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Questions and Answers on Eugenics
by Marian Van Court
Table of Contents
1. Equality
2. Social Status
3. Low IQ
4. Sterilization
5. IQ and Bias
6. Political Correctness
7. Alleviating metabolic disorders
8. A dangerous idea
9. Ignorance
10. Values
11. Fear
12. What is intelligence?
13. The disconnect
1. Doesn't it say in the Declaration of Independence that all men are
created equal?
This is an objection which is frequently brought up. It goes "We hold these
truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are
endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are
Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness." This means they are equal before
the law, that government can't (or shouldn't) take away these fundamental
rights. The historical record is quite clear that the Founding Fathers meant
equal before the law, not that everyone was born equal in intelligence,
talent, or athletic ability. Their other writings amply attest to the fact
that they did not believe in biological equality--between individuals, or
between races. A number of them were slave-holders. In a letter to John Adams,
Thomas Jefferson rejected the aristocracy based on one's birth as an
artificial one, and spoke of "the natural aristocracy of talent and virtue,"
which he felt was our country's most precious gift. (And isn't that a lovely
turn of phrase to express what he valued most highly?!)
2. When you say that high IQ people are having fewer children, aren't you
equating social status with intelligence?
No, but you're correct if you're thinking that there's also a social class
gradient for number of children (that, on average, high SES people have the
fewest, then average SES, then low SES have the most children). This SES
gradient exists, but so does an IQ gradient.
In 1984, I did a study (with Frank Bean) of IQ and fertility in the United
States. It was published in the journal Intelligence, 9, 23-32, 1985,
"Intelligence and Fertility in the United States: 1912 to 1982". [Anyone who
wants a reprint may contact me.] In this study (N>6000), we used a very short
IQ test, and correlated the score with number of offspring for 15 cohorts born
between 1894 and 1964. All correlations were negative, 13 were statistically
significant, and 7 were beyond the .001 level. At this rate, we lose about 1
IQ point each generation. I'm currently working on another fertility-IQ study,
and finding similar results. We don't need to be able to identify specific
genes for intelligence in order to conclude that genotypic intelligence is
declining, because we know intelligence is highly heritable.
3. Is there something inherently bad about having a low IQ?
Yes! From the standpoint of our whole society, it's very, very bad. I
personally have known people with low IQs whom I loved and respected, some so
honorable, hard-working, and pleasant to be with I'd choose them over an
unpleasant or obnoxious high-IQ person if I had to be stranded with only one
companion on a desert island. But collectively, in terms of society, they
constitute a tremendous liability. Low IQ people are much more likely to be
criminals, chronically dependent on welfare, unemployed, illiterate--in fact,
they're way over-represented in every category of social problems. They cost
taxpayers billions of dollars annually. This may sound abstract, but it all
translates very clearly into human misery!
The Bell Curve, by Herrnstein and Murray, is a brilliant book. I hear it's
now out in paperback for only $16. It's looks a bit daunting because it's kind
of long, but it's wonderfully well-written, and easy to read. It explains the
role of IQ in our society far better than I can here. Anyway, the authors
found that when they moved the average IQ of their sample down statistically
by just 3 points, from 100 to 97, all social problems were exacerbated: the
number of women chronically dependent on welfare increased by 7%; illegitimacy
increased by 8%; men interviewed in jail increased by 12%; and the number of
permanent high school dropouts increased by nearly 15%.
Everyone should be treated with respect, even retarded people, but
compassion requires us to face the fact that they are a big drain on our
economy, not to mention the economy of the future. This is why low IQ is
inherently bad.
4. In the British Medical Journal (# 7108, September 6, 1997, p. 563)
there's an article entitled "Thousands of women sterilized in Sweden without
consent." The Swedish government is investigating why thousands of women were
forcibly sterilized on eugenic grounds from the 1930s to the 1970s. There are
similar allegations about forced sterlisations in Switzerland, Austria and
Finland. Is this the kind of thing you support?
There's not enough information in this article to evaluate these programs.
