tv Documentary RT August 26, 2014 3:29am-4:01am EDT
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they will profit by destroying what our founding fathers once told us by job market and on this show we reveal the big picture of what's actually going on in the world we go beyond identifying the problem trucks rational debate and a real discussion critical issues facing america to find a job ready to join the movement then walk a little bit of. luck right on the streets. first street. and i think pictures. on our reporters twitter. and instagram. to be in the know. on mom.
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as if this were to ask you a question if you heard about the story for usually. with a general story you know you know the realization program and stories of past my job and i'm curious what's going on if you heard about the unusual next program or starring ization small town heard about it you know. and what do you what do you want what have you heard about it oh i don't know i don't know who he is you don't know exactly. sorry eugenics yet but eugenics ok that's a question. i was on. thirteen and i was molested. i got
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pregnant. the social worker came over and she had my grandmother to sign a consent. to the welfare department and to my grandmother to if she did the samples papers she would not receive supplements that. my grandmother signed the aunt's. name when they took my son they still asked me at the same time. normally. you know new thinking i'm trying ask myself why didn't we since my body was so young you know and nobody was if you really had to have a baby you know nobody would already traumatize you from the delivery or often the rate. they didn't even say anything to the markets. you know my grandmother didn't understand what she was signing me next because my grandmother
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was illiterate i was reading once. i was reading my pet trade. and i was also angry at the state north carolina because of something wrong. because. i didn't know how to sterilize until after night after i had gotten married. to a duck that actually explained to me even butchered they said that i was feeble minded i'm not even for the official reason those that were definition reason for me still. you know what i believe it was because i was blind i was full quarter environment and. they probably felt like i was going to end up just like other people i mean a little government is. i mean i don't believe that is
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it oh that of the people to sit here and say what was right for a lot of those. when the eugenics movement began in america americans thought of this is a very hopeful sign it's. there wasn't much talk of sterilization there was much attention though to better breeding and so the word eugenics became very popular. in genesis at the time it was understood to be science and given that this was a science the card day and the polar philanthropy. were interested in general in supporting the development of good science. andrew carnegie gave money to five hundred universities colleges and institutions in all they gave away
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over two hundred million up. the list is long of those who at the beginning of the twentieth century put their hopes in this new science coming straight from europe. towards the end of his life darwin became worried a dark future way to humanity where in our civilisation the process of natural selection doesn't play a role. what's more the renewing of our population is due more to the lower class rather than the middle or higher class. cult and darwin's cousin created in one thousand nine hundred three the word eugenics the science of genetic breeding. was unusually. good it did because of its human. on the book i mean of so
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remote that he needs me going to the positive listeners with the disease open usually as a developer. a simple prayer that i'll quit i'm going though the dude to be nice to benice to console fare who would know it about that i did that society. from one thousand nine hundred you genic organizations multiplied in europe. the first was created in berlin in one thousand and five by the doctor put in a psychiatrist. it was the movement for racial hygiene. racial hygiene was designed to prevent weakness illness disability and for the unfit to reproduce. a lot of were killed in addition and i saw death in the here because you're too busy about these and it is you suck at twelve hour. love also. this young prison want to see the. women.
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that's here on this was hit big. you need a couple or there's a nice solid wall good to discourage scenic trails is like. kinetic. can mimic you because mountain pretty. well we wanted to know and you want to get us off. the english eugenics organization presided over by one of darwin sons was founded in one thousand and seven. the novelist h.g. wells wrote that year. our duty is to inquire what this utopia will make of the infirm the idiots and the mad. the drunkards the mean and the stupid too stupid to be of use to society we need to resort to a type of surgery on society. it was in the
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united states that the first sterilization laws appeared in one thousand and seven . in one thousand ten close to new york the eugenics record office became the center for american eugenics research. the institution that emerged still exists today. what is called spring harbor laboratory now. one of the most distinguished laboratories for the pursuit of molecular biology and molecular genetics in the world i just want to films of from a building of. a record of his. i'm right. but it's a story called the commentary it's not about the present which. they
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are embarrassed by i think they should live more comfortably with it because it doesn't characterize calls for garber today by any means and they should say this is what went on there it was wrong and we're now going past it now for more than half a well more than half a century when the eugenics record office was founded in one thousand nine hundred it was meant to be a place where people studied families. charles davenport who was the director was focused like his hero francis galton on family traits. they look for families they call degenerate. so families where there was alcoholism in families where there were so called keep in mind that families where there
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illegitimacy are families where there was prostitution and what have you and then they would do interviews and ask about the parents and the grandparents but this was a pedigree chart of the famous jukes family and it got so large that they decided to make it in a circle because they could contain more people this way. than what was. it was made to show that some nine hundred individuals who ended up in the prisons of new york were descended from the same woman margaret the mother of criminals. carry loughlin had projected that we needed to be fifteen million american sterilized. in one nine hundred fourteen aloft and was asked to write
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a model. and harry loughlin said this law should use to sterilize ten perhaps cysteine million people represent the bottom tenth of the american population. and when the newspapers picked up the headline people and the reaction. was strong against him. this plan was really to simply eliminate people who would cause social costs like crime and poverty. and they thought you could do that if you just didn't let people have children. when virginia passed sterilization law in nineteen twenty four there was a need to see whether it would be held by courts in the states.
