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News
    14 Carolina 
6/27/2014 
   
The Governor's Task Force to Determine the Method of Compensation
    for Victims of N.C.'s Eugenics Board found that a majority of the 7,600
    sterilized during the program were black females. 
 
 
CHAPEL
    HILL, N.C. - Elaine Riddick believes she was sterilized
    by order of the Eugenics Board  of North Carolina at 13 for being black and poor.
    [Riddick is now the Executive Director for the Rebecca Project for Justice
    located in Washington DC and Marietta, Georgia]. 
 
"What
    they wanted to do was get rid of this bad blood, or whatever you want to
    call it," Riddick said. "They're calling it pure race, a
    cleansing of the races." [We see same subtle overtones of this
    mentality with Melinda Gates and HHS' "new eugenic"
    population-control policies that use dangerous
    long-term contraceptives 
    like Depo Provera, targeting Blacks, Hispanics and poor women in the United
    States and Africa, while concealing and minimizing lethal side effects]. 
 
North
    Carolina was one of nearly three dozen states that practiced eugenics. 
 
UNC
    School of Law Professor Alfred Brophy said the forced sterilization of what
    the state called the "feebleminded, epileptic and mentally
    diseased" was seen as a public good that would protect the health of
    future generations. 
 
"We
    now recognize that was incredibly immoral [similar to injecting and
    implanting millions of women with Depo Provera and Norplant without their
    consent and knowledge of lethal side effects that include sterilization],
    but that's the mindset the people making these decisions had," he
    said. 
 
In
    a ruling upholding the constitutionality of forced sterilization in 1927,
    Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote, "It is better for all the world
    if, instead of waiting to execute degenerate offspring for crime, or to let
    them starve for their imbecility, society can prevent those who are
    manifestly unfit from continuing their kind." [Reimert T. Ravenholt
    USAID's first director of population-control embraced these same
    racist views that have now evolved to become tacit US family planning
    policy to use lethal long-term contraceptives, which are aggressively
    promoted by Dr. Rajiv Shah of USAID and the Gates Foundation, while
    concealing harm]. 
 
Despite
    the ruling, most states discontinued the practice after World War II.
    "Americans looked at this and said, 'Boy, that looks like something
    the Nazis were doing,'" Brophy said.  
 
North
    Carolina, however, was just getting started. The Governor's Task Force to
    Determine the Method of Compensation for Victims of N.C.'s Eugenics Board
    was formed in 2011 to gather testimony about the eugenics program. In part,
    it found that more than three quarters of the 7,600 people who were
    sterilized during the program were sterilized between 1946 and 1964. 
 
It
    also found that a majority [of sterilized victims] were black females.
    [Presently, in the United States, Black females who account for only 11.5
    percent of US births are administered over 85% of Depo Provera and other
    long-term contraceptives that cause under reported sterility, HIV/AIDS and
    breast cancer, which is going to be a subject of Congressional Hearings
    this year]. 
 
Elizabeth
    Haddix is an attorney for the UNC Center for Civil Rights, "The state
    had decided with their eugenics board, this five-person, all-white-male
    board, decided who deserved to procreate or not," Elizabeth Haddix, an
    attorney for the UNC Center for Civil Rights, said. "And that decision
    was unfortunately based on a sort of world view that you needed to be of a
    certain class, of a certain race, a certain sophistication in order to be
    deserving of this natural human right." 
 
In
    2013, North Carolina made the historic decision to compensate the victims
    of its eugenics program, but there's a catch... [to be continued]. 
 
Victims
    of debilitating diseases related to Depo Proveraand other dangerous
    long-term contraceptives that cause sterilization should contact Elaine
    Riddick  to receive
    information about Congressional hearings and Attorney Willie Gary's Depo
    Provera lawsuit.   
 
 
     
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The Rebecca Project for
      Justice is a transformational organization that advocates for public
      policy reform, justice and dignity for vulnerable families. 
Elaine
      Riddick, Executive
      Director / 770-354-0583 / 202-406-0911 |  
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