult to control—not just technically, but culturally and socially. Throughout the book, he challenges us to look not only at the motivations of the activists who sought to control population, but at their actions. “When people set out to save the world,” he reminds us, “the devil is in the details.”

Connelly’s book stands as a warning about the dangers of seeing people as nameless numbers. The movement’s conceit grew out of an unwillingness to recognize the intrinsic humanity and rights of the individual; a readiness to act—and compel—in the name of an amorphous global social conscience; and an eagerness to invoke science and technology to treat problems that are, at root, political. In the end, as Connelly writes, “The great tragedy of population control, the fatal misconception, was to think that one could know other people’s interests better than they knew it themselves.”

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On Basic Care for Patients in the ‘Vegetative’ State

by Cardinal Justin Rigali

In a 2004 address on care for patients diagnosed as being in a “vegetative state,” Pope John Paul II affirmed the human dignity of these patients and the obligation to provide them with ordinary care, including food and water, even with artificial assistance. On Sept. 14, 2007, through its “Responses to Certain Questions of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops Concerning Artificial Nutrition and Hydration,” the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), with the approval of Pope Benedict XVI, reaffirmed and further explained this papal teaching. (The CDF’s “Responses” was accompanied by a “Commentary,” which offered further explanation.) The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) has welcomed this important clarification of Catholic Church teaching and has provided its own set of questions and answers to promote a better understanding of it in the United States.1

Unfortunately, confusion about this teaching and opposition to some aspects of it persist in some quarters. For example, a recent Health Progress article by John J. Hardt, Ph.D. and Fr. Kevin D. O’Rourke, OP, JCD, STM, titled, “Nutrition and Hydration: The CDF Response, In Perspective,” misinterprets the Holy See’s documents in important respects, and even makes the charge that the CDF interprets euthanasia in a way that is “at odds with the traditional teaching of moral theology.”2

As chairmen of the U.S. Bishops’ Committees on Doctrine and on Pro-Life Activities, we offer the following points to prevent misunderstanding and to help those involved in Catholic health care ministry more fully understand the church’s teaching.

First, contrary to the “Rules for Interpretation” referred to by Hardt and Fr. O’Rourke,3 the CDF document was not issued in the form of a canonical decree. Nor is it merely a public policy statement motivated by the threat of legalized euthanasia in certain countries in Europe. It is an authoritative statement of moral truth, reaffirming a teaching by the Catholic Church’s ordinary magisterium regarding how we are to exercise our freedom responsibly as children of God.

Second, not everything in the CDF’s “Responses” applies solely to patients in a “vegetative state.” For example, the CDF’s first response states that “the administration of food and water even by artificial means is, in principle, an ordinary and proportionate means of preserving life.” Certainly this basic principle applies when patients have chronic but stable debilitating conditions that are less extreme than the “vegetative state.” As the CDF “Commentary” notes, helpless patients with conditions such as quadriplegia, mental illness or Alzheimer’s disease also must not be deprived of basic care and “abandoned to die” because their long-term care may burden others. The phrase “in principle” (which in this context means “as a general rule”) is also important, because providing assisted food and fluids may cease to be obligatory in particular circumstances. The U.S. bishops asked whether such circumstances occur only when food and fluids “cannot be assimilated by the patient’s body or cannot be administered to the patient without causing significant physical discomfort,” and the CDF answered in the affirmative. The CDF “Commentary” notes that such circumstances will be “rare” and “exceptional” for a patient in a “vegetative state”; they may occur far more frequently for patients with progressively deteriorating or terminal conditions.

Also, the CDF “Commentary” notes the obligation to provide assisted feeding may not apply “in very remote places or in situations of extreme poverty” because we are not held to do something that is impossible in practical terms. But the CDF’s statement about the general or presumptive obligation to provide food and fluids as a form of ordinary care clearly has broad application.

