THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION By LEON F. WHITNEY FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY NEW YORK MCMXXXIV COPYRIGHT, 1934, BY LEON F. WHITNEY All rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced without the written permission of the publisher. Printed in the United States of America CONTENTS CHAPTER PACK I. STERILIZATION A BURNING ISSUE TO-DAY . . 7 II. WHAT Is STERILIZATION? 17 III. DOES STERILIZATION WORK SATISFACTORILY? 35 IV. THE EFFECT OF STERILIZATION ON SEX LIFE AND GENERAL HAPPINESS 57 V. THE RELATION OF MENDELISM TO STERILIZA- TION 67 VI. IMPORTING TROUBLE 91 VII. DEGENERACY IN THE MAKING .... 105 VIII. A PAGE OF HISTORY 125 IX. How MANY OUGHT To BE STERILIZED? . 143 X. WHAT HAPPENED TO CARRIE BUCK . . . 157 XL CHILDREN NOT WANTED 173 XII. THE OBJECTIONS MOST OFTEN URGED — I 189 XIII. THE OBJECTIONS MOST OFTEN URGED — II 217 XIV. THE WRONG SIDE OF THE LEDGER . . . 233 XV. VOLUNTARY OR COMPULSORY? 249 XVI. PAYING THE PIPER 259 XVII. A PLANNED SOCIETY 273 XVIII. HOLDING THE BEAR BY THE TAIL . . 281 APPENDIX A 295 APPENDIX B 297 APPENDIX C 301 BIBLIOGRAPHY 305 [v] Choose good grandparents. —Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes Three generations of imbeciles are enough. — Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION CHAPTER I STERILIZATION A BURNING ISSUE TO-DAY CHAPTER I STERILIZATION A BURNING ISSUE TO-DAY Since the year 1934 opened there has been a start- ling increase in the attention given to the subject of sterilization, an increase which among Ameri- can newspaper-readers is probably due largely to the news from Germany that Hitler has undertaken to have some four hundred thousand Germans sterilized — nearly a hundredth part of the popula- tion. Whether this order is or is not directed ex- clusively at the Jews, it is so grave a decision as to justify fully the recent discussion of it among thou- sands of persons in our own country who may never before have taken any real interest in the subject. Many far-sighted men and women in both Eng- land and America, however, have long been work- ing earnestly toward something very like what Hitler has now made compulsory. Ridiculed, even vilified, they have fought courageously and stead- ily for the legalization of what they consider a constructive agency in the betterment of the race. [7] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION And now they stand watching their fellow-coun- trymen awaken suddenly to a keen and inquiring interest in sterilization, and ready to explain what it is, why it is needed, and how it should be guarded. The average American, to whom it has been only a strange or sensational term, now wants to know just how it may be counted on to work in the elimination of undesirable elements in society, along with the burden so long imposed on us by their multiplication and their helplessness. Steri- lization has something to do with criminals and feeble-minded — so much the man-in-the-street knows ; it has something to do with the question of birth-control, some connection with inheritable diseases. Such ideas are to be gathered from the reading of newspapers and popular magazines. But beyond these he has little information; and he is going to need a good deal more if the issue in our own country is to be considered judiciously and legislated on with any degree of effectiveness. Holding no brief for Herr Hitler, approving his action only because it has served to bring dramati- cally to public attention a movement that I have long been interested in, I hope in this book to clarify the subject of sterilization in all its most important aspects; to present the case in non- technical language as far as possible, and to help [8] STERILIZATION A BURNING ISSUE TO-DAY my readers toward a better understanding of the purposes underlying the sterilization movement. My own enthusiasm has been developed through my work, during several years, as Executive Sec- retary of the American Eugenics Society, an or- ganization that acts as a clearing-house for all ideas relating to racial improvement, including steriliza- tion, and as an active agent in the enactment of new laws as well as in the enforcement of old. In the course of considerable study of the problem of sterilization and related questions in genetics, I have gathered a good many experiences and ob- servations that support my whole-hearted enthusi- asm for the movement, and some of these will appear in the pages to follow. I include them because they prove that sterilization is no mere academic question — it has an immediate and vital bearing on human life : on our personal happiness, on the welfare of our families, on the individual and the community pocket-book, on the quality of our race in the long run. Sterilization is at present, of course, a contro- versial issue. Not every one agrees with Mr. Jus- tice Holmes that "it is better for all the world if Society can prevent those who are manifestly unfit from continuing their kind." How bitter the op- position is, particularly in some religious quarters, [9] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION will appear in subsequent chapters. But dissent comes not only from these quarters; it emanates too often from persons who have no religious scru- ples in eugenic matters but who are ill-informed, or prejudiced, or overhasty in taking their stand on half-baked notions. And finally there are the thousands who honestly want to think straight on this critical question but who have never had the facts presented to them clearly and fully. To the pocket-book aspect of our situation to- day, too, we owe much of the interest expressed in sterilization. Taxes and charitable funds in huge amounts annually go to support institutions crowded with the degenerate, the unfit, the less de- sirable members of society ; and every citizen feels the pinch. Not that the whole of our burden of relief is due to degeneracy; much of it has been created by the special economic conditions of the past few years. Competent and useful citizens by the million have been thrown on charity. But when these are once more employed and self-sup- porting, there will still remain a heavy and in- creasing burden of taxes and charity which can be reduced for us and for our children after us only if we take such steps toward racial betterment as are represented notably by sterilization. Until we take that step, the feeble-minded person, the habit- [10] STERILIZATION A BURNING ISSUE TO-DAY ual sexual criminal, and the men and women af- flicted by inheritable disease will all continue to propagate their kind; women who cannot or ought not to bear any more children will go on bearing; our institutions will get more and more crowded and call on our pocket-books more and more often. And meanwhile, what of the quality of the race? The question is tied closely with the matter of sterilization, more closely than is commonly real- ized. Many a person who fully appreciates the desirability of the eugenic movement in general is likely to shy off at the mention of sterilization, be- cause the word arouses emotional reactions. If he is naturally kind-hearted, and has an inadequate comprehension of the subject, he tends at once to put himself in the position of the other fellow and ask himself how he would like being the object of this form of social discipline. But such a reaction is often grossly imaginary, conjuring up fears and objections that are groundless. It is hardly more than a kind of protective reaction that doubtless has some connection with individual and race sur- vival, and it can and often does push us toward rationalizations and unsound decisions. This fact is well attested in the personal experience of any- body who has had much to do with social planning or social work in general, for it is the human trait THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION that is utilized as the basis of appeals for charity. Any organization seeking help for a group of un- fortunates knows how effectively it can plead if it makes you and me feel that we are somehow iden- tified with those for whom the money is needed. And so it is with many of us when first we learn of the sterilization movement; our instantaneous reaction is, "But suppose I were ever to be the victim of the sterilization law!" — a reaction which in itself betrays less than adequate understanding of the subject, since (as I shall show later) a sub- stantial number of the very men and women who need sterilization either submit to it quite will- ingly or indeed welcome it. No — our instinctive revolt is negligible, both in itself and in its relation to the practical problem. If it develops into active opposition, or — as often happens — into a tendency to abuse the supporters of sterilization, it can be successfully met only by the wider spread of enlightened understanding. The case for sterilization rests on sound principles, it has the highest possible humanitarian aims and the support of countless scientific authorities, and it is growing more vitally important in our lives every day. No one can deny that our present trend is toward a planned society — planned biologically as well as economically; and no planned social or- [12] STERILIZATION A BURNING ISSUE TO-DAY der is attainable without careful consideration of the kind of people we want to 'have forming the race of the future. Inevitably the question arises, How are we to achieve the desired effect? And the answer is: Cut off the useless classes by pre- venting their reproduction, and increase the better — that is, the useful and self-sustaining, not neces- sarily the more brilliant. For the sake of our children, if not for our own sake, we must reduce the terrific burden of degeneracy that we have loaded on our shoulders through our policy in the past. I believe that sterilization is but a part of the general discipline that we call social planning, and it is from this point of view that I shall dis- cuss it. This is to be no "neutral" book — it is frankly advocacy of a worthy cause that I have for many years studied in all its aspects. I have even debated it on a number of occasions, some- times taking the side against sterilization. But after reading all that I could find on the subject and weighing the evidence carefully, I am now wholeheartedly in favor of it under certain strictly defined conditions, and it would be hypocritical to assume an attitude of neutrality. But by ad- vocacy I mean educational advocacy of the most disinterested sort. In two chapters I have brought THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION forward all the objections that I have ever heard urged against sterilization, answering these as hon- estly as I can and granting that there is weight in some of them. But the facts and figures presented throughout the book will prove, I believe, that the preponderant weight in the end will be found on the side of those who are urging sterilization. My position is not that of the scientist of earlier days, who was supposed only to collect facts and was not expected to publish the views he had derived from them except through learned scientific mono- graphs that could hardly reach the people. In such a matter as sterilization it is the people who must be reached ; they can form their own beliefs and direct legislation wisely only on the basis of the discoveries and the opinions of the scientist. CHAPTER II WHAT IS STERILIZATION? CHAPTER II WHAT IS STERILIZATION? From my own observation I can testify that a good deal of the opposition to sterilization arises from ignorance of what it really consists in. Ster- ilization is not castration. It does not completely destroy sexual activity, nor does it interfere with those processes, psychical and emotional, which are dependent on normal sex functions. It differs from castration in being partial, its sole effect being to prevent procreation. The person who is steri- lized in the ways that I shall describe as satisfactory continues to enjoy his or her normal sexual activity but is unable to produce children. I stress this dis- tinction because it is of the utmost importance and because I have encountered so many people who have the wrong idea. In order to understand the working of the vari- ous recommended procedures for sterilizing, it will be useful to review briefly the essential points in the anatomy and physiology of the sex organs. To take the female organs first : the most important [17] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION are the ovaries, ductless glands whose functions are closely linked with the entire gland system. Each of the two ovaries contains innumerable micro- scopic cells which develop into ova. During every cycle of 28 days there is a period of growth for some of these cells and of death for others; this period of growth and death being closely connected with the female sexual feelings. Many studies have been made on the sexual cycle in women, one of the most important being described in a mono- graph by Dr. George N. Papanicolaou of Cornell University, which with other work on correlated facts about reproduction shows that the cycle runs through the following four stages : First Period. There is a general cleansing process ; the lining of the uterus breaks down, is sloughed off, and is re- placed by a new lining. Deep within the ovaries (lying on each side of the uterus) cells are beginning to grow toward the surface. During this period there is a diminution in passion on the part of most women. Second Period. This is known as the copulative period. Ovarian cells which [18] WHAT IS STERILIZATION? will eventually become ova (eggs) are growing rapidly, each within a sac called a follicle. This sac contains also a fluid known as the follicular hormone, which is absorbed into the blood and for good reasons is believed to be the chemical cause of the desire for copulation. The cells and their surrounding follicles grow larger, until presently one of the follicles bursts. When this has occurred, it marks the virtual end of the copulative period. Third Period. The post-copulative. As soon as one follicle has burst, its con- tents are liberated ; a growth then starts in the place where that follicle was, and similar growths start simultaneously in the follicles that were not ruptured. In each case the growth not only fills the follicle but increases to very large pro- portions— so large indeed that, if we con- sider the ovary to be about three-quarters of an inch in diameter, the growth itself may reach a quarter of an inch in diam- eter, or more. The growth is called the corpus luteum or yellow body, and it de- velops faster than any other body of cells. [19] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION This process of development is over in a few days. Furthermore, the corpus lu- teum secretes a hormone which — working probably with other hormones — lessens the desire for copulation, so that for a few days there is a marked let-down. Fourth Period. The pre-menstrual, during which the ovaries are in a more or less quiescent state. At this time there is quite generally in women a desire for copulation, such as is not known in the lower animals during the corresponding period. So much for the 28-day cycle. Now let us see what happens in the rest of the reproductive tract. Alongside the ovaries are the fimbrae, bodies that are something like sponges, attached to the upper ends of the Fallopian tubes. These are the tubes connecting ovaries and uterus, their purpose being to carry the ovum to the uterus, where (if ferti- lized) it may develop into the embryo. Now, dur- ing copulation (sexual intercourse) the male's semen is moved upward in the Fallopian tubes until it comes to the fimbrae, where it awaits the appearance of the ova. As we reach this fact we [20] WHAT IS STERILIZATION? are again at the point where we may discuss sterilization. How is sterilization of the female to be effected with the desired good results and with no bad ones? Obviously, it must not be done through the removal of the ovaries, since the sexual rhythm and perhaps even the whole sexual life itself would thereby be upset, possibly causing still other physiological disturbances. What, then, is best? The question is being answered at present in several ways. Sal ping ectomy. The operation most often per- formed to-day for sterilizing women is known as salpingectomy, a simple and safe surgical method of rendering the Fallopian tubes impassable to the male sperm in its movement toward the fimbrae. Once these tubes have been rendered impassable by means of this operation, which, of course, can only be performed by a skilled surgeon, fertilization cannot take place, the unfertilized eggs being ab- sorbed in the same way in which the other thou- sands