Sterilization is still the number-one method of birth control
for women over twenty-five in this country. Its racist nature has long
been exposed; women on Medicaid are encouraged to get free sterilization
procedures. In sharp contrast to dwindling abortion rights, 90 percent
of all sterilizations in the U.S. are federally funded.
Proletarian Revolution, Fall 1989, page 27.
Anti-Life Philosophy.
Sterilization is the most efficient manner of birth control
available. It should be made available to everyone, especially poor
women.
The haunting visages of eugenic and racist abuses constantly shoved
in our faces by anti-choice people who want to deny women control over
their own fertility are either nonexistent, or based on events that
happened a century ago in other countries.
Introduction.
In less than twenty years, sterility has become more acceptable
than fertility, a vacant womb more valued than a pregnant one.
Debra Evans.[1]
Suppression of Natural Functions.
Through all of recorded history,
the paramount goal of the medical profession has been to repair the body
and restore it to its normal level of healthy function with a single
exception.
The only medical procedures that are performed to destroy or inhibit
healthy organs are done to the male and female reproductive system.
The example that springs most quickly to mind is abortion, the most
common medical procedure performed in the United States today.
The second most common medical procedure is sterilization.
This is the strange state of reproductive medicine in the West today.
We never hear of the natural function of any other organ or system being
deliberately sabotaged. There is probably no medical procedure available
for destroying someone's sight, hearing, or ability to walk, yet many
people do not give any thought to the fact that more than a million men
and women willingly eagerly allow themselves be neutered in this
country every year.[2]
Figure 102-1 shows the number of women who are sterile due to
different factors by age, race, and marital status.
FIGURE 102-1
THE INCIDENCE OF STERILITY AMONG UNITED STATES WOMEN OF CHILDBEARING AGE
[A medium text size on your computer's 'view'
setting is recommended, otherwise, the tables may be discombobulated.]
Non-
Total Surgically
Surgically Total
Description of Subgroup Population
Sterile Sterile *
Sterile
Classification By Age
All women aged 15 to 24
20,150,000 2.6%
0.6% 3.2%
All women aged 25 to 34
19,644,000 26.4%
1.5% 27.9%
All women aged 35 to 44
14,305,000 57.3%
2.8% 60.1%
Classification By Race
All White women 15-44
45,367,000 26.1%
1.6% 27.7%
All Black women 15-44
6,985,000 22.2%
1.5% 23.7%
Other minority women 15-44 1,747,000
29.3% 1.4%
30.7%
Classification By Marital Status
Never-married women 15-44 19,164,000
2.6% 0.7%
3.3%
Married women aged 15-44 28,231,000
38.9% 2.0%
40.9%
Widowed/divorced women
15 to 44
6,704,000 36.1%
1.9% 38.0%
ALL WOMEN AGED 15 TO 44
54,099,000 25.7%
1.5% 27.2%
Note. (*) "Nonsurgically sterile" refers to those women who
have been rendered sterile by accidents, illnesses, or congenital
conditions (i.e., due to environmental influences over which the women
have little or no control).
Reference. United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of the
Census. Reference Data Book and Guide to Sources, Statistical
Abstract of the United States. Washington, DC: United States
Government Printing Office. 1990 (110th Edition). Table 99,
"Contraceptive Use By Women, 15-44 Years Old, By Age, Race, Marital
Status, and Method of Contraception: 1982."
The average person could easily recognize the illogic and even the
sin in a person having his legs severed so that he would never be able
to walk or move again without assistance. But most people see another
kind of amputation the intentional destruction of their own fertility as
a positive good.
The Hysterectomy.
Hysterectomies, the removal of one or more of the
female reproductive organs, all render women sterile. Sometimes, they
must be performed in order to excise various diseases, including cancer.
However, according to pro-abortion Vicky Hufnagel, M.D., medical
director of the Institute for Reproductive Health, about 65 percent of
the 670,000 hysterectomies performed every year in this country are done
for birth control reasons.