The fact that political correctness has spread to Europe--that they now say
"Oh, isn't this terrible?" is irrelevant. What really matters is whether the
programs were actually fair and humane. Over the years, I've tried, without
much success, to get articles on eugenics programs in European countries that
continued on long after WW2. There don't seem to be many articles (or at least
I haven't been able to find them), and then there's the problem of having them
translated. Since I know so little about these programs, I can't comment on
their fairness or efficacy. Getting more information about them is important,
though, because whether they were sound, misguided, or somewhere in between,
surely something can be learned from their experiences.
This article conjures up horrible images: a young woman--selected for no
good reason--is dragged from her home, kicking and screaming, pinned to the
operating table, and sterilized. But it's really hard to imagine that such
things happen in Sweden. Sweden certainly appears to be a highly civilized
country. Could it be that in every imaginable respect, it's a highly civilized
country, except for these isolated, totally atypical acts of barbarism? Or is
it just possible there's a higher ethical principle operating here that we can
see only if we probe beneath the surface?
The sad fact is that there are women in this world who are mentally
incompetent (either severely retarded or mentally ill), and who are also
fertile. They present a serious ethical dilemma. It's easy to condemn Sweden's
actions, but it's not so easy to find alternatives that are demonstrably
better.
There's a very real danger that if such women aren't sterilized, they'll
get pregnant, because history has shown that there are plenty of unscrupulous
men ready to take advantage of them. In mental institutions, women are
sometimes impregnated ("raped" would probably be more accurate) by attendants,
guards, or janitors. Then, the child is taken away from the mother (is this a
good thing?) and given up for adoption. In the past, in most cases, the
adoptive parents weren't informed if the biological mother was a schizophrenic
who had been raped by an employee of the institution (is this fair to the
adopting parents?). Most of the children born of such unions will be alright,
but as a group, they are far more likely to develop psychopathologies of
various sorts.
We really don't know all the details about what happened in Sweden and the
other European countries mentioned in the article. I'm not arguing that these
programs were faultless. I'm just saying that the issues involved are
difficult and complicated. An article that reports that "thousands were
sterilized without their consent" could be verymisleading.
And what precisely does this phrase "without their consent" mean when
talking about mentally incompetent people? By definition, mentally incompetent
people cannot make decisions on their own. So what if they did give their
consent? What would such consent mean, if they don't understand what they're
consenting to? Maybe, just maybe, the authorities in Sweden realized they'd
have decide for the women--they didn't bother to ask their permission, because
they knew that to do so would be meaningless. I suppose one could try to
explain to the women how babies are made, and why it might be better if they
didn't have one, and then say "So, do we have your permission to be sterilized
now?" But the whole thing could only be a charade as long as they didn't fully
comprehend what was being said.
Pregnancy and childbirth, in and of themselves, are not terrific
experiences!! They involve nausea, depression, mood swings, bladder problems,
severe discomfort towards the end (just from being so fat), and hemorrhoids,
to say nothing of the pain. This is self-evident to the women who have
undergone it. To attempt to prove it seem kind of silly, but I suppose we
could do a survey asking a random sample of women with children, How much fun
was your last pregnancy and birth, on a scale of 1 to 10? Few women would
argue that pregnancy and childbirth are fun. Surrogate mothers are paid
considerable sums to undergo it for infertile couples, presumably because
there arent lots of women volunteering to do it for free. So I think its a
safe assumption pregnancy and childbirth are not inherently highly- rewarding
experiences, except perhaps as they are a patrt of the process of producing a
child to love.
Theyre something to be endured as a means to an end. But if a woman goes
through 9 months of it, has a baby, and then is told, "Sorry, we have to take
your baby away from you for its own protection," and the mother never sees her
baby again, this is a very sad story!! It's a wrenching experience, and it is
arguably far worse than having a simple operation to prevent pregnancy in the
first place, one which many thousands of women opt for every year when they
don't want more children.
Lets be clear about this. By sterilizing mentally incompetent women, were
not depriving them of the experience of MOTHERHOOD -- they are already denied
that by the fact that they would be totally unfit mothers. Rather, were
depriving them of the dubious priviledgeprivilege of PREGNANCY and CHILDBIRTH,
which, as the majority of women would attest, is doing them a favor. In
addition, were sparing them the profoundly painful experience of having their
baby taken away from them at birth, never to be seen again.