of eggs within the ovaries are absorbed. When so performed the records of this operation prove that it is not only simple, but not attended with any particular danger. This has now replaced an older and less efficient operation in which natural growth over a period [21] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION of time in a number of cases (18%) rendered the patient again fertile. Salpingectomy has been performed thousands of times, without one recorded case of serious com- plication or of death. Whether salpingectomy can be undone later — that is, whether by further surgery fertility may be restored — is still question- able. So far as I can learn this operation has never been attempted, though many argue that it is prac- ticable. Searing. Still another operation similar in effect has been devised by Dr. Robert L. Dickinson of New York. He reasons that it is better, when practicable, to effect the sterilization without mak- ing an incision, and he suggests searing within. This operation also is a simple matter when in the hands of a skilled surgeon, and leaves the patient without any permanent bad after effects or any appreciable amount of surgical shock. The rela- tive value of searing as opposed to the use of the knife is a surgical one and the opinions of surgeons vary upon this point. At any rate both methods are effective in the sterilization of women. Both of these operations are better than the use of the X-ray which will next be mentioned. Searing, too, in the belief of some authorities, may be undone at a later date if there is reason for the restoration of the [22] WHAT IS STERILIZATION? fertilizing process ; though like the other this point is questionable. The signal advantage of either salpingectomy or searing is that the operation not only prevents con- ception but also does not interfere in any way with the normal sexual activity of the woman. This is extremely important to bear in mind in connection with the problem of sterilization. X-ray. A third method must be described, if only by way of warning. In private practice the X-ray has been used, and more often than is war- ranted by the results. Its use is now decreasing, and some of the reasons for this may be cited. Al- though radium and the X-ray have been used with success in many sterilizations, these two methods have often produced either failure or at best unsatisfactory results. One common effect of treatment by radium or the X-ray is to stop men- struation— which virtually constitutes castration. The function of the ovaries is destroyed, and the hormones are no longer produced. This is not the worst result, however ; there are two other considerations of the utmost importance. The first relates to the effects of radium or the X-ray when used to bring about temporary steril- ity. This is sometimes desirable or necessary, and the treatment is not continued long enough to de- [23] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION stroy the ovarian function ; normal menstruation is not interfered with, though conception cannot take place. When, in time, the effects pass off and the woman regains her fertility, there is likely to be trouble ; for among the children conceived shortly after the treatments, it has been found that a large proportion were microcephalic idiots — i.e., with the tops of their heads abnormally small. This type of child seldom has intelligence and is usually short-lived. If it survives it becomes the sort of sad "freak" that one sees in side shows. If the cause of such monstrosities lies in an unexpected pregnancy following close on radium or X-ray treatment, the latter is certainly wrong as a method of effecting temporary sterilization. The second consideration is the influence of the X-ray on the germ-plasm. Experiments on lower forms of life have shown that mutations (perma- nent changes) of the germ-plasm can be induced rather simply by the use of X-rays ; and the changes observed thus far have always been downward in the evolutionary scale. A corresponding effect on the human germ-plasm — permanently altering its basic cells — would imply a tremendously impor- tant change in the next generation and all future generations. But whatever weight we may or may not give [24] WHAT IS STERILIZATION? to either of these considerations, it is certainly too early to put much trust in radium or X-ray sterili- zation ; the method has been in use for too short a time to produce results that can be checked. The safest course at present is to say: "When in doubt, don't." Male sterilization presents a far simpler prob- lem, as will be evident on a consideration of the anatomy and physiology of the male sexual organs. Here, as in the female, the sex glands (gonads) constitute the most important part of the mechan- ism. In the male these glands are the testicles. They are nourished by a large blood supply and are made up of millions of tiny tubes called tubules, each of which is lined with cells. These are the germ cells, and from them are manufactured the spermatozoa (or sperm), which correspond to the ova in the female. Every cell divides several times, each time working toward the center of the tube, until eventually, after several divisions, they change into cells that are able to move about; under the microscope at this stage they look like polliwogs. They are now moved along the tubules until they reach the epididymis, a much larger tube with many twists and turns which lies just outside the testicle, and here they are stored. [25] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION These spermatozoa are extremely minute; we should have to put hundreds of them together in order to make a spot large enough to see. The head of each spermatozoon is its more important part, its tail (about nine times as long) being for the purpose of locomotion. The channel by which the spermatozoa leave the epididymis is what must interest us in connection with sterilization. This is the vas deferens, a tiny, flat, thread-like tube running from the testicle, en- tering the abdomen through the groin along with the blood-vessels and the nerves, and passing around the bladder. There it meets the prostate gland, and at that point two vesicles or ducts join with it. It is in these ducts that the semen is stored — i.e., the fluid that carries the sperm. When sexual emission occurs, the seminal ducts discharge the semen, and this causes a suction that draws millions of the tiny sperm up the vas def- erens to mix with the semen. Since male fertility depends on the sperm, it is evident that the best way to sterilize a man is to prevent the sperm from reaching the semen; and this can be done by a rapid and skilled minor operation in the surgeon's office. This preventive principle was the basis of Steinach's operation, so much discussed a decade [26] WHAT IS STERILIZATION? ago. Dr. Steinach decided that if the sperm were not allowed to leave the testicles at all, the energy thus retained would put new life into an old man ; this was his "rejuvenation" process. But an im- portant distinction must be noted between Stein- ach's operation and the one performed for sterilization : Steinach, in keeping the sperm from passing, obstructed the vas in both directions — the sperm not only could not pass farther along the vas deferens but also could not issue from the vas at all, remaining instead in the testicle. This set up a degenerative process in the testicle that made it in- capable of producing sperm — a very bad result, according to Steinach's critics. The vasectomy used for sterilization, on the contrary, redirects the sperm so that it can be discharged into the scrotum (the sac that holds the testicles) ; thus the testicle continues to produce sperm, which are merely ab- sorbed into the scrotum. This matter of the absorption of the sperm is responsible for some of the objection that exists to the operation. Many persons have thought that it must be harmful; they urge that since there is no special mechanism provided for taking care of it, the process may lead to disintegration and de- composition. But the fact is that the human body is capable of absorbing harmlessly much larger [27] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION objects than the sperm or the ova. It is not un- common, for instance, for an embryo to develop normally during several months and then gradu- ally become absorbed with no harmful effects. Vasectomy is the standard operation in use for sterilizing men, and it is so simple as to require hardly more than an office call on the physician. It can be done in a few minutes and there is prac- tically no risk of complications if proper sanitary precautions are observed. The operation for ap- pendicitis, (appendectomy), in an average case with no complications, is very much more serious than vasectomy which can, perhaps, be better com- pared, for importance, with a tonsil operation. And even here the balance favors vasectomy since there is no risk of hemorrhage or risk of any kind beyond that of surgical cleanliness. It is as simple as that — and no complications have ever been re- ported as supervening. Ether is not necessary, but the operation need not be painful, since the patient can have either gas or a local anesthetic. The question has often been raised, by those who have learned of this operation, whether it can be corrected — undone — in case this be found advisa- ble. The point is as yet undetermined : many sur- geons are confident that it can be done effectually, WHAT IS STERILIZATION? while others are doubtful. Such a correcting op- eration is a far more delicate procedure than the original vasectomy, though it is not dangerous ; one side only would have to be reconnected, since the sperm from one testicle would be more than enough to insure fertility. Sterilization through the entire removal of the testicles, as a therapeutic measure, need not be con- sidered here, being a medical rather than a eugenic point. It can hardly be urged, evidently, that either the male operation or the female is a very serious mat- ter. A woman who is sterilized spends two weeks in bed at the expense of the community; a man may be put to bed for a week, though actually he is able to go about his work again almost at once if the bandaging has been done carefully. In both cases, as soon as the incisions are healed the thing is over. Compare these after-effects with those of another public health measure, vaccination. Here, and in various serum treatments, there are often serious and painful after-effects, which among many people give rise to doubts and even to active opposition; yet it is obviously the feeling of the law-making majority that this constitutes a risk that must be taken for the good of the community [29] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION — that the benefits accruing from these measures far outweigh the occasional and exceptional harm done. And we must add to vaccination and serum treatments this newer health measure, sterilization, as at least equal to them in potential benefit to the race. It differs from them in tending to perma- nently eliminate misery. A very important consideration, naturally, is the effect of either operation on the subsequent sexual life of the patient. It can hardly be said too em- phatically that normal sexual activity continues unimpaired. Desire is not reduced, and the sexual act can take place just as before ; the only difference being that now the sterilized person cannot create a child. As for that general comfort, happiness, and sense of well-being that are produced by normal and unimpeded sexual functioning, the effect of the operation will be discussed in Chapter IV. The sterilizing process is already at work natu- rally, has indeed always been at work, in a way that nobody wants to see continued. It is mentioned here only because so few persons realize that it ex- ists. I refer to the sterility brought about by pros- titution. The great majority of prostitutes are sterile because of venereal infection. However much we may approve of the result (that they can- [30] WHAT IS STERILIZATION? not produce children), we must realize that their venereal disease is carried to many innocent per- sons, who may thus be rendered sterile against their wills. For prostitutes are the chief spreaders of syphilis and gonorrhea. They are, moreover, pre- dominantly of low mentality, as shown in Dr. Tage Kemp's study of Copenhagen prostitutes.1 Half of the women he examined had the intelligence of morons or under. Nearly three-quarters suffered from active venereal disease. Only 35 percent presented no psychic abnormalities. In our own country we may read similar findings from Drs. Yoakum and Yerkes, who in their Army Mental Tests have this to say about the intelligence of pros- titutes in the United States : In several hundred cases investigated by the psychologists, 53 percent of the women were ten years mental age or less ; 10 percent were so feeble-minded that they should have been placed in custodial institutions. A large percentage of those who tested above ten mentally showed marked evidence of mental instability and in some cases definite mental disease. 1A Study of the Causes of Prostitution, a paper presented before the International Eugenics Congress, New York, 1932. [31] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION A relatively small number could be said to be mentally normal.2 If Nature is working the sterilization of pros- titutes through their venereal disease, and thus preventing the propagation of other undesirables, she is in a sense the ally of those who seek the same end through artificial sterilization ; but her method is hardly to be encouraged, if its means is venereal disease. 2 C. S. Yoakum and R. M. Yerkes, Army Mental Tests, New York, 1920, p. 196. 132] CHAPTER III DOES STERILIZATION WORK SATISFACTORILY? CHAPTER III DOES STERILIZATION WORK SATISFACTORILY? One gratifying feature of the task we have before us is the wealth of available information already assembled in the form of records. Many thou- sands of men and women have been sterilized under the laws of the United States, and thousands of others have been sterilized privately. The opera- tion is gaining favor among many classes of people and on several different grounds. By this time, therefore, there are enough data accessible to help us to determine, provisionally at least, the answers to two important questions: Has sterilization proved effective? What do the sterilized subjects themselves think about it? During several years before 1929, Mr. E. S. Gosney and Dr. Paul Popenoe of Pasadena, Cali- fornia, conducted a study on many aspects of sterilization, a study based in part on questionnaires and in part on direct interviews. The results of this study are found in their Sterilization for [35] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION Human Betterment* and in a series of eighteen papers.2 Two of these papers deal with the effect of sterilization on the patient, one with the attitude of the patient toward the operation, and another with the attitude of the patient's relatives. The complete results constitute one of our richest mines of concrete facts and figures on the subject, and it is from the Gosney-Popenoe data that I shall draw much of the evidence in this book. The answer, in California, to the first question above is contained in the fact that of the 2,500 women who were sterilized, only four subsequently became pregnant, these four having been sterilized by the old type of operation referred to in Chapter II ; the proportion revealing the superior effective- ness of the newer type of operation. Equally important, however — perhaps even more important — is the reaction of the patients. How many of them have been satisfied? Do they feel remorse over no longer being capable of hav- ing children? Do they wish that they could have their reproductive powers restored? The answers to these questions will appear in our discussion of the conditions found among the various classes 1 Sterilization for Human Betterment: a Summary of 6000 Operations in Calif orniaf 1909-1929. New York, 1929. 