Hysterectomies are often portrayed as completely routine and without
consequences, especially by population control pushers. However,
Hufnagel says that the female reproductive organs are not just for
reproduction; they are an essential part of any woman's body and
interact with brain chemistry and other hormones.
It is now unacceptable to refer to the sterilization of poor black
women as "Mississippi appendectomies." However, hysterectomies
are now referred to as "Catholic birth control" by bigots, and
are frequently offered to women with several children as they lie on the
delivery table, showing a total lack of regard for the mother's
feelings.
According to one-track population control fanatics, these procedures
cost about $4,500 in 1989 prices, and are a bargain because they are
cheaper than raising kids.
The Types and Dangers of Sterilization.
The Various Procedures.
The most common type of female sterilization
procedure is referred to as a laparoscopy. In this operation, the
woman's Fallopian tubes are sealed with electrocoagulation, in which an
electric current burns the tubes and causes them to clot to prevent
bleeding. In alternative procedures involving nonelectric techniques, a
clip or band compresses and divides the tubes. These operations are
illuminated with a laparoscope, hence the name of the procedure.[3]
In a minilaparotomy (or "minilap"), the Fallopian tubes are
pulled through a smaller incision of one to two inches length and are
sealed. Complications are slightly less than for laparoscopy, but the
associated hospital stay may be longer.[3]
Half of all women who are sterilized have the operation postpartum
that is, immediately after having their last baby. After a Cesarian
birth, the sterilization can be carried out by using the same incision
that the baby was delivered through.
Less than 50% of female sterilizations can be reversed, and, if the
reversal is successful, the risks of subsequent complications such as
tubal pregnancies are greatly increased because the reconnection of the
tubes is a delicate and often imperfect operation.
The Side Effects.
Dr. Gregory L. Smith of the Walter Reed Army
Institute of Research has shown that the female sterilization mortality
rate is 2.29 per 100,000 for tubal ligation laparotomies and 4.72 per
100,000 for other types of sterilization.[4]
Approximately 1.5 million female sterilizations take place in the
United States annually. If an average rate of 3.5 deaths per 100,000
operations is assumed, this means that about 50 to 55 women die each
year from surgical sterilization about three times the number that die
from legal abortion.
Other major complications due to female sterilization are quite
common. In two studies involving a total of 541 sterilized women,
researchers found that 94 (17%) required complete hysterectomies and 101
(19%) required dilation and curettage procedures for excessive bleeding
as a direct result of the sterilizations.[5]
Women are not the only people who suffer adverse side effects to
sterilization procedures. A comprehensive study of 11,205 neutered men
in 156 medical centers in the United States found a significant
relationship between vasectomy and the development of urolithiasis
(urinary tract stones), immunological changes such as the production of
anti-sperm antibodies, and tumors of the testes.[6]
The Ideal Eugenics Tool.
Because its effects are permanent, because
it cannot be tampered with, and because its effectiveness rate is so
high, surgical sterilization is the ideal weapon for eugenicists,
racists, and population controllers.
In the mid-1920s, American eugenicists found the simplest and most
effective way of preventing the "less desirable classes" from
reproducing widespread involuntary surgical sterilization.
Famous New York urologist William Robinson was certainly not unique
in his view that "It is the acme of stupidity to talk in such cases
of individual liberty, of the rights of the individual. Such [unfit]
individuals have no rights. They have no right in the first instance to
be born, but, having been born, they have no right to propagate their
kind."[7]
The first American law mandating the sterilization of 'undesirables'
was passed immediately after World War I. The operations were performed
in "mental health facilities" on "unwed mothers,
prostitutes, petty criminals and children with disciplinary
problems."[8]
Indiana was the first State to pass a compulsory sterilization law.