So we have 2 choices here: either these women can be sterilized, or they
risk having children for whom they cannot care, who will be forcibly taken
from them, without their consent!! The children will also have a substantially
increased chance of developing mental problems. I believe the former is the
more humane, and the more ethical, all things considered. (The fertility of
mentally incompetent men is not as big a problem because severely retarded or
insane men generally have a very hard time finding women to have sex with.)
It looks like we are going to HAVE to FORCE them to do something -- either
to be sterilized, or to take their babies away from them at birth. Either
that, or the babies can be brought up in an insane asylum. I think the former
is much more kind. There's no getting around this choice, pretending it
doesn't exist. What do you think?
The question remains, who will make this decision? Since the government
seems to screw up nearly everything it gets its hands on, the decision should
be made by the parents or closest relative. If there is none, perhaps by the
institution. This needs to be worked out.
Society can and does make decisions for mentally incompetent people all the
time--for example, to institutionalize them. To allow them total "freedom"
means to abandon them. It means allowing them to wander the streets mumbling
to themselves, hovering in doorways, easy prey for criminals, and likely doing
harm to themselves or others. In my opinion, it's in their best interest, and
in the best interest of any future children they may bear, and society at
large, if these people do not procreate.
5. Everyone knows that IQ tests are biased--what makes you think they're
not biased?
Here's an example of real bias: Say an IQ test is standardized in England,
and in the vocabulary section there are words like "lift" [as a noun] and
"lorry" and "scones." If this same test is given to American kids, these items
would stand out rather conspicuously. When you looked at the data, you would
recognize immediately that: 1. answers to these questions were merely random
guesses, 2. kids who scored high on the test as a whole wouldn't be any more
likely to get them right than those who scored low, and 3. older kids wouldn't
do any better than younger kids. (We'll assume, for the sake of simplicity,
that their exposure to these words is uniformly zero.) This means they're
worthless questions, with no predictive value, for the American kids, because
all they do is add "noise," thereby reducing the reliability and validity of
the test. Furthermore, if nobody ever bothered to look at the data and delete
these items from the American version, these items could legitimately be said
to be "biased" against American kids.
By analyzing the data, it's possible to determine definitively whether a
test is, or is not, biased against any group, or whether particular items are
biased. (It gets much more complicated, but this is a kind of
"Bias-Made-Simple" explanation.) Also, there's the important question of
whether the test predicts success equally well for all groups. If a test
doesn't satisfy the criteria for bias, it's not biased. People's feelings, and
what may appear on the surface to be bias, have nothing to do with making this
determination.
In Arthur Jensen's definitive work on the subject, Bias in Mental Testing,
he found that IQ tests are not biased (using statistical criteria), except
that the tiny unreliability of the tests slightly favors low-scoring groups.
Also, it's hard to imagine how the argument of bias towards Caucasians could
be refuted any more effectively than by the fact that Japanese kids do better
(on average) than American kids.
6. What you're advocating is the kind of thing David Duke would endorse!
It's a pathetic commentary on freedom of speech in this country, but given
the current political climate, only brave people with a large degree of
independence can speak unpopular truths that go against political correctness.
Why? Because people can and do lose their jobs. Remember "Jimmy the Greek?" He
made some comment about blacks that wasn't even derogatory, but he was
immediately fired, and never seen or heard from since. The whole country
witnesses these events, and we're all cowed by them. It's kind of like
Fascism, or Communism, only the censorship was created from within, and there
are no laws on the books. We need to understand better what is fueling this
insanity. At any rate, if David Duke knows the facts, and he's smart enough
and brave enough to endorse eugenics, then great, he's to be commended for it.
7. Wouldn't it be impossible to make a serious dent in the incidence of
recessive metabolic disorders through eugenics?