2 For their titles see Appendix A. [36] DOES STERILIZATION WORK SATISFACTORILY? into which the sterilized may be grouped. I be- lieve that we may take the answers with a con- siderable degree of assurance that they represent the real feelings of thousands of subjects, for I myself have not only examined carefully all the public records that I could find, as well as such studies as that by Gosney and Popenoe, but also have interviewed in person a considerable number of people who have been sterilized ; and I repeat that our experience with the operation is suffi- ciently extensive by now to warrant positive asser- tion that its results are predominantly beneficial. The classification offered here needs a pre- liminary definition of some of its terms if misap- prehension is to be avoided. By birth-control, for example, is not meant abortion, or infanticide, or any of the other things that are often wrongly put forward as its equivalents; it means merely the prevention of conception, any method by which the male sperm is prevented from reaching the female ovum and thus starting a new life. When, again, I speak of "therapeutic reasons" for sterilization I am referring to the cases in which some existing pathological condition can be cured or arrested or prevented from getting worse only by sterilization. Finally, it may be useful to clear up certain general misconceptions of the meaning of "eugenics." Too [371 THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION many people, I find, confuse this with genetics. Now genetics is the study of the mechanics of heredity; it will be discussed in the chapter on Mendelism. Eugenics is quite another matter. It has nothing to do with sex hygiene, or with anti- vice movements, or with State-made marriages, or with the birth of babies to unmarried mothers; it is not a plan for creating a race of supermen. It has been called all these things by persons who get their ideas from news channels of rather less than perfect authenticity. What eugenics really is has been perfectly defined by Francis Galton, who coined the term and who was one of the greatest scientists of all time : Eugenics is the study of all the influ- ences under social control which may im- prove or impair the inborn qualities of future generations of man either physi- cally or mentally. We live in an age of social control, and here — in eugenics — lies our most glorious opportunity of controlling the quality of our children and our children's children. The thousands of persons who have submitted to the sterilization process may be grouped for con- [38] DOES STERILIZATION WORK SATISFACTORILY? venience of discussion into five classes, having been sterilized (1) as a means of birth-control; (2) as a therapeutic measure; (3) privately, either as a eugenic measure or for the protection of them- selves and their families; (4) punitively, as criminals, and (5) under the protection of the law, at the request of parents for social and eugenic reasons, or as a eugenic measure by the state. ( i ) As a means of birth-control. No figures are available for the sterilizations performed as a means of birth-control, since, when the operation is resorted to by either husband or wife for this reason, it is done privately by a surgeon. But my own inquiries have led me to believe that it is done thousands of times annually in this country. One California doctor, for instance, states that he has sterilized 150 married men for this purpose during his years of private practice. For certain reasons I am personally opposed to the adoption of sterilization for birth-control, believing that in the great majority of cases the more usual contracep- tive methods are preferable. [39] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION Leaving aside for the moment all cases in which the prevention of conception is desired because the wife ought never to have any more children — cases which will be discussed under our second group — it may be said that the commonest reason given by married persons in the first group runs something like this: "We've had enough children and we don't want any more." Among my own acquaint- ances I can count half a dozen men, all of a high type, who have had the operation performed when they felt that their families were as large as they wanted or could take care of. One of these has six fine children. He and his wife are both young, but they know that their days of wanting babies are over, and both are perfectly satisfied now that the husband has been sterilized. Indeed I should have to go far to find a happier couple. None the less, I believe that sterilization is not necessarily called for in such conditions, and still less when the man and his wife are well on toward middle age at the time of considering the step. Contraceptive measures would serve as well. Under our current social customs marriage is likely to be deferred until the late twenties, with the result that by the time a man and his wife have had a number of children, conveniently spaced, they are both ap- proaching forty ; which means that the woman has [40] DOES STERILIZATION WORK SATISFACTORILY? only a short time to wait for the menopause, and during those years the same contraceptive practice that has served to space out the births will do just as well to prevent further conceptions. The only reason for substituting sterilization is apparently that it saves trouble. Sterilization is, we must bear in mind, a pretty final thing in the present state of our knowledge. I have said earlier that though some authorities be- lieve that it can be undone, and fertility restored, others doubt this. I myself have never heard of such a correction's being even attempted. The person, therefore, who considers being sterilized to prevent further children must consider it long and carefully — must indeed, I should say, be able to foresee his future and his wife's! For if ever the time should come when they felt that, after all, they would like to have another child, they cannot be sure (so far as we know at present) that the sterilization can be undone; they may wish that they had resorted to contraception instead. I have in mind an example of this. A young man and his wife, in business together, decided that they did not want a home and children; so the woman (against her husband's wishes) went to a hospital and was sterilized. Five years later the husband found that he wanted children, and he urged his THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION wife to undergo a re-operation to restore her fer- tility. But she argued that this would mean a risk, that up to this time their life had been pleasant and fairly free from risks, and she could not make up her mind to agree. Then another woman came on the scene, who was willing to give the man a home with children. The result was a divorce, the divi- sion of the business, and — lonely perplexity for the first wife. If they had adopted contraception rather than sterilization, their problem might have been sus- ceptible of a happier solution. The procedure is liable to abuse, too, when re- sorted to for birth-control purposes. I have in mind the case of a man whose life had always been filled with adversity. There was no doubt that he had been used very badly, hounded continually by ill fortune. When he married (so he has told me) he and his wife decided not to have children. "I wouldn't want to bring a child into the world to risk going through what I have gone through," he said. "I feel that it is a kindness to the unborn to keep them unborn." Well, most of us would probably not agree with him, but I emphasize the fact that he is, in all respects save this, a fine type of man and citizen, and I must admit that he and his wife are utterly happy. Yet here again I be- [42] DOES STERILIZATION WORK SATISFACTORILY? lieve that the sterilization performed on that man was wrong. Nor is it only the husband and wife who in my observation had sometimes put themselves in the wrong in this matter; the doctors, too, may some- times exceed their duties. I know of one young woman who was told by the surgeon after she came out from an appendectomy, "Now, my dear, there is one burden that you have off your mind forever. While I was taking out your appendix I tied off your tubes, and you'll never have to worry for fear you'll have babies. Isn't that nice?" Comment is unnecessary; though exclamation marks are almost irresistible. If, however, there are good reasons for steriliza- tion in order to prevent further births, the opera- tion should be performed on the less healthy of the pair in most cases. A physician's advice should be sought, naturally, since the decision will depend on the various circumstances surrounding each case. (2) As a therapeutic measure. The cases in this group are, strictly speaking, medical rather than social, but they are included because of the service that medicine has rendered to society in preventing the transmission of biological defects. Sexual per- verts and the emotionally unstable are conspicuous among the subjects for sterilization with this aim. [43] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION Such cases will be discussed more fully under (3) and (5). Here I may mention first the case of the woman who cannot bear her children normally be- cause her pelvis is too small and who therefore has to have a Caesarean operation. It is sometimes represented that sterilization is here in order be- cause the woman may transmit this same difficulty to her girl babies. This I cannot accept, never in my own observation having known of a Caesarean girl child who, when grown up, had any harder time in parturition than if she had been born naturally; nor is there any evidence to be found that such a biological defect is transmissible. The real reason, I believe, for urging sterilization in this case is the unwillingness of the parents to have any more children, and I must say that in the cases I have encountered the woman has seemed to be perfectly content to be rendered sterile. Many a woman faced by the choice of having Caesarean babies or none has found a way out through adopt- ing children. Other conditions in which sterilization is indi- cated for therapeutic reasons are heart disease, tuberculosis, kidney trouble, and other ailments not necessarily inherited. Any of these, when coupled with pregnancy, may bring breakdown or even death to the mother if the disease is severe, or if [44] DOES STERILIZATION WORK SATISFACTORILY? the pregnancy is not terminated. Plenty of women with such diseases have had one abortion after an- other, and — if for no other reason than to relieve them of worry — these women should be sterilized, since especially in the case of patients afflicted with tuberculosis the worry often aggravates the disease. (3) Privately, as a eugenic measure or for pro- tection. Numerous persons have been sterilized by the family physician or surgeon at their own in- stance or that of the family. These are usually the feeble-minded or insane, the kinds of abnormal persons whose sexual impulses, as is well known, are likely to be strong and unchecked and who are therefore a potential menace to society. In these cases it is useless to ask whether the patients are satisfied, to seek to learn how they feel about hav- ing been sterilized ; they are commonly of so low a mental grade that they are incapable of construc- tive thinking. But we do know how their parents and relatives regard the procedure. To them it means infinite relief from anxiety, the assurance that the patient will not now bring grief on them through sexual crimes and perhaps illegitimate children, and finally the possibility that they can keep him at home instead of sending him to an institution. [45] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION No one knows how many feeble-minded and in- sane persons are kept in their own homes, or how many of these have been sterilized. Of the total number, probably the majority live in country areas. Indeed, there are many families on run- down farms all over the land who are one and all feeble-minded and who go on reproducing their kind generation after generation, supported by the community through jobs requiring little or no in- telligence. Except for its reproductive feature, such a situation is often not so bad as to call for the segregation of such persons in an institution. If a feeble-minded or insane person can be kept at home, and is sterilized so as to avert the most seri- ous kinds of trouble, there is no reason why he should be put away in an institution. He is doubt- less happier at home, and in certain cases his family is better satisfied to have him at home. But certain strict conditions are prerequisite: the family must be able to take care of him properly, and must be reconciled to the need of making the family life revolve around its unfortunate member. A wealthy family, with a large house and plenty of servants, which is able to regulate its life to the chief end of seeing that no harm comes to outsiders through the presence of the patient, does well to keep him at home. But any less fortunate family [46] DOES STERILIZATION WORK SATISFACTORILY? conditions — as in a poor rural home — are likely to lead to trouble in the neighborhood. What I have just said applies rather to adult patients than to children, for my observation sug- gests that the feeble-minded child is often much better off in a well-run institution among others of his kind. The staff of such an institution are trained to handle emotional upsets, which consti- tute the dangerous element in some cases. More- over, the family of an adult patient will usually agree to his sterilization in order to protect them- selves and others, whereas the permission is hard to get in the case of a child; which is one more reason for placing the feeble-minded child (especially if he is also emotionally deranged) in an institution. When sterilization is performed on a feeble- minded child, he usually does not take in what has occurred and is likely to be as happy afterwards as before. If there is objection, it is on the parents' part — they so often simply refuse to give up hope that their child may "get well some time." But my impression, in the cases where the operation has been permitted by the family, has been that they were eventually very much relieved by it; a ter- rible responsibility has been lifted from their shoulders. In cases where sex perversion can be proved to [47] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION be inherited, sterilization is permissive in certain States. That it runs in families there can be no doubt, but this does not apply to all forms of it. Not a little sex perversion is developed by our over- civilization, as well as by early association with the wrong kind of children. The cure often resorted to, where perverts become offensive or dangerous, is castration, this being done not, of course, in the name of eugenics but rather as a therapeutic meas- ure, and it is generally effective. (4) Punitively, as criminals. Sterilization in the case of criminals should never be regarded as a form of punishment, but always rather as a eugenic measure — that is, for racial improvement. Some of the first laws enacted authorized the perform- ance of the operation as a punitive measure, and we may be grateful that in every case our courts decided against it as "cruel and unusual punish- ment," and it no longer has any place in our penal system. There were, in any case, very few sterili- zations performed on that ground under these early laws. Before the passage of any law in Indiana a fairly large number of sterilizations were performed with the consent of the criminals themselves — what is called voluntary sterilization. The operation in these instances was sanctioned by the State and [48] DOES STERILIZATION WORK SATISFACTORILY? prison authorities, and the usual procedure ran something as follows : A criminal would be approached by the prison doctor or the warden. He would be asked whether he had any children. If so, how was he able to support them? Was the State taking care of them? Did he add another to his family every time he was liberated? Did his wife like that? Did he like it? Then how would he like it if a simple operation were to be performed on him that wouldn't make the least difference in his sex life, but would make it impossible for him to have more children? Every man was skeptical — naturally. "Has any- body else ever had it done?" "Yes — Mike, down in the other corridor." Mike would be summoned. The two would talk it over, Mike proving enthusi- astic and selling Sam in no time. If you or I had had ourselves sterilized, we might be ardent advo- cates of sterilization. So Sam says he'll think it over, and eventually he decides that it will be a good thing. On this basis a great many operations were per- formed in Indiana institutions, and the men were eminently pleased. Indeed, the voluntary proce- dure might still be carried on, had not a law been passed authorizing sterilization in Indiana. This law, however, instead of helping along the move- [49] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION ment, threw so many legal protections about the patient that the surgeons grew wary and the volun- tary practice was discontinued. (It has, however, gone on in other kinds of institutions in Indiana- charitable, for instance.) In this group of cases, then, we