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View Full Version : Eugenics: the skeleton that rattles loudest in the left's closet



ed miliband
17th February 2012, 20:48
controversial but worth a read:


Does the past matter? When confronted by facts that are uncomfortable, but which relate to people long dead, should we put them aside and, to use a phrase very much of our time, move on? And there's a separate, but related, question: how should we treat the otherwise admirable thought or writings of people when we discover that those same people also held views we find repugnant?

Those questions are triggered in part by the early responses to Pantheon, my new novel published this week under the pseudonym Sam Bourne. The book is a thriller, set in the Oxford and Yale of 1940, but it rests on several true stories. Among those is one of the grisliest skeletons in the cupboard of the British intellectual elite, a skeleton that rattles especially loudly inside the closet of the left.

It is eugenics, the belief that society's fate rested on its ability to breed more of the strong and fewer of the weak. So-called positive eugenics meant encouraging those of greater intellectual ability and "moral worth" to have more children, while negative eugenics sought to urge, or even force, those deemed inferior to reproduce less often or not at all. The aim was to increase the overall quality of the national herd, multiplying the thoroughbreds and weeding out the runts.

Such talk repels us now, but in the prewar era it was the common sense of the age. Most alarming, many of its leading advocates were found among the luminaries of the Fabian and socialist left, men and women revered to this day. Thus George Bernard Shaw could insist that "the only fundamental and possible socialism is the socialisation of the selective breeding of man", even suggesting, in a phrase that chills the blood, that defectives be dealt with by means of a "lethal chamber".

Such thinking was not alien to the great Liberal titan and mastermind of the welfare state, William Beveridge, who argued that those with "general defects" should be denied not only the vote, but "civil freedom and fatherhood". Indeed, a desire to limit the numbers of the inferior was written into modern notions of birth control from the start. That great pioneer of contraception, Marie Stopes – honoured with a postage stamp in 2008 – was a hardline eugenicist, determined that the "hordes of defectives" be reduced in number, thereby placing less of a burden on "the fit". Stopes later disinherited her son because he had married a short-sighted woman, thereby risking a less-than-perfect grandchild.

Yet what looks kooky or sinister in 2012 struck the prewar British left as solid and sensible. Harold Laski, stellar LSE professor, co-founder of the Left Book Club and one-time chairman of the Labour party, cautioned that: "The time is surely coming … when society will look upon the production of a weakling as a crime against itself." Meanwhile, JBS Haldane, admired scientist and socialist, warned that: "Civilisation stands in real danger from over-production of 'undermen'." That's Untermenschen in German.

I'm afraid even the Manchester Guardian was not immune. When a parliamentary report in 1934 backed voluntary sterilisation of the unfit, a Guardian editorial offered warm support, endorsing the sterilisation campaign "the eugenists soundly urge". If it's any comfort, the New Statesman was in the same camp.

According to Dennis Sewell, whose book The Political Gene charts the impact of Darwinian ideas on politics, the eugenics movement's definition of "unfit" was not limited to the physically or mentally impaired. It held, he writes, "that most of the behavioural traits that led to poverty were inherited. In short, that the poor were genetically inferior to the educated middle class." It was not poverty that had to be reduced or even eliminated: it was the poor.

Hence the enthusiasm of John Maynard Keynes, director of the Eugenics Society from 1937 to 1944, for contraception, essential because the working class was too "drunken and ignorant" to keep its numbers down.

We could respond to all this the way we react when reading of Churchill's dismissal of Gandhi as a "half-naked fakir" or indeed of his own attraction to eugenics, by saying it was all a long time ago, when different norms applied. That is a common response when today's left-liberals are confronted by the eugenicist record of their forebears, reacting as if it were all an accident of time, a slip-up by creatures of their era who should not be judged by today's standards.

Except this was no accident. The Fabians, Sidney and Beatrice Webb and their ilk were not attracted to eugenics because they briefly forgot their leftwing principles. The harder truth is that they were drawn to eugenics for what were then good, leftwing reasons.

They believed in science and progress, and nothing was more cutting edge and modern than social Darwinism. Man now had the ability to intervene in his own evolution. Instead of natural selection and the law of the jungle, there would be planned selection. And what could be more socialist than planning, the Fabian faith that the gentlemen in Whitehall really did know best? If the state was going to plan the production of motor cars in the national interest, why should it not do the same for the production of babies? The aim was to do what was best for society, and society would clearly be better off if there were more of the strong to carry fewer of the weak.

What was missing was any value placed on individual freedom, even the most basic freedom of a human being to have a child. The middle class and privileged felt quite ready to remove that right from those they deemed unworthy of it.