It did so in 1907, and was followed quickly by Connecticut and
California in 1909; Iowa in 1911; North Dakota, Kansas, Wisconsin, and
Michigan in 1913; Nebraska in 1915; New Hampshire, Oregon, and South
Dakota in 1917; North and South Carolina and Alabama in 1919; Delaware
and Montana in 1923; and another 11 states by 1956, for a total of
28.[9]
These laws were modeled on the Model Eugenical Sterilization Law,
promulgated by Harry H. Laughlin, director of the Eugenics Record
Office. This legislation called for the sterilization of criminals,
mental patients, the retarded, the blind, deaf, diseased, and
alcoholics, and for dependents upon society the homeless, orphans, and
tramps.[10]
Before Nazi Germany's Sterilization Act was passed, California was
the world's primary eugenics experimentation laboratory, with more than
15,000 involuntary sterilizations performed on psychiatric inmates.[11]
In the United States, from 1907 to 1941, more than 36,000 persons in
all were forcibly sterilized, mostly in California, Virginia, and
Indiana, primarily for "feeblemindedness" or for having been
born into large welfare families.[7]
In 1927, Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes delivered the
Court's Buck v. Bell decision, which upheld the widespread
enforced eugenic sterilization of poor Black women in several states. In
his opinion, Holmes wrote that "We have seen more than once that
the public welfare may call upon the best citizens for their lives. It
would be strange if it could not call upon those who already sap the
strength of the State for these lesser sacrifices ... Three generations
of imbeciles are enough."[12]
Justice Holmes had once remarked that "I see no reason for
attributing to man a significance different in kind from that which
belongs to a baboon or a grain of sand."[13]
In 1975, a United States Federal court found that, under these laws,
100,000 to 150,000 women were sterilized annually without their
knowledge or consent under these federal programs. From 1924
right up until the early 1970s, more than 7,500 poor men and women were
forcibly sterilized in the State of Virginia alone every year.[8]
Vestiges of this racist American eugenics program still linger to
this day. The Federal government continues to fund 90 percent of the
cost of sterilization of poor women under Medicaid and other family
planning programs, but will not pay for infertility treatments.[13]
The Catholic Church Position on Sterilization.
Barnyard Birth Control.
Sexual sterilization is sometimes sneeringly
referred to as "Catholic birth control." This term, and the
misguided assertions of a number well-known dissident Catholic priests,
has led to confusion about what the Catholic Church teaches about
sterilization.
Quotes on Sterilization. In his address to the Congress of Urology on
October 8, 1953, Pope Pius XII outlined the specific conditions under
which sterilization (or any amputation, for that matter) may be
performed;
Three things condition the moral permission of a surgical
operation requiring an anatomical or functional mutilation;
(1) that the preservation or functioning of a particular organ
provokes a serious damage or constitutes a threat to the complete
organism [this is the 'principle of totality'];
(2) that this damage cannot be avoided, or at least notably
diminished, except by the amputation in question and that its efficacy
is well assured; and
(3) that it can be reasonably foreseen that the negative effect,
namely, the mutilation and its consequences, will be compensated by the
positive effect: exclusion of a damage to the whole organism, mitigation
of the pain, etc.
[As far as sterilization is concerned], the conditions which would
justify disposing of a part in favor of the whole in virtue of the
principle of totality are lacking. It is not therefore morally
permissible to operate on healthy oviducts if the life or (physical)
health of the mother is not threatened by their continued
existence.
In response to its query on sterilization, the Vatican Congregation
for the Doctrine of the Faith's statement of March 13, 1975 replied to
the United States National Conference of Catholic Bishops as follows;
Any sterilization which of itself, that is, of its own nature and
condition, has the sole immediate effect of rendering the generative
faculty incapable of procreation, is to be considered direct
sterilization, as the term is understood in the declarations of the
pontifical magisterium, especially of Pius XII. Therefore,
notwithstanding any subjectively right intention of those whose actions
are prompted by the care of prevention of physical or mental illness
which is foreseen or feared as a result of pregnancy, such sterilization
remains absolutely forbidden to the doctrine of the church. And indeed
the sterilization of the faculty itself is forbidden for an even graver
reason than the sterilization of individual acts, since it induces a
state of sterility in the person which is almost always
irreversible.