can say that the operation has been effective as regards the attitude of the patients. I myself have talked with men who have been sterilized and in every case they ex- pressed complete satisfaction. A number of States permit sterilization of habitual criminals. Germany, too, has included this provision in her sterilization plans. Usually it is done not as a means of punishment but as a eugenic or social measure. If a recidivist offender must spend most of his time in a jail, then it is hardly fair to society that during every period of liberty he should cause another child to be born to his wife, who very likely does not want another, especially since he cannot support the ones they already have. A great deal is to be said in defense of the sterilization of such persons, even when it is not strictly a eugenic measure. (5) Under the protection of the law, for social and eugenic reasons, at the instance of the parents or the state. In this group we may include all persons sterilized by the state, whether the initia- [50] DOES STERILIZATION WORK SATISFACTORILY? tive is taken by the patient's family or by public officials. These are all low-grade persons, nearly always too stupid or too insane to apply voluntarily for the operation. Those among the low-grade class who are so imbecile or so insane that they will always remain incarcerated do not enter our present consideration, since in their case there is no need for sterilization. It is the border-line cases —those who can be given partial or entire freedom at times or even permanently — that fall into this class. In California it is the custom in nearly all cases to obtain the written consent of the relatives for the sake of harmony and the avoidance of litiga- tion. Institutional superintendents report that relatives often urge the operation. As most people know, the type of insanity called manic-depressive affects its victim periodically; he will get over one attack and be released, but sooner or later he is taken with another and must return to an institu- tion. It is such cases in particular that have bene- fited by sterilization. Sometimes, during the sane period, there will seem to be every prospect that sanity will continue permanently; the husband or the wife returns home apparently for good, a baby is born, and then — the victim of the disease falls once more into depression, to be returned to the THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION hospital, the other parent having then to care for the child or children. Such couples have wel- comed sterilization, pleading with the physicians in charge to have the operation performed for the good of the patient and his or her family. Usually both husband and wife sign the order for it. When it is done, everybody concerned looks on it as a blessing. (See Chapter V for a discussion of the inheritability of insanity.) In the case of border-line children, families are often happy to have the operation performed, either for the sake of the child or in order to pre- vent distressing consequences as the child grows up. More will be said in this book about the problem of the border-line child, a problem whose gravity is appreciated by too few persons consider- ing that this group constitutes the danger-spot of society. Any one who has ever had experience in dealing with feeble-minded persons knows that it is not hard to persuade them to do something that may be actually harmful to them. It is for this reason that they fall victims to foul play so readily, are so often roped into gangs engaged in deviltry, and thus come to the attention of the authorities. And for this same reason it is very easy to persuade them to undergo the sterilization operation — they will [52] DOES STERILIZATION WORK SATISFACTORILY? assent to almost anything and sign any papers pre- sented to them. Special care is thus called for if they are not to be exploited ; they should have all the protection that a court can throw about them. And, as a matter of fact, under the sterilization laws now in use they do have this ample protection. Such people can be made to tell how much they think they have benefited by the operation ; while, in the hands of others, they can, through suggesti- bility, be made to say they have been badly treated. Lest any one put himself in the position of a person to be sterilized and conjure up imaginary grievances, let me say that such a person knows very little about the feelings of one needing steri- lization. The fact is that the greater part of the operations performed to date have been done with the consent of the patients, in the case of those with sufficient mentality to understand what it was all about; and in most other cases the patients have been sterilized with the consent of relatives. If you were insane, I am very sure that you would never wish to transmit such a condition to any child of your own. If you loved your children, surely you would want to spare them the suffering that you have had to endure. If you were blind, congenitally deaf, epileptic, or insane, would you conceivably want to have children badly enough to [53] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION run the risk of passing on these defects to them? If you would, you are not like the persons with these troubles whom I have known. Let me cite an instance that I myself encountered not long ago. In this family the mother had Hunt- ington's chorea — a disease which is inherited, if one parent has it, by half the children of the mar- riage. This pair had two children, one of whom was showing symptoms. I asked them directly why they had not had other children besides these two. The mother was plainly shocked that I should even suggest such a possibility. It was the deepest sorrow of her life that she had passed her disease on to the child. And I learned one further fact, pertinent to our subject: the husband and wife had for some time been living in virtual celibacy, for fear of begetting more children, and it was threatening their health and happiness. She ex- pressed frankly her strong regret that she had not been sterilized early in life, as soon as the chorea appeared, and assured me that if she had known at the time of her marriage that her disease was in- heritable and that sterilization was feasible, she would have had the operation performed then. By the time I knew her it was a lost hope, for she was past her menopause; but she was planning to have her son sterilized, with her husband in agreement. [54] CHAPTER IV THE EFFECT OF STERILIZATION ON SEX LIFE AND GENERAL HAPPINESS CHAPTER IV THE EFFECT OF STERILIZATION ON SEX LIFE AND GENERAL HAPPINESS In Chapter III a point was raised that is of the utmost importance in any discussion of steriliza- tion: its effects on normal sexual activity and on the general sense of well-being in the person steri- lized. If there were any evidence that he or she complains of a let-down in either the desire for intercourse or the enjoyment of it, if the operation has had such systemic effects that the psychic, emo- tional, and esthetic irradiations of the sex life have been reduced or lost altogether, then a grave chal- lenge would be offered. But no such evidence has appeared. The reports from persons intelligent enough to testify on the point are with few excep- tions unanimous in the other direction ; one group, indeed, finding a new and positive heightening of these elements. It is hard for many people to believe this. Some — particularly those trained in certain historic religious faiths — find it impossible if not indeed [57] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION wrong to dissociate the sexual act from the con- scious intention to produce offspring. Still others, and there are entirely too many of these, have so little understanding of the physiology of reproduc- tion that they jump to the conclusion that sterilization implies the complete stoppage of sexual activity. Physicians encounter this attitude constantly in their practice. When they tell us that many a pregnant woman thinks that her child is to be born through the navel, how can we expect her to know the intricate mechanism and the com- plex activity of the sexual organs? It is probably only natural that the majority of people who hear or read about sterilization should have the idea that it involves a definite alteration, physical or psychical, for the worse. We have seen exactly what is involved physically in the operation. No organ is removed in either salpingectomy or vasectomy; in each case a con- necting tube only is severed. The nervous system is not meddled with to any appreciable extent. Knowing this, we should not expect much psycho- logical change if any. But to make sure, we must ask the men and women who for one reason or an- other have been sterilized. What is perhaps our fullest and clearest source of statistical information on the subject is two of [58] THE EFFECT OF STERILIZATION ON SEX LIFE the studies made by Gosney and Popenoe in Cali- fornia.1 The general conclusion to be drawn from its pages is that, so far as these men could find out, there was practically no dissatisfaction felt by steri- lized patients. Both voluntary and compulsory sterilizations were represented. Of the former class, the study states emphatically that they were not only satisfied but even grateful ; of the compul- sory cases (173 in number) one-seventh were regretful, the remainder either well pleased or not dissatisfied. And it may be noted that these com- pulsory cases were all psychiatric cases, in which one might naturally expect an augmentation of mental and emotional disturbance. For a certain reason it is desirable, in examining the replies made to the authors of these papers, to beware of giving equal weight to those from older persons and to those from younger : the testimony is largely in the form of questionnaires, which pre- clude following up the answers with oral questions that would penetrate further into the underlying conditions. Thus a sterilized person of middle age who answers the questions printed might report that his or her sexual vigor has diminished follow- 1 No. 17 — Effect of Salpingectomy on the Sexual Life; No. 1 8 — Effect of Vasectomy on the Sexual Life. For complete list see Appendix. [59] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION ing the operation, when the truth would be that it was beginning to diminish anyhow, at that age; the testimony for or against such diminution in younger persons must be given far more weight be- cause the effects noted are absolute rather than relative. Yet, although the California study re- ports such adverse testimony in the case of a num- ber of older persons, it is more than offset by the far greater number (of all ages) who reported an increase in sexual satisfaction. Of 109 women studied, for instance, 78 noticed no change, 22 noticed an improvement, and only 9 reported a decrease. Of 65 men of high type who had been sterilized privately as a means of preventing pro- creation, practically all said either that the opera- tion actually improved their physical satisfaction and psychical well-being, or else that it seemed to make no difference. Of 155 women privately steri- lized, 56 reported improvement, 92 saw no change, and 7 claimed a decrease. It is not hard to identify the reason for the pre- ponderating evidence of satisfactory effects that we find in this and other studies: the release from worry, the mental relief consequent on the removal of fear lest a child may be conceived as the result of the act. For a considerable number of the per- sons testifying were men and women whose motive [60] THE EFFECT OF STERILIZATION ON SEX LIFE for sterilization was their reluctance to bring into the world more children than they could take care of, or defective children carrying on some trans- missible trait. What sterilization does for such persons is to enable them to have intercourse more frequently and without fear of possible conse- quences. How markedly the libido (sexual desire) is heightened when this fear is removed is illus- trated by the testimony of some husbands that their wives are always more passionate during pregnancy — a time when, physiologically speaking, they might be expected to lose desire. Though, as has been said, most of those who an- swered were in favor of the operation, there were a few who expressed themselves as believing it to be good for other people but not for themselves. One of the most interesting recordings is that of the woman who, after being sterilized, objected vio- lently; so the physicians considered her case and wrote to her to return to the institution so they could operate and restore her fertility. She did not return. I should like to describe an experience that came within my own observation, to show the intimate connection between fear and the due enjoyment of intercourse, as well as the occasional real justifica- tion for sterilizing in the interests of birth-control. [61] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION In this episode I pitted my own small knowledge against the much larger fund of a psychiatrist. He won, but I still think I was right. A man consulted me about his wife. There was insanity on both sides of her family, and she had been in an insane asylum for two years. Now that she was home again, cured, he wanted to know what to do to keep her sane and happy. The reason he had come to me was that a psychiatrist had told him that they ought to have a second child, "so as to keep her oc- cupied." She was greatly opposed to the idea, and so was he. Her fear of pregnancy was growing to the proportions of a delusion of persecution. So I suggested, for the sake of her happiness as well as that of her husband and the nice youngster that they already had, that either he or she be sterilized, so that the two could enjoy the normal pleasures of marriage without the fear of pregnancy on her part — a fear that might possibly bring on a recurrence of her insanity. Well, though the husband was convinced that I was right, they decided to consult the psychiatrist once more. After all, he was a professional man, who ought to know the right thing to do. And it was his reputation that won. He persuaded them to have the baby, not the sterilization. The result of that birth was that the wife was again committed [62] THE EFFECT OF STERILIZATION ON SEX LIFE to the asylum, and from present indications will stay there for the rest of her life. Thus a home is broken up, a husband has lost his dearly loved wife, and their two children are motherless. Now, of course, it is not possible to dogmatize here, to pre- dict that the woman would have stayed sane if she had been sterilized. But what is certain is that if she had been, or if her husband had been, they would not have produced a child whose prospect of mental health and happiness is hardly promising. And this was only one woman of the millions whose fear of pregnancy dominates their lives, only one of the many whom, for one reason or another, it would be a mercy to sterilize if the conditions are such that contraception is impracticable. In the case above, for instance, two such conditions were present: the woman was too desperately afraid to put her full trust in any contraceptive measure, and if the most reliable of these had proved a failure, and she had conceived, there would have been the same disastrous outcome as actually did occur. To attain some degree of control over our own destinies, to reduce the hold that fear has over our lives, is a familiar psychological formula for hap- piness and efficiency. Contraception is proving of inestimable value in this respect to thousands of persons, and where contraception does not answer, THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION the recommendation should be for sterilization. I should like to repeat here what I have often said publicly, that sterilization is the kindest operative procedure introduced since the discovery of anes- thesia three-quarters of a century ago. Except for anesthetics, nothing else has the power of alleviat- ing or preventing so much human misery. CHAPTER V THE RELATION OF MENDELISM TO STERILIZATION CHAPTER V THE RELATION OF MENDELISM TO STERILIZATION In any study of sterilization one continually meets the word "carrier." For instance, in The Biological Basis of Human Nature 1 Professor H. S. Jennings speaks of the great hope for racial im- provement that may come if only a way can be found by which carriers of racial degeneracy may be identified. What has this to do with the subject of sterilization? A great deal. We should know at least a little about the mechanics of heredity if we are to discuss the subject intelligently. For thousands of years it has been recognized that certain traits seem to skip a