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Government Forcibly Sterilized Latina Women Without Their Consent

Counter Current | December 28, 2015

Disturbing revelations about a U.S. government program to forcibly sterilize Latina women are now coming out, and the evidence is more damning that previously expected.

The documentary No Más Bebés has compiled a litany of evidence that sheds the light on one of California’s most disturbing secrets, which are reminiscent of Nazi eugenics programs: forced sterilization of Latina women.

For decades, California was one of several states that performed forced sterilization. For women, it meant having one’s “tubes tied” after giving birth – usually without their consent. It wasn’t just women, though. Men were also given vasectomies without their knowledge. Hardest hit: Spanish-speaking immigrants.

The eugenics program ran from 1909 to 1963. During that time, over 20,000 Californian Latina women were subject to forced sterilization to “control” the population of Latinos in the state.

By the 1970s, that same program had continued but was scaled back just slightly.

Before that gradual phasing out of the program, Latina women – particularly immigrants – in the 1960s had been forcibly sterilized at the Los Angeles County Hospital, without their consent.

The sterilization happened via government instruction to the hospital, after Latina women gave birth at the hospital.

Many women were told about the procedure, but only after it was performed on them.

As more and more women were told about what was done to them, word began to spread among the Latino community that the government was sterilizing them against their will.

To add insult to injury, many Caucasian Californians saw the government program as “legitimate population control.”

California’s government argued passionately that forced sterilization was “necessary” to keep “welfare” expenditures to a minimum.

But others knew very well that this was a further attempt to stem the growing Mexican American population in California.

The documentary No Más Bebés has now uncovered proof that the real intention was to rid society of “undesirables.”

Eventually a class action lawsuit was filed against the government for the forced sterilization program, in the case of (Madrigal v. Quilligan). Further implicated in the suit, was not just L.A. county doctors as well as the state governments, but also the U.S. federal government itself.

Perhaps the worst part of this infuriating story is that the class action suit – brought by the victims of this racist government program – actually lost the lawsuit when it was brought to court.

Watch the full trailer for the documentary No Más Bebés below…

December 29, 2015 - Posted by | Ethnic Cleansing, Racism, Zionism, Timeless or most popular, Video | ,

4 Comments »

  1. http://www.peacecorpswiki.org/History_of_the_Peace_Corps_in_Bolivia “The Peace Corps initially entered Bolivia in 1962 with a group of health Volunteers. The program continued to grow over the next nine years, with Volunteers working in public health, agriculture, and community development in rural communities and in education in both urban and rural areas. In 1970, a coup installed a leftist military government. A number of economic, political, and social circumstances strained the formerly cordial relationship between Bolivia and the United States. At the same time, a popular 1969 Bolivian movie, Yawar Mallku (Blood of the Condor), strongly suggested that Peace Corps Volunteers were sterilizing indigenous women. While the film’s director denied any association and the film itself was not a documentary, many Bolivians believed the movie to be factual. Public sentiment toward the Peace Corps became increasingly antagonistic, and in 1971, the Peace Corps was expelled from Bolivia….”

    Date: Tue, 29 Dec 2015 15:51:49 +0000 To: earthconcert@hotmail.com

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    raphael diaz's avatar Comment by raphael diaz | December 30, 2015 | Reply

    • And the Bolivian suspicion would have been well founded since USAID had been sponsoring a similar sterilization program in Pakistan’s Pashtun tribal region which was expelled in 1965. No doubt that more such endeavors existed which simply have never been exposed in western media yet no doubt were widely known of among the victim’s communities.

      The state of North Carolina had a similar program which, if memory serves was not terminated until 1969.

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      aletho's avatar Comment by aletho | December 30, 2015 | Reply

  2. these wonderful u.s. programs: sterilizations, aids, ebola, poverty. just a few.

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    5 dancing shlomos's avatar Comment by 5 dancing shlomos | December 31, 2015 | Reply

  3. Keep up the excellent work , I read few articles on this site and I believe that your web site is very interesting and has got circles of wonderful information.

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    MACD expert advisor's avatar Comment by MACD expert advisor | July 17, 2017 | Reply


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