Pope Paul VI's July 25, 1968 Encyclical on the
Propagation of Human Life (Humanae Vitae) equated sterilization
with abortion;
Above all, direct abortion, even for therapeutic
reasons, is to be absolutely excluded as lawful mans of controlling the
birth of children. Equally to be condemned as the Magisterium of the
Church has affirmed on various occasions, is direct sterilization,
whether of the man or the woman, whether permanent or temporary.
The Catholic Church has consistently, and at regular intervals,
condemned sterilization for any reason whatever except to save the life
of the man or woman. In addition to the documents stated above, some of
the Church's other pronouncements against sexual sterilization are
listed below.
"Encyclical on Christian Marriage" (Casti Conubii),
Pope Pius XI, December 31, 1930, paragraphs 68 to 71.
Decree of the Sacred Congregation of the Holy Office
(Topic: Sterilization for eugenics), March 18, 1931.
Pronouncement to the Cardinals in Response to Recent Nazi
Legislation in Germany, Pope Pius XI, December 23, 1933.
Decree of the Congregation for the Holy Office, February
24, 1940.
Address to the Congress of the Italian Association of Midwives,
paragraphs 24 to 26, October 29, 1951.
Address to the Symposium on Medical Genetics, Pope Pius
XII, September 7, 1953
Address to the Seventh Congress on Hematology, Pope Pius
XII, September 12, 1958.
Pastoral Letter of the Indian Bishops, January 15, 1977.
Among documents of the Bishops of the United States that have
condemned all sterilization procedures for both men and women are;
United States Catholic Conference Administrative Board, Statement
on Sterilization Procedures in Catholic Hospitals, November 22,
1977.
United States Catholic Conference of Bishops: Statement on
Tubal Ligation, July 9, 1980.
The "Double Effect" and Sterilization.
As described in
Chapter 43 of Volume II, the Catholic Church allows abortion for no
reason whatever, even to save the life of the mother. However, a fine
distinction must be made in this case: If an operation other than
abortion is performed to save the life of a woman (say the surgical
excision of an advanced cancer of the uterus), and the preborn baby dies
as a result of this operation, then the procedure is licit. This is
because the intent of the operation was to save the mother's life, not
to kill the preborn child.
This principle of the "double effect" also applies to
sexual sterilization. If a woman must have a hysterectomy to remove a
dangerously cancerous uterus, this will result in her sterilization, but
is not a sinful act. However, if the purpose of the operation is not to
heal or safeguard health, but to sterilize, then that act is
intrinsically evil and is always a mortal sin.[14]
References: Surgical Sterilization.
[1] Debra Evans. Without Moral Limits: Women, Reproduction, and
the New Medical Technology. Westchester, Illinois: Crossway Books,
1989. Page xviii.
[2] Contraceptive Technology Update, April 1988, page 39.
[3] American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Committee on
Patient Education. "Patient Education Pamphlets." P-011,
"Voluntary Sterilization for Men and Women" (June 1983),
P-035, "Sterilization by Laparoscopy (June 1983), and P-052,
"Postpartum Sterilization" (June 1984).
[4] As described in "From the Mail." The Wanderer,
December 22, 1988, page 11.
[5] E.M. Boyd. "Post Tubal Syndrome." Royal College of
General Practitioners, June 1987. M.I. Muldoon. "Gynaecological
Illnesses After Sterilization." British Medical Journal,
January 1970, pages 84 to 95. F. DeStefana et al, "Long Term
Risk of Menstrual Disturbance After Tubal Sterilization." American
Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 152(1985)835-841. M. Vessey et
al, "Tubal Sterilization: Findings of a Large Prospective
Study." British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology,
90(1983)203-209.
[6] N.R. Rose and P.L. Lucas. "Immunological Consequences of
Vasectomy II: Two-Year Summary in a Prospective Study." In I.H.
Lepow and R. Crozier (editors), Vasectomy: Immunological and
Pathophysiologic Effects in Animals and Man. New York: Academic
Press, 1979. Pages 533 to 539.
[7] Gregory E. Pence, M.D. Classic Cases in Medical Ethics:
Accounts of the Cases That Have Shaped Medical Ethics, with
Philosophical, Legal, and Historical Backgrounds. New York:
McGraw-Hill Publishers, 1990. Chapter 14, "Preventing Undesirable
Teenage Pregnancies," pages 286 to 302.