generation. These will appear in one generation, fail to appear in the next, and then reappear in the third. Plant and animal breeders were familiar with this fact for centuries, but it remained for an Augustinian monk of the little Moravian town of Briinn to discover the mathematical law governing the 1 The Biological Basis of Human Nature, New York, 1930. [67] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION phenomenon. At the time — some three-quarters of a century ago — his valuable contribution to human knowledge was neither appreciated nor even widely known; and not until 1900 was it de- scribed, in a little journal published by the Natural History Society of Briinn, where it had lain since 1859. This published description constituted the virtual re-discovery of the Mendelian principles. With that re-discovery, developments followed thick and fast in the science which we know to-day as genetics. Men began to apply Mendel's law to the inheritance of characteristics in animals and man. Charles B. Davenport studied human eye- color, for instance, and found that it is inherited according to this law. Others studied color in- heritance in rodents, to such good purpose that by our own day, if you describe to a geneticist the color inheritance of a mouse or a guinea-pig, he can tell you within quite narrow limits, sometimes exactly, what the color of the offspring will be. During the same period, Thomas Hunt Mor- gan and his associates at Columbia University were studying the mechanism of inheritance in the fruit- fly. Cytologists (students of the cell) were observ- ing the components of cells and describing their discoveries. As for inherited human characteris- tics, similarly productive work has been done and [68] RELATION OF MENDELISM TO STERILIZATION is still being done. Some of these are found to be inherited in such complicated ways that the only method by which they can be studied is the statis- tical. If you look at a cell through the microscope you find within it a little globe called the nucleus, filled with what looks like granular material. If you were to observe a long series of these cells, you would sometimes note curious changes occurring in them. These mark the process of multiplica- tion. As is well known, the body grows by an in- crease in the number of its cells. A cell that is to grow must divide, forming two cells. When it divides, all of its component parts divide also. This should be remembered, since it has a bearing on heredity. The granular material in the nucleus congre- gates into tiny lines called chromosomes. All of these chromosomes, except sperm cells (sperma- tozoa) and egg cells (ova), are found in pairs. In the case of spermatozoa and ova, each has half of the normal number of chromosomes, which are on their way to create new individuals and are thus reduced in order that this new individual may not receive twice as many chromosomes as its parents possessed. Every species has a definite number of chromosomes. We humans have twenty-four THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION pairs; fruit-flies have only four pairs. We often hear biologists say that every individual receives half his characteristics from one parent and half from the other. This is because the chromosomes are the hereditary bridge from one generation to the next The chromosomes themselves are made up of smaller units called genes, and every characteristic of the body of an animal or a plant is produced by the interaction of these genes. Like the chromo- somes, genes go in pairs. It is believed with good reason that the members of each pair are placed directly opposite each other in the chromosomes. In creating the characteristics in the body for which they are responsible, each two genes work as a team. When, in the process of reproduction, they come to be dissociated one from the other we know that in spite of their intimate relationship, neither one has influenced the other ; and it is this stability of the gene that keeps the various inherited characteristics stable in their turn. Genes themselves can and do divide, and thus there is always a lavish amount of germ-plasm, far more than is ever used. For instance, during copulation between a male and a female animal, sometimes as many as 10,000,000 sperm are trans- ferred. The tassel of the corn plant produces so [70] i. n-r^8 LJ^ ^w Persons aff«ct«3°°- But, as I have said, that isn't all. How [236] THE WRONG SIDE OF THE LEDGER much does it cost to build and equip an establish- ment that will house, say, 1,000 feeble-minded per- sons adequately? Surely a million dollars, the way it is done to-day. Add another $1,000 to each person for that. And there, you might say, without considering the cost of the overseers, the superin- tendent, the nurses, the doctors and staff to look after the inmates — there you have $8,300. So is it not fair to say that every time a feeble-minded child is born we at once invest $8,300 in it? And now if we add all other costs to that figure — cost to parents, payment for damage done, etc. — we should reach a total of at least $10,000. Be- sides these institutional figures we must take into our reckoning the 80,000 feeble-minded persons in subnormal schools. Adding the costs of these brings our total up to $800,000,000. All this leaves out of consideration those who are outside of insti- tutions and schools — the insane, the epileptic, and so forth. If our crime bill actually is ten billion dollars, if it has to be paid every year, we have an investment in criminal degenerates of two hundred billions, the principal necessary to yield ten bil- lions. In New Haven in 1933 we spent over $3,000,000 on relief. In normal years our burden is only about $500,000. But it is only fair to throw off [237] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION half of the larger sum on account of the unfortu- nates whose plight is due to economic maladjust- ment rather than to biological degeneracy. In 1915, when Dr. Estabrook finished studying the Jukes tribe, he made a calculation of official expenses which the State of New York had been called upon to meet on behalf of this family. Of course, only the expenses that had been recorded as official could be traced, and naturally not all of these. But, doing the best that he could, Doctor Estabrook recorded over $2,000,000. This did not take into account any of the property damage caused by various members of the family. It did not take into account the time spent by various charity workers who made hundreds of visits to them, nor did it cover the misery that the family caused. Nor, finally, did it cover the misery they themselves suffered. It might have cost the State of New York pos- sibly a thousand dollars at the maximum to have sterilized the first of that clan. Now, if we com- pute the money spent by the State the first year, it was doubtless trivial; so also for the second, and the third, and up to the end of the second genera- tion. But it began to grow, then, because the Jukes grew in numbers. When the latest official check-up of the tribe was made, there were over 600 then [238] THE WRONG SIDE OF THE LEDGER living, and only seven of them were confined in institutions. Mental and other tests show us that the greater part of the clan is subnormal, not sufficiently so to be confined, but subnormal enough to be inca- pable of doing anywhere near so much productive labor as normal citizens, and so incapable and trou- blesome as to be a perpetual care to the State. Let us see if the figure of $10,000 which we said had to be placed in the bank for every degenerate born holds in this case where a family is outside of an institution. Probably not over half of the pres- ent 600 Jukes who are at liberty are of the lower grades. I have met a number of them who were well qualified to hoe their own row in the world, but capable none the less of transmitting degen- eracy. If 300 are of the potential caliber we are considering, then we might say that the State has invested in them 300 times $10,000, or $3,000,000. Five percent interest on this amount would be $150,000 a year, which is what they should be cost- ing the State; as a mattter of fact, the average over the past years, taken in proportion to their num- bers, somewhat exceeds this figure. I think, there- fore, that whether the subnormal individual is in an institution or out of it, we are safe in assuming that we have $10,000 tied up in each. If he is out- [239] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION side, the State has court costs, police costs, and chanty costs ; if he is inside, the State has the cost of food and maintenance, plus the investment in buildings and equipment. The subnormal are ex- pensive luxuries, wherever they are. In fact, such people are expensive more or less in proportion as their intelligence falls below the level of ordinary usefulness. They are below this level if they suffer from a degree of incomplete mental or emotional development, rendering them incapable of independent social adaptation, and necessitating external care, supervision, and con- trol. The sums spent by the several States on relief during the depression do not, of course, accurately reflect the cost of defectives. Let us therefore go back to 1915 to get statistics less distorted. In that year the States of the Union spent a total slightly exceeding $75,000,000 for the institutionalized defectives. This is the interest on a billion and a half. They are spending more to- day. When we include criminal classes we find a very different story. New York State alone appro- priated for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1928, $32,558,000 for the care of the feeble-minded, in- sane, criminalistic, blind, deaf, paupers, and other [240] THE WRONG SIDE OF THE LEDGER institutionalized and socially aided classes. This was exclusive of private charity, which was prob- ably several times that amount. This represents an investment in these classes of $651,160,000. In New York State one person out of every 25 during a generation becomes an inmate of an asylum or a residence for mental defectives. One family in seven is represented. Then, too, it must be remembered that there are several times as many insane persons outside of institutions, who never are admitted owing to the desire of the family to maintain them at home. All this signi- fies that the population of that great State is not so sound mentally as it should be. Dr. H. M. Pollack, who for many years was the Statistician for the Mental Hygiene Society, made an interesting estimate. Considering the 300,000 persons in institutions for mental disease, he deter- mined to discover as nearly as possible what was lost to these individuals in the way of earning ca- pacity. After a careful study he concluded that the average amount these people might have earned during the rest of their lives, had they not been deprived of their liberty, was $6,000 each. Thus the 80,000 committed each year meant an economic loss (above what we have already fig- ured) of $480,000,000. This, taken with the an- THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION nual amount spent on the maintenance of the 300,000 ($150,000,000), represents a staggering total. Look at it in whatever way you please, you come to the conclusion that from a financial point of view degeneracy costs a great deal of money. But to me, even that does not represent so enormous an expenditure as does the misery to the people them- selves which degeneracy entails. Here we have considered only mental disease and mental deficiency. What about the inherited deafness, epilepsy, blindness, chorea, and other maladies? Some are more serious than those we have considered, but they are not so prevalent, and we can ignore them. Civilization is becoming more and more compli- cated. Sounder brains are constantly being de- manded to cope with modern conditions. That quality which is best described as adaptability, one of the most important human character require- ments, is seriously lacking when so many people in a State become insane. Yet it is just that quality which is needed to render one adjustable and thus secure in the face of our rapidly changing civiliza- tion. It is becoming too rare. Figures speak louder than words to some people, though to some of us they prove boring. Enough [242] THE WRONG SIDE OF THE LEDGER has been said already to show that our degenerates now constitute an appalling investment, and there is no doubt whatever that the investment is grow- ing. Frightful though this financial situation is, I be- lieve that it is not so grave as other aspects of the problem. What does it mean for the more intelli- gent of us that, for instance, all appeals to the public have to be written down to a low level, have to be cast so as to reach the 1 3-year-old mind? Agencies such as the newspapers and the moving pictures have to earn money to be able to stay in business. To earn money they must make their films or edit their papers in such a way that these will sell. And to make them sell they have to cal- culate the average intelligence of their market. The most successful producers know that the average movie fan or newspaper reader is about 13 years old. To make sure that their pictures and newspapers can be understood, they could almost select a group of seventh-grade pupils and try out their productions on them. If these proved to be over the heads of such children, they would be over the heads of half the population! Of course, certain moving pictures are made with the upper half in mind — pictures that appeal to the reason and the higher emotions, pictures [243] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION not so cheap and tawdry. Sometimes these make money. One thing, however, seems never to occur to the producers: if this were the only kind pro- duced, then the lower half would go to see these instead; whereas the upper half refuses to go to see most of the junk. Then, too, there are "class" newspapers — the tabloids, for instance, which obviously are written for the lower half. A tabloid editor knows that this group can read pictures if they can't read print; so he concentrates on the pictures and makes the text so simple that any child who has just learned to read can understand it easily. More- over, the tabloid editor bases his appeal chiefly on sex and the emotions, which in the scale of evolu- tion are of course much older than reasoning ability. Civilization has to keep continually in mind the lowest quarter and the lower half. These we shall always have with us. But let us hope that the "lowest quarter" in the future will not be on so low a level of intelligence as it is to-day. We have much more than a mere financial problem. We have the shame of this degradation of everything decent in life, pulled downward to meet the under- standing of the subnormal. And finally we carry the burden of the unhappiness caused by the [244] THE WRONG SIDE OF THE LEDGER childish conduct of the unintelligent and by the depredations of the ill-trained and emotionally un- balanced. The cost of crime is higher than any official figures reveal. Heartaches are not meas- urable in dollars. [245] CHAPTER XV VOLUNTARY OR COMPULSORY? CHAPTER XV VOLUNTARY OR COMPULSORY? There is, in my opinion, only one kind of sterili- zation worth considering, and that is voluntary sterilization. I know the arguments for compul- sory laws, but I know also the practical objections to these. Theoretically it would be well worth while if we could appoint a tribunal which would pass on the sterilization of several million persons and thus in one gesture purge the race of a large amount of degeneracy. Then we should merely have to repeat the process at intervals when new crops of degeneracy appeared. All this sounds well, but in our democracy it is impossible of at- tainment. Where sterilization has been made com- pulsory it has not been so successful as where it has been permissive. Nor would it be, anywhere else. This operation must be identified in the public mind as a eugenic one, a health measure and a means of alleviating suffering. It has already and wisely been taken out of the class of punitive meas- ures. Allowing sterilization to become a stigma [249] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION of criminality would be a serious handicap to its acceptance. Having one's tonsils removed does not stigmatize one, nor having one's appendix re- moved. Even serious operations in some families, generation after generation, carry no public stigma. Yet any such operation is surely an indi- cation that the person is in some way inferior, our ideal being such rugged health that no operations are necessary. But sterilization is both more be- nevolent and less serious than many another