Yes, that's a good point. Most children born with them come from parents
who didn't know they were carriers. If everyone who actually had the disorder
didn't have children, it still wouldn't make much difference. But nowadays,
there are many powerful new ways to deal with these problems. Parents can be
tested to see if they're carriers, and if a fetus is affected, they have the
option to abort. Or, they could have in vitro fertilization, and implant only
the fertilized egg that was not affected. These procedures are part of
contemporary eugenics, which really has many more options than early eugenics
had.
8. There are good reasons to reject eugenics, even if it's scientifically
valid. One is that the world is not ready to handle this research. It's true
the media have a kind of filter that is heavily biased in favor of equality,
so pro-eugenics views are hardly ever heard. However, there's a reason this
filter exists: it's more important for the majority of people to have a good
life than it is for them to consider dangerous or volatile ideas.
Ah, now you've hit on something! You very aptly describe the suppression of
these ideas as a "filter." I agree absolutely that this belief--that the
public should be protected from radical ideas, particularly ones the media
themselves find distasteful-- is a major reason journalists and others have
lied to the public about IQ. But as reasons go, this one is not nearly good
enough!! Don't journalists have an ethical obligation to report the facts?
Snyderman and Rothman showed that in this debate, the ultra-liberal media have
actually kept expert opinion from the public.
While mentally incompetent people must have decisions made for them by
others (because, by definition, they're incapable of making rational choices),
the public can hardly be considered mentally incompetent. Are you suggesting
that the public is too stupid and too unstable to be trusted with the truth?
This is precisely the reason why many in the anti-eugenics camp distort or
suppress the truth about IQ. Also, what a handy rationalization for
journalists and others who are simply too cowardly to express an unpopular
truth! They don't even have to admit it to themselves. Instead, they can
congratulate themselves on being "real humanitarians.
To me, the attitude you express conveys a chilling arrogance, and utter
contempt for the humanity of the public. It indicates they (you?) don't value
truth, or freedom, very much. Because you "care" about them, you want to
decide what's best for them to believe?! Would you want people to "care" about
you that way? Who are you--who is anyone-- to decide what truths the masses
can, and cannot, be told? Do you believe in freedom of speech? Or is it only
for certain people?
9. Maybe there are valid reasons why many people are ignorant about
sociobiology and eugenics--ie, because they are scared of their implications.
I think you're right. But wouldn't it be much better to know exactly what
the facts are, and then start worrying? Maybe it's not as bad as we fear. Has
it ever been a good strategy to stick our heads in the sand, like an ostrich?
And really, the facts are basically the same things people have always
believed in since the beginning of time. Now science has confirmed what common
sense told people for millennia, so there's no reason to think these beliefs
will somehow bring about the end of the world. The idea that everyone is born
exactly equal on everything that matters is totally new. Before Marx and
Freud, it would have been laughed at, and it will be laughed at in the future,
because an illusion--especially one this blatantly obvious--can't sustain
itself indefinitely.
10. There are many admirable human qualities that aren't measured by IQ
tests. There will never be consensus on what all of those qualities are. What
gives any of us the right to decide which ones to phase out?
I believe there's already a consensus on the fundamental traits we
value--for example, what traits would you want to see in your children? Most
people would say they want their children to be healthy, intelligent, sane,
law-abiding (not criminals) and conscientious--meaning possessing good
character (honest, hard-working, concerned for well-being of others). Have any
parents, anywhere, ever said, "We're hoping our son will grow up to be a
psychopath?" These values would be the same 100 years ago, and 1000 years ago.
Another way this consensus is expressed is in governmental expenditures on
hospitals, research on diseases and mental illness, prisons, police, etc. We
as a society are already very clearly trying to change people, using
environmental engineering in a not-very-effective attempt to make people
smart, law-abiding, sane, and healthy. Why not do something that actually
works?
A "right" implies there's something in it for us, when in reality, there's
nothing in it for us. I believe that we have a responsibility to future
generations, a moral obligation, to help them, just as we want to make sure
they have clean air and water, and a sound economy. We already agree on what
is good, and what is not. There's absolutely no doubt about it--we are quite
sure that we wouldn't want to be diseased, retarded, a criminal, or insane--so
it's no great leap of faith to assume people of the future don't want that,
either!