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and some of the doctors at the bridge in the county for a couple of feet finding an institution near lynchburg virginia shows a young lady named carrie but was the first person to be sterilized. i met her in one nine hundred eighty three and she told me how she had been falsely accused of being promiscuous of being an unfit mother a big moral degeneracy. when we asked to film the former institution where carrie puck found herself we were told that most of the building no longer existed. but in going to see it ourselves it seems that the building is in fact still there. the evidence was that carrie's feebleminded this was inherited. this was determined by giving an i.q. test to her mother who also had been in the virginia colony she flunked. and to
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kerry who also failed it and she had a illegitimate daughter named bibi who was then about six or eight months old and the nurse said that she seemed to be feeble minded as well. first it went to the virginia court of appeals and then it went to the united states supreme court the citizen was rendered in one nine hundred twenty seven by justice all over one of the homes jr who is rich. guarded as one of the great progressive justices in the united states and so he said in the end three generations of imbeciles or enough kerry's mother kerry and via. the media leave us so we need to. push and secure. your party isn't the. issues that no one is asking with to get that you deserve answers from.
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politic only on our team. i. think it needs the. economic ups and downs in the find it tolerable month day the london deal sang night and the rest of life during the making will be everything on. the world is laughing at america because every single day jamie diamond. that is the american economy shows up in bloody great you know near death and they're saying oh it wasn't jamie that did it this time it wasn't me that did it this time i don't jamie i love jamie he loves me and the rest the world like. oh.
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he's in full scope becoming independent schools a nation that nations should be self-governing they govern the feels better than allowing someone else to do it for. do we speak your language. programs and documentaries in arabic it's all here on all t.v. reporting from the world talks books of p.r.p. interviews intriguing stories for you to. see been trying. to find out more visit or a big t.v. dog called.
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kerry book was sterilized at the lynchburg colony and thousands of people were sterilized there after her. more than eight thousand people in virginia were sterilized under the generous laws more than twenty thousand california and the rest of the united states as many as sixty thousand people were sterilized. it's always surprising to me a few people actually have heard this story it's not something we're proud of in america. she lay out because they don't come from but we need to do everything that i said that. did this is the way to absolutely buy these people to do that we'll consider you know that it was a fix to do it. you know we don't like you know what we see they didn't know didn't
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know do it up and see who's in the east of the senate in the solving this all these means of solving. that. in one thousand thirty one the psychiatrist co-founder of the racial hygiene organization became director of the psychiatric institute in munich he also became one of the three authors of the nazi eugenic law of july one nine hundred thirty three so fast that you dorsey get to go unique it didn't pass you but because immortal so you know who was on the whistle to get you. also in one thousand twenty five this institute was one of the biggest investments of the rockefeller foundation in europe aka philip on they shifted something i learned it from thousand dollars. he says how. often sponsor me so much you. know in this fashion this program. includes you
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i know i mean for this be credit in view in the pick up the house feeling vacant i need for to skinny to. pay the interest do you think you should cancun and how. he's only doing that will scheffer honest you know phonies short of sequels maniacally perceive i'm going to put it on your t.v. put it down sure. it's a great book and i paid all they asked for not that i would actually read this piece. i think that has its own limits on northcote on his other people you see me come with me and i don't wanna see community talk on farms i don't need to know what you like i mean people have been in and it. looks good on the self really put me more vision into that yeah and it could be happy to have it connected because let me remember. famous enough the other was at
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least essential s.t.'s human. design to do. the math here because it was i conquered most americans. the germans took. inspiration from the american law from both the bill. establishing their own sterilization law. the law for the prevention of hereditary diseased offspring was passed on the fourteenth of july nine hundred thirty three conditions such as mentally disturbed schizophrenia depressed deaf disabled alcoholics were targeted by the law. tribunal's on hereditary health were set up composed of two doctors and a judge. under the nazi regime they carried out the forced sterilization of four hundred thousand people.