that we undergo as a matter of course. There are, too, so many needing sterilization that no stigma need be- come attached. In fact, we ought to respect any- body who has been voluntarily sterilized when he learned of his defects, as a person who is consider- ate of his fellow-men. It is strange that people seldom consider the value to a race of eliminations from it. In biology, for instance, those who fail to survive sometimes contribute by their very deaths as much to the wel- fare of the rest as those who do survive. That is because we cannot remove one minus element with- out adding to the plus side. And when we subtract a plus element we add to the minus. But no sac- rifice is asked for in this case; we merely supply what is desired. There is in sterilization a parallel to finger- [250] VOLUNTARY OR COMPULSORY? printing. I have made a goodly number of finger- prints, both to show people how it is done and to use the prints as marks of identification. Finger- printing, every one who has thought about it agrees, should be a universal mark of identifica- tion. And why isn't it to-day in America? Chiefly because a stigma has wrongly become attached to it, and respectable folk shrink from being finger- printed. They have heard that a prisoner is finger- printed at once, and the impressions are kept on record. They know that the authorities keep files for identification of the criminal element, along with pictures. The Rogues' Gallery has been so well publicized that our people have come to think of careful identification only as a system of catch- ing rogues. It is thus no exaggeration, probably, to say that the majority of people who are not already en- lightened shrink from even the thought of being finger-printed. What they are afraid of is not the putting of their marks on record ; they dislike the idea of submitting to what they have always asso- ciated with criminals. This may not, of course, represent a high degree of common sense, but it is perhaps only natural. In just the same way, if sterilization is made compulsory, is performed on inmates of public in- THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION stitutions without their consent, it too will gradu- ally create in the minds of most people a feeling that it is somehow a disgrace. Already, and very wrongly, they have come to consider it disgraceful to have been an inmate of any public institution; hence the many private, secret institutions. This is just as ridiculous as though we were to consider everybody disgraced who had been to a hospital. There is no essential difference: in one case the patient is sick in one part of his body, in the other he is sick in a different part — the brain, or possibly the ductless glands. Let us never allow sterilization, this agent of racial betterment, to become a stigma. It isn't to-day; let us see that it does not become so to- morrow. If, however, we make it a matter of com- pulsion, there is no doubt that it will take on this unwelcome connotation. This would be almost a disaster, since, as we have seen, the people who need to be sterilized are not chiefly those in insti- tutions, but those at large in the population. The voluntary kind, I say again, is the only kind worth working for. In this conviction, I am happy to note, I am sus- tained by the decision of the Department Com- mittee on Sterilisation of the English Board of Health. This body of learned men say in their [252] VOLUNTARY OR COMPULSORY? report, published by the British Government in 1934: "We are convinced that the harm done by compulsion would far outweigh any possible ad- vantage resulting from it." This Commission comes to the conclusion that there are adequate grounds for sanctioning voluntary sterilization. Though there may be no certain prog- nosis in any particular case, we know enough to be sure that inheritance plays an important part in the causation of mental defects and disorders. We know also that mentally defective and mentally disordered parents are, as a class, unable to discharge their social and economic liabilities or create an environment favor- able to the upbringing of children, and there is reason to believe that sterilisa- tion would in some cases be welcomed by the patients themselves. This knowledge is in our view sufficient, and more than sufficient, to justify allowing and even en- couraging mentally defective and men- tally disordered patients to adopt the only certain method of preventing procrea- tion. In this view, as in all our recom- mendations, we are unanimous, and we [253] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION record it with a full sense of our responsi- bility. We believe that few who ap- proached the question with an open mind and listened week by week to the evidence we have heard could have failed to be struck by the overwhelming preponder- ance of evidence in favor of some measure of sterilisation. Another thought is relevant here. Of all the sterilizations thus far done in America, only a very few have been performed at the instance of the State. It has been fully demonstrated that there is very little need for this, so why all the commo- tion, considering that there are so few who could object to the permissive sort and so many who might object to the compulsory kind? We are told that in Germany sterilization is compulsory. But let Germany worry about that. I believe that if that country were to make her legislation permissive, she would in the long run achieve as great results as she will under the pres- ent system. German surgeons, we are assured, are going to sterilize 400,000 persons during the next few years. This will help Germany materially to reduce her charity burden in the next generation. But I feel that had she adopted the voluntary [254] VOLUNTARY OR COMPULSORY? method and trusted to persuasion and thorough education by intelligent medical counselors, she would progress just as far by inducing her defec- tives and their kin to grant permission, for the future of the Vaterland and the well-being of their families. If patriotism to-day runs higher in Ger- many than in many other countries, it is because it is kept stirred up and alive, with biological pa- triotism as the incentive. And though biological patriotism is a comparatively recent phenomenon among human beings, selfishness is very old, and selfishness can be relied on to do some things that patriotism cannot; so can altruism. Selfishness plus sterilization can reduce the degenerates, as it has already started to do. Altruism plus a little self-interest and pride can increase our best peo- ple, as it has already begun doing. [255] CHAPTER XVI PAYING THE PIPER CHAPTER XVI PAYING THE PIPER All the Protestant churches in the United States except the Lutheran have issued proclamations or made statements supporting the practice of birth- control; so have the Jews. The Lutherans have not condemned it, but they have decided not to voice an opinion as a church. The first pronounce- ment came from the Unitarians, and I feel just a little pride in having had something to do with that. Once, in Boston, I spoke before a large group of the Unitarian ministers of New England, suggesting that they pass a certain resolution that I left with them. Shortly afterward they did so, altering my wording somewhat but essentially ex- pressing the same thought. The Federal Council of Churches set forth their feeling on the matter as follows : The uncompromising position taken against preventing conception, under any and all circumstances, except by absti- [259] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION nence, is manifestly an extreme one, and even dangerous. Certainly there are cir- cumstances of health and disease, recog- nized everywhere by physicians, which, when abstinence is not to be relied upon, make the use of contraceptives wise. The arguments from nature and inferences from authoritarian doctrinal positions, upon which the encyclical so largely re- lies, are labored and inconclusive. . . . Catholics themselves in increasing num- bers will not submit themselves in "filial and humble obedience toward the Church" in all these matters. Half of the patients in the Los Angeles birth-control clinics are Catholics, and the people of no country in the world regulate birth so effectively as the French. The Lutherans in general are in favor of con- traception, individually if not as a church. And we may say that those people who have no religious affiliation are just as whole-heartedly in favor of the widespread practice of birth-control as are those connected with churches. When we come to the question of sterilization, it has been my observation that most people consider [260] PAYING THE PIPER it another means of birth-control, differing chiefly in being final. I think we are safe in saying that the same great groups which have endorsed birth- control will even more heartily endorse steriliza- tion if they are called upon to do so. There is, therefore, potentially, a ready-made alignment of interests in favor of the project in America. On the one hand, we have all those who are in- terested in racial improvement, who want to see the problem of degeneracy decreased for the sake of reducing the misery of the degenerates them- selves. They are thinking also of the possible sav- ings, the removal of burdens from the more worthy people, and the heightened prosperity of the na- tion. Many of them think, too, that those who will have to bear the burden of future incompetence are diminishing in numbers owing to their failure to fulfill family-survival quotas; thus they realize that the burden will be all the harder when those who need help may have doubled. On the other hand, we are opposed by some of the clergy, who insist that birth-control be refused to all, that sterilization be avoided. There was a time when we could sit back com- placently and try to convince ourselves that actually there was nothing to worry over. It required a depression to bring us to a realization that some- [261] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION thing was radically wrong. Even before the de- pression actually set in students were warning us of what was impending, but we were too busy making money to take them very seriously. Only now have we become fully aware. The most happy people to-day seem to be those who have convinced themselves that the old times are no more, and who have decided to consider that they must build again, but build more rapidly with the accumulated experience of their past life- times to help them. Those who sit, idly waiting for some guardian angel to come and drop manna into their laps are those who are most miserable to-day. The new deal has been proclaimed be- cause these are new times. Then why should not the people of this new day take stock and plan against a repetition of the evils of the old days? We should. If we did this, one of the first investigations we might make could profitably be to scrutinize all of the forces which are working for racial betterment, and those which are opposed to it. We might consider charity for example. Most cities have their community chests from which funds are distributed to those who need them, regardless of race, creed or color. The funds are not, however, distributed to members of sepa- [262] PAYING THE PIPER rate religious faith in accordance with their pro- portionate part in the population. All over the country, wherever I have studied, I have found this same situation to exist. It is what you would find if you were to make a similar inquiry. Hence I, in view of years devoted to the study of this vital problem, offer this suggestion, which I believe is the one and only way to bring about a reasonable adjustment. Establish separate Com- munity Chests. One chest will be supported by those who are interested in race-betterment, regard- less of sect. Out of the income from that chest will go expenditures carrying with them some perma- nent alleviation. Out of the other, raised from among those who prefer the older and more con- servative methods, will go the funds to take care of their incompetents. This will throw the entire burden imposed by the increase of population ex- actly where it belongs. Just as soon as people de- cide that while they are willing to pay for a reasonable thing they are unwilling to be mulcted because of a policy with which they have no sym- pathy— as soon as this happens, there will come a rebellion. We had exactly such a situation in the early days of our Republic when Britain tried to collect taxes from colonies who had no share in fixing them. "Taxation without representation is [263] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION tyranny!" was the cry that rang up and down the Atlantic coast. To-day our donors of charity face an analogous situation : they are seeing their money used to perpetuate a condition that they disap- prove. Perhaps this argument may seem to some a far cry from sterilization. But it is very intimately re- lated. We have such good and reliable informa- tion as to the increase of sub-normality, of the reasons for its increase, of the ways and means to reduce it both for the benefit of society and the alleviation of the suffering and unhappiness of the sub-normals themselves, that we can to-day point our finger at this influence and say with as- surance, "This is helping to build civilization." We can point our finger at another influence or social agency and say, "This is tending to lower the general level of social values." We can prophesy in some cases whether these levels are being per- manently lowered or whether they are only tem- porarily lowered. We know that, given a sound citizenry, a great change in our economic system can be serious, but only temporary, but we know too that a great change in the quality of the general heredity of the people cannot be replaced, ever, from the same people. Environment plus a splendid citizenry, [264] PAYING THE PIPER becomes more or less what the citizens make it, but that same environment plus a group of sub- normals becomes a very different appearing envi- ronment when they have impressed it with the natural propensities. This is seen over and over again in our cities and in the rural districts. Some of the finest old residential sections of New York City and its boroughs are now slums, where yester- day they were populated by the type of families which furnish wholesome character to our na- tional constitution. And those very sections are as we see them today, because of the kind of people who have moved in when the others moved out. There is nothing about the argument for sepa- rate community chests which is not apropos to sterilization. We are talking about a race build- ing measure, and we cannot accomplish this for the whole population while a minority objects. So we simply ask that minority to look after its own people. Nothing could be fairer than that. Some will say that if we do establish separate chests, we shall have to look after the offspring of those who oppose sterilization anyway. They say that we shall have to support the miserable from the public pocketbook, just as we are now support- ing all kinds of people through the governmental enterprises in the United States and through the [265] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION dole in England. But people who say this forget that public opinion has been somewhat educated by the depression, and will be further educated in days to come. It will be a difficult matter to awaken much enthusiasm in a public which knows remedies and resolves to put them in practice even though a minority objects. But I imagine that we need not worry over the situation. As a concrete example, persons who live in neighboring apartments or houses are likely to reach a certain stage of intimacy, and presently to talk over family problems with each other. When one group has neighbors who follow a more sen- sible practice as regards the number of children they produce, can we expect that group not to find out about it and try to emulate the others? Any number of thoughtful people are now speculat- ing on the wisdom of the opposition to birth- control and sterilization, and we may perhaps see another "Reformation" in our own time, and with it the realized dreams of the many liberals whom we all know and greatly respect. Let me close this chapter with a parable that bears on this theme. Two farmers lived on adjoining farms. Both were potato-growers, and they had always been good friends. One day they met on the road. [266] PAYING THE PIPER "Bill," Sam called out, "why don't you 'n' me do a little cooperatin'?" "Why not? What's on yer mind?" Bill re- turned. "Well, I been a-thinkin'. Here you raise pota- toes and / raise potatoes. Now why don't we go to work and do