11. What you say may be true, but still, you frighten me!
I realize eugenics upsets many people, and I'm sorry. I know from long
experience that besides frightening people, it also makes them extremely
angry, believe me! I wish I could say what is true without upsetting people,
but I can't. The reason I have devoted myself to eugenics is because I believe
there's an enormous amount to be gained from it, and that eugenics can bring
about a vast increase in happiness and well-being. But in the short term, just
mentioning the word upsets people--there's no doubt about it.
I'm not unsympathetic to people who are horrified at the thought of
eugenics, because they think it's some form of cruelty, and cruelty in any
form is something I personally abhor. The two traits I value most highly are
honesty and kindness. I believe passionately in eugenics because I see it as
the most immense kindness. People who think of eugenics as some form of
cruelty wrongly associate it with the Nazi's. This is an unfair association,
since 28 other countries had eugenics legislation, but did not commit
genocide, or anything like it.
12. What is intelligence?
One simple, straightforward definition is that intelligence is
problem-solving ability. There are other ways to define it. Egalitarians may
object, "Since we can't all agree on a definition, it's a useless concept."
Not true! Intelligence is like heat. We know the difference between hot and
cold, and we can measure fine gradations of heat. But, they may ask, what is
heat, really? It's molecules rushing about. OK, but what is that really? Some
people say, "It's too hot in here!" while others will say, "It's too cold!"
Does this mean we must discard the concept of heat? No. Almost any definition
of any word could give rise to disagreement. We don't have unanimity on
definitions of many important constructs which we use every day, but we carry
on nevertheless, and we are much better off with them, than without them.
Egalitarians also love to say, "But IQ isn't everything!" That's true. (Is
there anything which is everything?) But IQ clearly is something very, very
important. Prediction is the gold standard in science. Those who pooh-pooh it
have a difficult time (or maybe I should say "an impossible task") explaining
why IQ is the single best predictor of success in life. How could anything
which measures nothing--or even something trivial--predict success so well?
13. It seems like there's a total "disconnect" on this issue between
science on the one hand, and popular opinion, on the other.
You're absolutely right. There are 2 arenas in which the Nature-Nurture
debate is taking place --the scientific one, and the public one--and the
outcomes are exactly opposite. Scientifically, the egalitarian (nurture)
position that heredity has no influence on behavior, that everyone is born
exactly the same, and that the environment determines everything--is totally
bankrupt. Proponents of this view have been not just beaten, but clobbered by
overwhelming evidence-- from numerous twin studies, adoption studies, and
studies like the one by Charles Murray (on this website). The egalitarians
have been clobbered despite the fact that the "playing field" is absurdly
uneven in their favor--it is far easier to get funds for research if you take
an egalitarian stance, your articles will be greeted with great interest and
approval, and you won't have even one-thousandth the problem finding a
publisher for your book, which will get good reviews and sell lots of copies.
In spite of all that, the egalitarians have been thoroughly trounced in the
scientific arena for the plain and simple reason that they're wrong.
But in the public arena, it's just the opposite. The egalitarians, with
help from the liberal media, have clearly won the day. The egalitarian
strategy has been all along to snipe at the research of the hereditarians. [I
use "hereditarians" to mean people who believe heredity exerts a strong
influence on behavior. No hereditarians I've ever heard of believe the
environment is unimportant.] Egalitarians use ad hominem attacks, portraying
hereditarians as hateful, bigoted villains who deliberately distort their data
in order to make other people feel bad. Egalitarians have no compelling
evidence, and they know it, so their best tactic is to confuse the issue:
"Nobody can ever know for sure." "It hasn't been proven." "Who can say what
intelligence really is?" They like to say that heredity and environment are so
hopelessly entangled, how could anyone figure out the relative influence of
each? [Easy--by studying identical twins reared apart.] Their obscurantist
strategy is powerless against vast areas of new research (e.g., on biological
correlates of IQ), so they simply ignore them. They point to small flaws in
one twin study, for example, to try to invalidate it, but neglect to inform
the reader that a dozen more studies found exactly the same thing. They give
examples of questions taken from IQ tests, often items discarded 20 years ago,
saying they're "obviously biased," as if it's sufficient to simply make the
assertion and leave it at that. But do the egalitarians really want to get at
the truth? Ask yourself this question, "What research have Gould, Lewontin,
Rose, et al ever produced to prove the egalitarians are correct?" Answer:
None.
