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Edwin Black "A hair-raiser and an eye-opener contains details so vivid and horrid that one can hardly believe them or bear to read them .This is an important book, filled with little-known facts about how some of our most esteemed institutions and professionals have funded and practiced very bad science, if it was science at all, and how this pseudoscience permeated much of the world's thinking and led to the atrocities of a world war." St. Louis Post-Dispatch "Fascinating War Against the Weak is filled with tale after tale of arrogance, ignorance, and cruelty accounts that Black wisely allows the eugenicists to relate in their own words . Perhaps most chilling, though, were the ways in which American eugenicists influenced their German counterparts." Discover Magazine
Black's team of dozens of researchers scoured scores of archives in four countries, unearthing some 50,000 documents, which collectively prove that the eugenics agenda was funded by esteemed philanthropies such as the Rockefeller Foundation and the Carnegie Institution; taught at Yale, Harvard, and Princeton; lauded by leading progressive thinkers such as Margaret Sanger, Oliver Wendell Holmes, and Woodrow Wilson; and even sanctioned by the U.S. Supreme Court. With this kind of backing, American eugenics was quickly able to move beyond the theoretical in its quest to eliminate social "undesirables," getting cruel and racist laws enacted in 27 U.S. states. Ultimately, more than 60,000 Americans were sterilized against their will, and tens of thousands of others were institutionalized and/or denied the right to marry whom they chose. In the last year or so, governors from five states-Virginia, Oregon, California, North Carolina, and South Carolina-have apologized for their states' official efforts to wipe out their unwanted citizens. Surprisingly, the victims of eugenics weren't limited to the groups that have regularly suffered from prejudice in the U.S.; they were also the poor, epileptics, alcoholics, people who wore glasses, petty criminals, the mentally ill, and those deemed "shiftless." War Against the Weak details how those at the forefront of the movement worked tirelessly to establish the biological rationales for persecution, with the goal of continuously eradicating the "lower tenth" until only a pure Nordic super race remained. To achieve that end, eugenics contaminated many otherwise worthy causes, from the birth control movement to the development of psychology and IQ testing, and beyond. After Nuremberg declared eugenics to be genocide and a crime against humanity, the American eugenics movement did not disappear; it simply went underground, changed its name, and reappeared as "human genetics." War Against the Weak closes by bringing its analysis into the present day, pointing out that our increasing knowledge in the realm of genetic selection and gene-mapping is rife with opportunity for misuse. Edwin Black is the award-winning author of The Transfer Agreement, Format C:, and the New York Times bestseller IBM and the Holocaust, which won the American Society of Journalists and Authors' award for the best nonfiction book of 2002. That same group deemed Black's "IBM at Auschwitz," which he wrote for the Village Voice, best investigative article of 2002. As an investigative journalist, Black has written for numerous newspapers and magazines worldwide, including the Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, New York Daily News, Los Angeles Times, Sunday Times (England), and Jerusalem Post. "Fierce, compelling well told and extraordinarily sad a prodigious feat of reporting." Mother Jones "Astonishing chilling and thoroughly researched A book whose message must be made known." Tampa Tribune $27.00 | hardcover | 592 pages | ISBN: 1-56858-258-7
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