Third, in applying the church’s longstanding moral tradition against euthanasia to the present question, the CDF is in full accord with that tradition. In 1980, the CDF (with the approval of Pope John Paul II) issued a “Declaration on Euthanasia” defining “euthanasia” as “an action or an omission which of itself or by intention causes death, in order that all suffering may in this way be eliminated.”4 In its more recent “Responses” and accompanying “Commentary,” the CDF is stating that this issue is of particular concern regarding medically assisted food and fluids. Food and water are basic necessities of life, without which anyone (sick or healthy) would soon die. When they are withdrawn from a seriously disabled patient who needs help from others to obtain such basic care — withdrawn not because the means themselves are useless or excessively burdensome, but because someone has judged that patient’s continued life to be useless or burdensome — the patient’s death is the first result, and any other intended goals would seem to be met only through this death. The argument that in such cases the cause of death is merely the underlying condition (the inability to eat and swallow for oneself) is not valid, and is explicitly rejected by the CDF:

Patients in a “vegetative state” breathe spontaneously, digest food naturally, carry on other metabolic functions, and are in a stable situation. But they are not able to feed themselves. If they are not provided artificially with food and liquids, they will die, and the cause of their death will be neither an illness nor the “vegetative state” itself, but solely starvation and dehydration.5

Fourth, this brings us to the argument by Hardt and Fr. O’Rourke that the “significant financial hardships” of providing assisted food and fluids to patients in the “vegetative state” in the U.S. may justify withdrawing such care and letting the patient die.6 In reality, providing the complete range of long-term care for these helpless patients may indeed become very costly, and families should not be abandoned to carry these burdens alone. But providing food and fluids generally accounts for a very small fraction of this cost. If food and fluids are targeted for removal because this will lead to the patient’s early death, thus saving the significant costs of other care, then it seems clear that the patient’s death is being intended precisely as a means to saving these other costs. In other words, this would be a decision to practice euthanasia by omission.

Fifth, nothing in the CDF’s “Responses” or in Pope John Paul II’s address of 2004 provides a basis for withdrawing food and fluids based on a far broader category of “psychic burden.” Hardt and Fr. O’Rourke say that some may “feel” the continued life of a patient in a “vegetative state” is a burden to others, or is not a benefit. This may be true, but such feelings do not justify euthanasia by omission or the deliberate withdrawal of basic care owed to patients because of their human dignity.

Sixth, regarding advance directives such as the “living will,” Hardt and Fr. O’Rourke claim that under the Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services (ERDs) people may continue to make advance decisions regarding their care (Directives 25 and 28).7 This is true as far as it goes. However, Directive 28 provides that “the free and informed health care decision of the person or the person’s surrogate is to be followed so long as it does not contradict Catholic principles” (emphasis added). Moreover, Directive 24, not cited by Hardt and Fr. O’Rourke, also speaks of generally respecting patients’ and surrogates’ decisions, but adds:

The institution, however, will not honor an advance directive that is contrary to Catholic teaching. If the advance directive conflicts with Catholic teaching, an explanation should be provided as to why the directive cannot be honored.

The CDF’s “Responses” provide clarifications as to what Catholic moral principles require of us on the provision of food and fluids, out of respect for the perduring human dignity of even the most severely cognitively disabled of our brothers and sisters.

On the relationship between the ERDs and the CDF’s “Responses,” the USCCB had this to say in its Q&A document:

Directive 58 already speaks of “a presumption in favor of providing nutrition and hydration to all patients, including patients who require medically assisted nutrition and hydration.” The Address and the Responses clarify how this presumption applies to the patient in a “vegetative state” as to other patients, and provide further guidance as to how the Directives should be interpreted and implemented.8

We fully intend that the next edition of the ERDs will be amended to reflect this doctrinal clarification.

While we disagree with other claims by Hardt and Fr. O’Rourke, we believe these are the most important points in need of clarification. Certainly, when they say it is “questionable” whether the Catholic community will rise to the challenge of caring for the basic needs of patients in the “vegetative state,” we hope their pessimism is unwarranted. It is precisely in caring for the poorest and most helpless of patients, those whose value and dignity are dismissed by others, that Catholic health care most clearly lives up to its mission and demonstrates the need for specifically Catholic health care providers in our secularized society. It is in meeting the moral challenge of caring for the most helpless that we will live up to our own God-given dignity.

Notes

© CHA

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