Among researchers in the field of IQ, it's been common knowledge for years
that the leading proponents of egalitarianism are not merely mistaken or
misinformed, they are thoroughly dishonest. They deliberately mislead people
into accepting egalitarianism, an ideology consistent with their own political
beliefs, and one which they arrogantly decided is "good for" the masses to
believe. (And in so doing, they make lots of money--they must be in hog
heaven.) Not only is their position true, they insist, it's the only moral
stance. I ask you: doesn't this sound suspicious? Are we talking about truth
here, or about religion? How can a question of fact become also a moral duty
to believe? Brilliant and sincere scientists, such as Jensen, Lynn, Rushton,
Herrnstein, and Murray, who consistently report the truth even though they
know it's unpopular, are the evil villains in the little "morality play,"
while the egalitarians, of course, are the "good guys." It's ironic the way
they take on pious airs while blatantly lying. The reader must surely be
thinking by now, "What kind of insanity are we witnessing here?!" I'll tell
you what kind--it's called temporary insanity, because the egalitarians won't
be able to suppress the truth forever.
Judging from their past behavior, it wouldn't be at all unreasonable to
imagine that the egalitarians would conduct studies and lie about their
results--if they thought they could get away with it. But they can't, at least
not for long, and here's why. If they conducted a twin study, for example, to
prove that genes don't influence behavior, that IQ has no genetic component,
or whatever, if they tell the truth about their results, it either won't prove
much of anything (because they messed it up), or more likely, it will prove
they're totally wrong. Still, they might get a little mileage out of it by
interpreting their results in some convoluted way. But if they fabricate a
study, and lie about their results, then they'll get into big trouble, because
other scientists will attempt to replicate it, and get the opposite results.
Eventually, their dishonesty will be revealed, and they will lose what
piddling credibility they have left in the scientific world. (That's part of
the beauty of science! It's an excellent system for uncovering the truth.) So
basically, all the egalitarians are left with is sniping at the hereditarians,
and droning on and on No one can never know for sure.
Everyone knows that if a person listens to only one side in a bitter
divorce, he/she is liable to come away with a totally biased impression. (The
wife's friends will say "The husband is a monster!" and the husband's friends
will say "The wife's a psychopath!") But even though we know better, we still
fall prey to believing what we hear based on just one side, and we do it all
the time, because there are only so many hours in a day, and we can't probe
deeply into every question. On the issue of genetics and behavior, the
egalitarians and the liberal media have totally dominated public discourse, so
for decades, only their side has been presented to the public. Is it any
wonder the public accepts what they say uncritically? It's certainly not
anyone's fault for believing it. If I didn't happen to be involved with IQ,
I'm sure I'd believe it, too.
But then maybe someday, I might think to myself, "Why not see what the
other side has to say?" Many, many people are incapable of doing this, because
they're terrified the other side might be right. Then, not only would they
feel like fools ("embarrassed in front of themselves"), they'd have to
re-assess many of their beliefs. Anyway, just imagine I summoned up the
courage to venture into forbidden territory, and I read one really good book,
such as The Bell Curve, by Herrnstein and Murray. I'd think to myself "Gee,
what a totally different world this is! It's not a long, rambling, tendentious
bunch of propaganda like Gould's The Mismeasure of Man--it's well-organized,
clearly stated, interesting, even engrossing. Hmmm . . . kind of exciting!
It's like real meat-and-potatoes here, whereas that other stuff . . . was more
like . . . cotton candy. And look--all these interesting graphs and tables! I
guess that's because this is, well, science." And when I'd finished, I don't
think I'd feel foolish at all - I think I'd be plenty angry that I'd been lied
to about genes and behavior for my whole entire life.
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