our farmin' together, like we hear about other folks doin' in the magazines?" "Good idea, Sam. How be we a-goin' to do it?" "Easy, my boy. We'll pool our seed from last year, and we'll plow and cultivate, and then this fall we'll dig our potatoes and sell 'em together. What do ye say?" "O.K. Let's start as soon as plowin' time comes." The two met again to talk over details. Pres- ently spring came, and they joined forces and be- gan plowing the two farms. They found it much easier to treat the two as one — to plow straight across instead of each plowing his own small field and having to turn his horses around often, as be- fore ; and they liked the new plan. After plowing and harrowing came planting. One morning the men brought the potato-planters out from the sheds. Bill drifted over to see how Sam's seed looked. There it lay in big piles. "Jumpin' Jehosaphat!" exclaimed Bill. "You [267] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION ain't a-goin' to plant that gnarly, scabby, wiz- ened-up trash, be ye?" "Why not?" said his partner, looking up. "Why wouldn't I?" "And you knowin' enough to propose coopera- tion in the first place? Surely you know enough not to plant that kind of seed!" "Well, I been a-plantin' of it every year, just like my father V my grandfather did, and I'm goin' to keep on. Fact is, I kin remember hearin' my granddaddy say that it was always best to sell the best potatoes and plant the rest. He done it and what was good enough fer my granddaddy is good enough fer me!" "But what about me?" Bill protested. "Here I been selectin' and selectin', tryin' to get my pota- toes bigger 'n' finer V no scab on 'em. Soaked 'em every year fer scab, an' it's no wonder my spuds have shelled out so fine every fall. And what's more, everything I kin learn from them fellers over at th' Experiment Station about growin' 'em better, I'm going to learn. An7 I'm a-goin' to use it too." "Aw, come on, Bill," coaxed Sam. "Go ahead and let's plant yours and mine all together. What's the harm? I tell ye, what them old-timers said was right. I'm goin' by them." [268] PAYING THE PIPER Well, the preliminary work had all been done, and anyway spring is the time of hope, so Bill felt that for this one time he had better be a sport and go along with Sam. They proceeded to pool their seed, and they went to work. Summer passed. Here and there were fine stalwart potatoes. But by the time the crop was dug, some of the scab from Sam's had infected Bill's, and in addition the crop as a whole was much less than twice as large as Bill by himself had had during previous years. The time came to market the potatoes. Said Bill : "Now looka here, Sam, let's select our seed for next year, first thing we do. We've had a bad enough lesson this season to know that a feller can't grow good potatoes unless he has good seed." "Save the seed?" exclaimed Sam in disgust. "I guess not. We'll sell the best, and use for seed the little poor ones that we can't sell." Then (because this is a modern parable) Bill replied: "Oh, yeah? Well, you go ahead and run your farm, and keep plantin' your scabby, runty seed. I'm a-goin' to keep the best fer seed. I'll run my farm — you run yours — and some day maybe you'll find out what plantin' that poor seed is costin' you!" [269] CHAPTER XVII A PLANNED SOCIETY CHAPTER XVII A PLANNED SOCIETY To-day's discussion of our need for "a planned Society" usually emphasizes aspects of our eco- nomic structure. As yet, current talk has not touched on a far more important need of contem- porary life, the foundation on which any new eco- nomic structure must be built, if it is to stay firm. I mean a eugenic program. There is no denying the fact that if we take ac- count of the quality of a population as well as of its numbers, we strike at the root of the problem, for these two go hand in hand. Back of this ques- tion, again, stands that of ambition, of goal. Where are we heading? If we want to get some- where, we first ask ourselves where we are going and then take the most direct route. Where do we want to go? We have over us no dictator mo- tivated by self-glorification; we are not being coerced into breeding a great army which he may use to acquire new territory. We do not need millions of men for national defense, since there is [273] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION little likelihood of our being attacked by another nation. Perhaps we should do well to adopt as our ideal the desire to become a model nation, to live contentedly within our own boundaries, to forgo any plans of aggression, to produce as much as pos- sible for the support of our own people, to be self- sufficing and yet have enough surplus to help other peoples when they need it. A large proportion of our population is of in- nately fine stock. We still have seed-stock from which we might erect a nation such as the world has never seen, a nation such as has only been dreamed of. What else is there for us to do than just that — become an object lesson? But what kind of object lesson shall we become? We need financial security. We are going to achieve it, with effort. It has been argued, I think convincingly, that we can get along very well in- deed with a smaller population. But it must be made more and more a quality population. Per- haps we shall get that too. But if ever we are go- ing to, our first and greatest necessity is the wide and immediate dissemination of birth-control in- formation. Every one must do what he can in the direction of that legislative reform. We must make available to every couple at the time of mar- riage such information as will enable them to have [274] A PLANNED SOCIETY as many or as few children as they want, and to space the children properly. Progressive up- ward evolution will inevitably set in. As I have said earlier, what if the minus social elements do have two children to satisfy their parental instinct? At that they will diminish at the rate of 50% each generation. Give them the necessary information and in- struction and let them decide for themselves whether to have few children or many. If we sup- pose their incomes to be reasonably stable, and if each year they must make their choice between a commodity and a baby, which do you think they will choose? Here is a nice shiny automobile; and here is a baby. Which will they take? Here is a television apparatus, the newest and best on the market. Will you choose that, Mr. Moron, or would you like another baby? There, Mrs. Moron, are the moving pictures, the public golf-course, there are nine months of freedom w. nine months of staying home — which will you choose? Mr. Moron, here you see a squalling baby who will get you up nights, and here you see nice long evenings in the poolroom — which will you choose? A Sears-Roebuck catalogue offers a thousand choices between a baby and something else that looks pretty tempting. Which will the morons choose? [275] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION If you think they will choose more than one or two babies, then you don't know morons. The first step in building a civilization, there- fore, is to place everybody on the same footing as that on which our intelligent classes find them- selves to-day. This done, sterilization will come to the assistance of those who are too stupid to com- prehend or to carry out the simple methods of con- traception; to help those who are intelligent but resolved, because they know they bear dysgenic germ-plasm, that they will have no children at all; and finally the relatives and guardians of de- generates who want to protect themselves, their family, and the race against the trouble to which the pregnancy of a degenerate in their family might give rise. In the program for a controlled and planned society, sterilization^ will take the place of contraception for a host of persons. It will make contraception unnecessary in many cases and will liberate the mind of the person desiring an effective and permanent means of birth-control. A planned society must imply the regulation of births. But its birth-control program must be threefold : birth-liberation for those best endowed by Nature; birth-maintenance for the great aver- age; birth-reduction for the lowest social elements. Just one thing is essential: to make contraception [276] A PLANNED SOCIETY and sterilization available. Superiority will of it- self be the deciding factor. Superior people will show their superiority in the test which is to come. That test is the survival of the fittest, but the question of who the fittest are will come to have a new meaning. No longer will we make the mis- take of translating fitness as brute strength; we shall understand it to comprehend all that we hold dearest in life — beauty, love, idealism, good citi- zenship, honor, health, and the happiness that springs from being able to create our families by choice rather than by chance. If I did not know that already within our ranks we are witnessing a demonstration that this con- dition can actually come about, I should not feel so hopeful. But all our population figures show that whereas the birth-rate dropped first in the upper classes (considering class on the basis of in- telligence) the ability to control this has slowly crept downward until to-day it is almost possible for the border-line group to control their births. To-morrow it will be possible for them. And that to-morrow can be brought closer by the efforts of all intelligent people. "Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free." [277] CHAPTER XVIII HOLDING THE BEAR BY THE TAIL CHAPTER XVIII HOLDING THE BEAR BY THE TAIL Once upon a time there was a kind gentleman who bought a bear-cub. Now a bear-cub is about the most lovable little creature ever invented by Nature. Anybody would fall for one. Indeed, "Teddy Bears" owed their popularity to this very susceptibility in chil- dren and grown-ups alike. So we must not blame the kind gentleman for yielding to his impulse. Edward was the cutest of bear-cubs — so helpless, so utterly dependent on its master for its every need, so gentle and appealing. Never did Edward scratch the kind gentleman, but lapped his hand and followed him everywhere he went. Edward lived on the fat of the land. Edward grew. But for many months its owner, because he was so close to his pet, did not notice the growth ; though now and again he did wonder why Edward was eating so much more food every week. Then one day he awoke to the realization that his darling little cub was losing some of its cuteness. That night he didn't sleep very well, and he got up on the wrong side of the bed. At breakfast he said THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION to his wife that maybe he had undertaken some- thing that wasn't so laudable. However, he went off to business, and came home feeling better and having forgotten all about Edward in the mean- time. Day after day he continued Edward's feedings — a little more every week. He brought his friends over to see his pet, to admire Edward's proud beauty. But pretty soon he found he had to stop referring to "our cub" — Edward could certainly not be called anything but a full-grown bear by this time. Also it occurred to him after a while that his pet didn't seem very grateful for every- thing he was doing for it — acted, indeed, anything but appreciative. Sometimes, when he set the dish of food down, Edward would actually growl at his kind master. And then one day he took his bear out for a stroll, leading it on a chain as usual. But as the two were passing along the village street the bear suddenly began to growl fiercely; then struck at the kind gentleman with a tremendously powerful paw. This seemed almost to hint ingratitude, and the gentleman was much shocked. He dared not drop the chain lest Edward should run loose through the neighborhood and scare the people to death. So he promptly did what he had been [282] HOLDING THE BEAR BY THE TAIL told was the only thing to do — he caught hold of Edward's tail. The bear raced ahead, dragging its master by its tail; then stopped and tried to reach back. But its master only pulled a little harder, sidewise. All that the bear could do was to look around threateningly. All that its master could do was to hang on. He hung, and he hung, and finally, when he was completely exhausted, he yelled for help. So a neighbor came out with a gun and shot Edward. And that's the end of the story. Some generations ago, we — the kindly people of America — adopted a cute little harmless bear-cub, in the form of our mentally handicapped citizens. We fed them, clothed them, housed them, allowed them to increase in size by continual augmentation from immigrants of their own caliber. At first we enjoyed helping these unfortunates. Those of us who could afford it took no end of pleasure in the consciousness that our charges were being gen- erously provided with creature comforts. But this bear grew, too, and once in a while we found ourselves a little worried as to whether we had done just the right thing. But we got over that feeling, chiefly because we had argued our- selves into believing that what we were doing was the only thing we could do. [283] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION And then the time came when our bear — our subnormals and degenerates, our imbeciles and morons — actually attacked us. There was just one chance of salvation : we reached for the bear's tail. And we have been hanging on to that tail ever since. We daren't let go, because we know that if we do, our bear will turn on us and tear us to bits. Indeed, this is exactly the problem that now con- fronts the better classes not only in our own coun- try but in many another as well. They have a bear by the tail, the bear that they have fondly tended. They forgot that a bear grows up to be a treacher- ous beast. They saw it first when it was appealing and harmless, except for its potentialities. And how are they now holding onto its tail? By charity, which they no longer give cheerfully but have come to look on chiefly as a means of self-protec- tion. Now charity, in its Pauline sense — love and compassion — is essential to human nobility, and the expression of it in kindly action brings strength and happiness, "blessing him that gives and him that takes." But organized charity should be di- rected toward making itself gradually less and less needed. It should end with one generation, if pos- sible with one almsgiving. This is, of course, an unattainable ideal. The ideal benefaction is a [284] HOLDING THE BEAR BY THE TAIL charity to lessen charity — I mean ideal in the sense of ultimate kindness, kindness to the recipient. The true Good Samaritan not only binds up the wounds of the stranger assaulted on the road; he uses his intelligence to see to it that there won't be any more attacks made along that road. Have you ever thought what might happen if we were to stop dispensing all this soothing-syrup? The Community Chest is one of the things that have carried America through the depression. We have nurtured our minus elements, who are too stupid or too vicious to understand anything but force, to whom the sole criterion of right is whether you can get away with it. We have cod- dled them until they have become so powerful that if we let go of the tail we might as well write finis to ourselves and our civilization. They are strong enough to overwhelm the rich and intelligent and public-spirited. More of them to-day are demand- ing perpetual care than we are able to control. Give, give, give. You must give — you who have the wealth. We must, too — we who wear white collars and who have suffered during the depres- sion far more than have many of the pets whom misguided charity has reared so tenderly. We have reached a crisis. These border-liners are having so many unwanted children that they THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION are — not from choice — almost doubling their num- bers every generation. The donors of charity are becoming gradually fewer, though when they get free of some of the burden that our degenerates im- pose on them they will begin to increase. We know that to-day's need for public relief has been a terrific strain on ourselves as donors to pri- vate charity and on our national resources as well. We know how necessary some of our multi- initialed Federal enterprises are, how helpful they have been in relieving the strain on private charity. But we know, too, that these are but another form of soothing-syrup, for which our children will have to pay. Now isn't it obvious — so obvious that even the morons themselves could see it — that if the subnormal group, our overgrown pet whose keeper dares not let go of its tail, continues to grow, it will not only shake its keeper off but actually