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see the immense. eventually tungstens importance in fathom. condition mention in children on mars so i'm talking to you all those calls to your to more success a little would be done to guns cause of hope and yeah so when i'm to. just sit on the set actors on tights because it's. something i don't sleep much in washington d.c.
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my father asked is an illegal interview against what he bunny seamanship to do it just so they can learn to give your fish hope stocks on the watch and tough talk from skunks you have a good chance you have out this market now after funding cuts for good norman an interview before he could light it it conquer. in stupid movie. and go bought and then once he. did not caught at enough to not go far. as i am of them are. one of my birth. is that there have been lots of. sort of a few of us close enough if i thought hard to know any one of the thoughts on the road why it is of. hundred coke me because i have power over
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there on their shop window shoot through flute of their own purple lie that this isn't one privy that i did it is the kind of control freak on. those hired. by. it then it's. good nobody could open that's my limit remarked lord remind the. sheets of on us in van to citrus we are interested in the new office and good news in the indian auction off of the top of this is. the hope this is just one mixed of it. being any more fiction from integer can come to the kind of cotillion fest of others or more convention aphorism vassie finds after speech ideologically damn
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good idea can was a. given listen yeah yeah neither of us got to leave . the scene shifts to get. these are. the week. with the rockefeller foundation. if they can. as a national incident six entices six is done to question the work if it a foundation. can then. i. don't i found. this kind of a nothing you give you some stuff it gets on and you know if they don't do it at that stage also and. then they get two months old and it's not sanaa is it so this was. we are not alone was the propaganda carried out by the nazis in one nine hundred thirty six. if the eugenic laws didn't end up being adopted by the english
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government despite several attempts by catholic countries after the pope intervened in one thousand nine hundred eighty they were in fact at the time of the berlin olympic games being enforced in the united states in denmark in switzerland finland norway and in sweden. it was in one nine hundred thirty six that the nazi shot the eugenic propaganda film called crunk on hereditary diseases. as you know you can put you on the eggs next to take out i think cities buzz about
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in the film. we want to lose you when one side community is this you know all the she's going to need some oh. damn yet continue did. sit on set free your own soul in the state it is this young girl is the. most up on seekers sophistry for passing it up. in fairly not a booklet is us didn't stiff it is a skill i very put the message. love to last the ticket on looked on as. loss of on the so he's yet to topple succeed secreted out of its alternative and so they're under the shelf that out of
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here at least on their way. it's here for tear garden street in berlin that the administrative headquarters of the t. for program is found. the patients were selected based on their medical records. to begin t. the highland flea and stuck to. its skin thea too busy and deserved to minimize the damage done to it in an oven very few mouse clicks given what i could see and. the parts he couldn't i was an alibi hadn't gotten. on just rush. off the transporter front but in terms of starting thirty thousand.
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thank you sensed on that new magazine that anybody if i deal with it but. because they thought. it was mine a muslim terrorist if you run the indian and that's and that's the gun study that comes on i tell you i'm buying them. being. you could see it wouldn't so well get kids. up transport it to those on study. or. the sneaked in the nuns oxen and i don't fully understand in the money and the
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speed. and but what. this will show bush is transport's gets a facelift and he got something for which makes him most of the sun in. this science flourishes it's almost and we check out some on our let's say the most technology update here on r.g.p. we've done the future coverage. we think of why we think there are no. rules and beaches. coconut palms gently swaying in the ocean breeze. in fact. white has a deep dark little secret a secret the u.s.
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the shell shocked population of eastern ukraine struggling to find food old water in their ruined towns. continue here and i'll tell you we follow the anti-government forces bringing relief to the suffering locals. and the conflict will be up for discussion at a meeting between the president's office russia and ukraine if indeed the meeting goes ahead we have more on the expectations from the talks. i think u.s. president approves the surveillance and she harvests fighting in syria. we look at how working with bashar al assad could suddenly become a pressure for washington. just a few weeks ahead of the scottish independence referendum poll suggests they are.
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