Eugenics went into steep decline after 1945. Most recoiled from it once they saw where it led – to the gates of Auschwitz. The infatuation with an idea horribly close to nazism was steadily forgotten. But we need a reckoning with this shaming past. Such a reckoning would focus less on today's advances in selective embryology, and the ability to screen out genetic diseases, than on the kind of loose talk about the "underclass" that recently enabled the prime minister to speak of "neighbours from hell" and the poor as if the two groups were synonymous.

Progressives face a particular challenge, to cast off a mentality that can too easily regard people as ends rather than means. For in this respect a movement is just like a person: it never entirely escapes its roots.


http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/feb/17/eugenics-skeleton-rattles-loudest-closet-left

swap 'socialism' for 'social democracy' and there is an argument somewhere in there

when one considers fabian support for class collaborationism, corporatism and eugenics, is it really such a jump to fascism? oswald moseley was a labour party politician and solid fabian only months before he formed the british union of fascists

Martin Blank
17th February 2012, 21:54
The article touches on a very important and uncomfortable period in the development of the Social Democratic movement in the early 20th century, when "socialism" was seen by most of those in the movement as an exclusively economic act. All of the political aspects of "socialism" we think of today were under debate.

In the U.S., this could be seen in the likes of Margaret Sanger, co-founder of Planned Parenthood and firm believer in eugenics (both "positive" and "negative"). This rightwing "socialism" was also present in Jack London, who, as a member of the Socialist Party of California, backed the anti-Chinese laws passed in the state at the turn of the 20th century. At the same time, there were the "segregation socialists" of the South, who believed that "socialism" was "white man's liberation", and thousands across the country who held memberships in both the KKK and the SPA.

If people wonder why so much of the early fascist movement emerged from Social Democratic organizations, this is why. With "socialism" seen almost exclusively as "economic liberation", and its politics left to individual self-described Socialists, the typical "Socialist" Party had everyone from national socialists to Marxian socialists in its membership. It was only after the First World War that these fundamentally different trends began to break apart and form separate organizations.

Ravachol
17th February 2012, 22:27
The article touches on a very important and uncomfortable period in the development of the Social Democratic movement in the early 20th century, when "socialism" was seen by most of those in the movement as an exclusively economic act. All of the political aspects of "socialism" we think of today were under debate.

In the U.S., this could be seen in the likes of Margaret Sanger, co-founder of Planned Parenthood and firm believer in eugenics (both "positive" and "negative"). This rightwing "socialism" was also present in Jack London, who, as a member of the Socialist Party of California, backed the anti-Chinese laws passed in the state at the turn of the 20th century. At the same time, there were the "segregation socialists" of the South, who believed that "socialism" was "white man's liberation", and thousands across the country who held memberships in both the KKK and the SPA.

If people wonder why so much of the early fascist movement emerged from Social Democratic organizations, this is why. With "socialism" seen almost exclusively as "economic liberation", and its politics left to individual self-described Socialists, the typical "Socialist" Party had everyone from national socialists to Marxian socialists in its membership. It was only after the First World War that these fundamentally different trends began to break apart and form separate organizations.

And, not surprisingly, some (rather marginal) fascist tendencies such as the NazBols, certain 'Autonome Nationalisten',etc. are trying to revive these things. All under the banner of 'socialism has been corrupted by "cosmopolitanism" and has nothing to do with any political aspect, it's just <insert some form of state- or self-managed capitalism here>'. Obviously it's all bollocks since the unity of the proletariat and the abolition of divisions is not only a matter of strategic importance (the class-for-itself part) but also a matter of teleologic importance, considering the self-abolition of the proletariat, the abolition of all divisions (the social division of labour, patriarchal/gender and racial/national divisions,etc.) serve towards the refounding of the 'human community' (gemeinwesen), the only possible basis for actual communism.

So I don't think that you can seperate 'socialism' (though I really dislike the term) in an economic and political sphere.

Raúl Duke
21st February 2012, 20:58
So I don't think that you can seperate 'socialism' (though I really dislike the term) in an economic and political sphere.

We don't think so but they think so...thus the problem and the reason why they exist.

It kinda reminds me of some American anarchists who are soft or outright market anarchist/anarcho-capitalists. They also want to separate the political and the economical of anarchism so to fit their needs; except in the reverse (they keep the political, albiet reduced-simplistic form, about "abolishing the state" and what not yet reject the economical implication of an anti-hierarchical political idea entails: anti-classism, anti-capitalism).

Franz Fanonipants
21st February 2012, 21:44
this is really what "class interests" writ large without any understanding of imperialism/racism turns into

tbh none of this is much of an issue for the modern red unless you are some kind of teleological "progress" worshiping weirdo. what i do find discomforting is certain board member's addiction to terms and dichotomies like "barbarism," "tribalism," etc. that all point to a whig world history of communism. a lot of that shit comes from the primacy of European thinkers in certain tendencies.

all of which points to, as cthulu pointed out, the need for a historical understanding of worker's struggles etc.