turn and devour him and all his property? The only mystery is why the keeper himself hasn't long ago seen this. Is it because he has been only half- conscious of the growing strength and menace of the bear, and has refused to admit that the day must come when he can no longer control it? I have endeavored to treat the subject of sterili- zation dispassionately, at the same time presenting [286] HOLDING THE BEAR BY THE TAIL the facts as I know them and as they relate to the ways in which sterilization may be used as a race- builder, an eliminator of human misery, and an agency for increasing the sum total of human hap- piness. To recapitulate briefly: we have seen that the operation itself is a simple one — very simple as operations go ; and that it does not interfere either with sexual satisfaction or with the sexual func- tions except that it insures sterility. We have noted the great increase in degeneracy in America, its source, and its cost. We have observed some of the known inherited human characteristics and the mode of their inheritance. We have seen that there are few valid objections and many compel- ling reasons for making sterilization available to those who want it, provided they are given com- plete protection and are made to take time to con- sider the possible consequences of their decision. Then we have observed the recognized fact that many a degenerate does not really want a lot of children, that he has them as the price he must pay for pleasure, and that if we will but help him to do as he really prefers to do, if we will put him on a par with ourselves in the matters of contraception and sterilization, he himself will do the very thing that is best for the future of America — namely, [287] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION have fewer children. We have seen, too, that a planned society is practically unthinkable without sterilization, and that to a certain extent the future of our race depends on the widest possible applica- tion of the procedure. But we also know that the movement has powerful enemies, who for reasons of their own will probably continue for many years to oppose all efforts toward race-building. We therefore propose not only to bring them to their senses but also — in the name of ordinary justice — to let them pay for their folly; nay, to insist that they pay for it. Twenty years ago the proponents of sterilization found themselves but voices crying in the wilder- ness, supported only by a little band of far-sighted citizens whose common sense told them that like tends to beget like. Until to-day one has felt in- adequate, almost solitary, when he tried to urge his convictions upon the apathetic millions of his fellow-citizens. If Herr Hitler deserves any ap- probation at all it must be for his services in making John Citizen think about sterilization. Eugenics is being taught now in three-quarters of our five hundred colleges and universities, and in many high and preparatory schools. Its teachings are furnishing texts for thousands of sermons. HOLDING THE BEAR BY THE TAIL Though I know of no other like movement that has had such encouraging growth, there is still room for a lot of expansion. Not until its mes- sage has reached every man, woman, and child and made all of them feel that theirs is the opportunity to take part in the building of a greater civilization — not until then will eugenics be living up to its potentialities. And what can / do, what can you do, in this cause? Helpless and insignificant we may be, as individuals ; but by adding each his en- thusiastic willingness to spread eugenic ideas and to help educate the opposing forces, we can do a great deal. Let me quote from Charles Edward Russell's article in the October, 1933, issue of Scribner's Magazine: Every attack upon every intrenched evil helps toward the onward motion. And it makes not the slightest difference in men's eyes if the attack is fruitless. There is no such thing in the world as a wasted protest against any existing evil. If the protest is made to no more than a handful of people and is stifled then, it will, if it is true, just and honest, bear [289] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION sometime its due measure of fruit. . . . Nothing pays so well as enlistment in some betterment movement. It pays — not in simoleons nor in kudos, but in one's right to be on good terms with one's self, which is about all there is in life anyway which amounts to a hoot. . . . The one purpose that seems to have either sanity or actual reward is to keep some step, however stumbling, however far in the rear, with the vast, silent, often mysteri- ous, sometimes hardly discernible proc- esses that are slowly transforming the world from a wolves' den to a place where a man can know some peace, some content, some joy of living, some sense of the inexhaustible beauties of the universe in which he has been placed. If you can think of any subject or cause that you could interest yourself in that will yield to you and to society the same returns that the sterilization cause will yield, I should like to know what it is. Every man, every woman, needs some constructive hobby. Here is a cause to which you can usefully give as much or as little time as you have to spare. You will find yourself shoulder to shoulder with [290] HOLDING THE BEAR BY THE TAIL men and women who have the best interests of our country at heart. None of them is trying to make any profit, none has any ax to grind. Everybody has just one objective and is doing his or her part to achieve it. We ourselves, admittedly, will hardly live to see much more than the beginnings of what we are striving toward. But the world is old, after all ; the human germ-plasm has been evolving through countless eons, and there will be human creatures on earth for many millions of years to come. This being so, it is little enough for us now to "learn [or plan] as though we were to live forever, to live as though we were to die to-morrow." As biology tells us, though we ourselves shall not live on, the germ-plasm that created us will go on creating our children and our children's children. The Immortal Germ-plasm! When we consider that in this way we do have immortality of a sort, ought it not to make us think? Should we not accept more seriously than we do the responsibility that is ours? What we do to-day in the direction of improving the germ-plasm determines what kind of germ-plasm there will be to-morrow. What are we going to do about it? Drift? There are those who see us headed for dire calamity. uAs I watch America drifting gaily with invincible optimism [291] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION down the road to destruction, I seem to be con- templating the greatest tragedy in the history of mankind," wrote Dr. William McDougall, emi- nent psychologist — but he wrote it before we had learned the eloquent fact that the people at the very top are having enough children to keep their families perpetuated, before we began to note the swing toward adequate families in our best- endowed classes. America is certainly not bound "down the road to destruction," notwithstanding some current situ- ations that must cause us grave concern. Too many good minds are left, too many persons are eager and ready to help steer the Ship of State away from the rocks that loom in the distance. There is fuel aplenty for that ship, but we have come to see that navigation is as essential as fuel. We may heartily rejoice at the promising signs that point unmis- takably to the fact that a biological revolution is going on among us, that a new public sentiment is discoverable which may turn the tide, that there is developing among us a better type of human being — idealistic, practical, religious, intelligent, with sound temperament and noble emotions. Let us then devote our utmost effort to encouraging this type, and to discouraging the continuation of those at the lower end of the social scale. [292] APPENDICES APPENDIX A THE STUDIES MADE IN CALIFORNIA BY GOSNEY AND POPENOE APPENDIX B TABLES OF INHERITED CHARACTERISTICS APPENDIX C NUMBER OF STERILIZATIONS, BY STATES APPENDIX A The following technical papers represent the work of Mr. E. S. Gosney and Dr. Paul Popenoe. They deal with the workings of the California eugenical sterilization law and are fundamental source-material for any one interested in sterili- zation. 1. THE INSANE. Journal of Social Hygiene, XIII (5) : 257-268, May, 1927. 2. THE FEEBLE-MINDED. Journal of Social Hygiene, XIII (6); 321-330, June, 1927. 3. SUCCESS ON PAROLE AFTER STERILIZATION. Proc. Amer- ican Assn. for the Study of the Feeble-minded, 5ist annual session, 1927, pp. 86-103. 4. CHANGES IN ADMINISTRATION. Journal of Social Hy- giene, XIII (8) : 466-477, November, 1927. 5. ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL STATUS OF STERILIZED INSANE. Journal of Social Hygiene, XIV (1)123-32, January, 1928. 6. MARRIAGE RATES OF THE PSYCHOTIC. Journal of Nerv- ous and Mental Diseases, LXVIII (i) : 17-27, July, 1928. 7. FECUNDITY OF THE INSANE. Journal of Heredity, XIX (2) : 73-82, February, 1928. 8. MENSTRUATION AND SALPINGECTOMY AMONG THE FEEBLE-MINDED. The Pedagogical Seminary and Journal of Genetic Psychology, XXXV: 303-311, 1928. 9. VOLUNTARY STERILIZATION. Proceedings of the 3d Race Betterment Congress, Battle Creek, Michigan, 1928. [295] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION 10. ATTITUDE OF THE PATIENT'S RELATIVES TOWARD THE OPERATION. Journal of Social Hygiene, XIV (5) 1271- 280, May, 1928. 11. ATTITUDE OF PATIENTS TOWARDS THE OPERATION. Journal of Social Hygiene, XIV (5)1280-285, May, 1928. 12. SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC STATUS OF THE STERILIZED FEEBLE-MINDED. Journal of Applied Psychology, XII (3): 304-3 1 6, June, 1928. 13. MARRIAGE AFTER EUGENIC STERILIZATION. Proc. of the $2d annual meeting of the American Assn. for the Study of the Feeble-minded, 1928. 14. THE NUMBER OF PERSONS NEEDING STERILIZATION. Journal of Heredity, XIX (9) : 405-411, September, 1928. 15. THE LAW AND HUMAN STERILIZATION. Proceedings of the 5 1st annual meeting of the American Bar Assn., 1928 (by Otis H. Castle). 1 6. STERILIZATION AND CRIMINALITY. Proceedings of the $ist annual meeting of the American Bar Association, 1928. 17. EFFECT OF SALPINGECTOMY ON THE SEXUAL LIFE. Eu- genics, 1(2): 9-23, November, 1928. 1 8. EFFECT OF VASECTOMY ON THE SEXUAL LIFE. Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 1929. [296] APPENDIX 13 TABLE I INHERITED CHARACTERISTICS IN HUMAN BEINGS (PARTIAL LIST) Dominance of One Character and Recessiveness of the Cor- responding, in the First Generation of Offspring; and Segrega- tion in the Second and Subsequent Generations. Body size and shape. Certain fetal deformities (achondroplasia). Dominant over normal. Normal size. Dominant over true dwarfs. Skeleton. All the following traits dominate normal condition. Short digits and limbs (brachydactyly). Absence of distal phalanges. Extra digits (polydactyly). Fused, webbed, or fewer digits (syndactyly). Fused joints of digits (symphalangy). Abnormal outgrowths of long bones (exostoses). Fragility of bones (osteopsathyrosis). Double-join tedness. Skin. Pale thin skin. Dominant over colored thin skin. Brunet complexion. Dominant over intermediate and blond. Spotted white (vitiligo). Dominant over uniformly col- ored. [297] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION Excessive formation of blisters (epidermolysis). Domi- nant over normal. Hairiness, congenital (hypertrichosis). Dominant over normal. Skin thickening, nail marking. Dominant over normal. Hair. White forelock. Dominant over normal solid color. Dark brown. Dominant over light brown to tow and light reds. Black. Dominant over all other colors. Patchy graying of hair (canities). Dominant over normal, solid color. Curly, flat cross-section. Dominant over straight, round cross-section. Beaded, non-uniform cross-section. Dominant over normal section. Digital hair. Dominant over absence. Eyes. Brown or black. Dominant over blue. Hereditary cataract — this and following all dominant over normal. Internal pressure and swelling of eyeball (glaucoma). Displaced lens (ectopia lentis). Retina pigmentary degeneration (retinitis pigmentosa). Absence of crystalline lens, congenital (aphakia). Drooping of eyelid from paralysis, congenital (ptosis). Ears. Normal condition. Dominant over deaf-mutism. Normal condition. Dominant over hardening of ear tissue (otosclerosis). Nervous system. Chronic muscular twitchings ( Huntington's chorea). Dominant over normal. [298] APPENDIX B Muscular atrophy, progressive neural, both dominant over normal. Spontaneous (idiopathic) epilepsy. Recessive to normal. Constitutional feeble-mindedness. Recessive to normal. St. Vitus' dance (Sydenham's chorea). Recessive to nor- mal. Lack of muscular tone (Thomson's disease). Recessive to normal. Kidneys. Excessive urination (diabetes insipidus). Dominant over normal. Excessive sugar in urine (diabetes mellitus). Dominant over normal. Urine dark after oxidation (alkaptonuria). Recessive to normal. TABLE II CHARACTERISTICS TENDING TO "RUN IN FAMILIES" Defective hair and teeth Extra teeth Double set of permanent teeth Harelip and cleft palate Retention of testes in abdomen (cryptorchidism) Absence of certain teeth (dental agnesia) Bilobed ear Dent in forehead Human protein sensitization Double crown of scalp Stiffening of joints (ankylosis) Degeneracy of the cornea Longevity Handclasp Constitutional predisposition to certain diseases, such as cancer, pneumonia, abdominal hernia, inguinal hernia [299] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION Stuttering or stammering Anemia in young women (chlorosis) Nosebleed (epistaxis) Dilatation of capillaries (telangiectasis) Splenic anemia Gout Goitre Exophthalmic goitre (Graves' disease) Ability (a) literary, (b) mathematical, (c) mechanical, (d) artistic, (e) intellectual Heart defect Pernicious anemia Hardening of arteries (arteriosclerosis) TABLE III INHERITED CHARACTERISTICS DOMINANT IN MALES AND RECESSIVE IN FEMALES Fissure of parts of eye (coloboma) Atrophy of optic nerve Near sight (myopia) Color blindness (Daltonism) Night blindness Rolling of eyes (nystagmus) Scaly skin (ichthyosis) Pattern baldness Degeneration of nerve tissue (multiple sclerosis) Grower's muscular atrophy (dystrophia muscularis progressiva) Tendency to abnormal bleeding (hemophilia) Wanderlust Deficiency in sense of smell Sea-lust (thalassophilia) Toothlessness Webbed toes Abnormal smallness of eyes (microphthalmia) [300] APPENDIX C NUMBER OF STERILIZATIONS, BY STATES The following table shows what many of our States are doing in regard to sterilization in their institutions. It shows the number of operations in each State performed up to January i, 1921; between then and January i, 1928; between then and January i, 1932; and between then and Janu- ary i, 1933. The first column shows the year when the law was passed or when the latest amendment was passed to the existing law. A dash means that in this year there was no law; a cipher means that there was a law but that no operations were per- formed. The table does not, of course, show the many operations performed privately. [301] THE CASE FOR STERILIZATION State Last Law Passed Alabama 1923 Arizona 1929 California 1917 Connecticut 1919 Delaware 1929 Idaho 1929 Indiana* 1931 Iowa 1929 Kansas ^9*7 Maine 1931 Michigan 1929 Minnesota 1925 Mississippi 1928 Montana 1923 Nebraska 1929 New Hampshire 1929 New York Nevada North Carolina .... 1929 North Dakota *927 Oklahoma 1931 Oregon 1925 South Dakota 1927 Utah 1929 Vermont 1931 Virginia 1924 Washington 1921 West Virginia 1929 Wisconsin 1913 Total Jan. i, Jan. I, 1921* 1928 0 0 2,558 5,820 27 158 77 o 120 120 49 57 54 647 • ' 5 i 1 06 232 0 35 155 308 46 42 42 0 0 0 23 33 •" o 127 5" 0 0 64 o 27 I 9 0 76 218 3,233 8,515 Jan. I, 1932 76 o 7,548 158 141 o 120 57 657 42 629 508 o 35 386 85 42 o 21 33 o 576 37 79 o 658 9 o 248 Jan. i, 1933 131 20 8,504 338 296 13 217 94 976 4i 1,083 693 12 81 229 165 42 o 46 93 o 882 139 85 30 i,333 20 i 492 12,145 16,056 * The figures given for Indiana do not include the voluntary sterili- zations of several hundred males between 1899 and 1909, the year when Indiana passed its first law. [302] BIBLIOGRAPHY BIBLIOGRAPHY Barr, M. W. "Mental Defectives." Philadelphia, Blakiston, 1904. Carr-Saunders, A. M. "Eugenics." New York, Holt, 1926. "The Population Problem." Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1922, pp. 516. "Population." London, Oxford Univer- sity Press, 1925. Conklin, E. G. "Heredity and Environment in the Develop- ment of Men." Princeton University Press, Ed. 5, 1923. Danielson, F. H. and Davenport, C. B. 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