[8] Stephen J. Gould. The Mismeasure of Man. New York: W.W.
Norton, 1981. Page 335. Also see the Washington Post of February
23, 1980, "Over 7,500 Sterilized in Virginia." The example
shown is from Oregon statutes. The Oregonian, January 29, 1990,
page A12. Also see Gerald N. Grob, Mental Illness and American
Society, 1875-1940.
[9] Robert Lipton. The Nazi Doctors. New York: Basic Books,
pages 23, 24, and 129. Also see Bernard Schreiber. The Man Behind
Hitler. Pages 36 and 84. Described in Spannaus, op.cit.
[10] Allen Chase. The Legacy of Malthus: The Social Costs of the
New Scientific Racism. Chicago: University of Illinois Press, pages
69, 103, 316, 349, and 635.
[11] Peter Roger Breggin, M.D. "The Psychiatric Holocaust."
Penthouse Magazine, January 1979, page 11. Described in Spannaus,
op.cit.
[12] United States Supreme Court decision Buck v. Bell, 274 US
200 (1927), at 207.
[13] Relf v. Weinberger, 372 F.Supp.1196(D.D.C1974), remanded
for modification, sub nom Relf v. Matthews, 403 F.Supp.1235
(D.D.C.1975). Also see the "Women's Guide to Reproductive
Rights." American Civil Liberties Union's Reproductive Freedom
Project, 1981. Page 23.
[14] Pope Paul VI, Humanae Vitae, #14, July 25, 1968, and Pope
Pius XII, "Allocution to Midwives," #27, October 29, 1951.
Further Reading: Surgical Sterilization.
Nona Aguilar. No-Pill, No-Risk Birth Control.
New York: Rawson,
Wade Publishers, 1980. 235 pages; paperback, hardback. Reviewed by
Edward F. Keefe in the Spring 1980 issue of the International Review
of Natural Family Planning, pages 81 to 84, and by Rose Fuller on
pages 177 to 179 of the Summer 1986 issue of the same publication. This
book extols the virtues of natural family planning while explaining the
"shocks" to the system of sterilization and the various
methods of artificial contraception. A good 'theory' book.
Benedict M. Ashley, O.P. Theologies of the Body: Humanist and
Christian.
The Pope John XXIII Medical-Moral Research and Education
Center, 186 Forbes Road, Braintree, Massachusetts 02184. 1985, 727
pages. A very in-depth examination of the history and implications of
the attitudes towards the human body by Christians and humanists.
Gary Atkinson, Ph.D., and Father Albert Moraczewski, Ph.D. A Moral
Evaluation of Contraception and Sterilization: A Dialogical Study.
St. Louis, Missouri: Pope John XXIII Medical-Moral Research and
Education Center, 1979. 115 pages. Reviewed by Donald DeMarco, Ph.D. in
the Summer 1980 issue of the International Review of Natural Family
Planning, pages 166 and 167. This small volume presents the central
arguments of the controversies over contraception and sterilization.
Eugene F. Diamond, M.D. This Curette for Hire.
Published by
the ACTA Foundation, 4848 North Clark Street, Chicago, Illinois 60640.
1977, 141 pages. Order from: Life Issues Bookshelf, Sun Life, Thaxton,
Virginia 24174, telephone: (703) 586-4898. The author discusses the
deterioration of medical ethics and the critical role of the doctor in
all anti-life activities: Abortion, fetal experimentation,
sterilization, euthanasia, infanticide, sex therapy, abortifacients, and
more.
Father Ronald Lawler, Joseph Boyle, Jr., and William E. May. Catholic
Sexual Ethics: A Summary, Explanation, and Defense.
1985, 274 pages.
Paperback. Order from: Life Issues Bookshelf, Sun Life, Thaxton,
Virginia 24174, telephone: (703) 586-4898. Reviewed by Father Robert
Barry, Ph.D. on pages 346 to 348 of the Winter 1985 issue of the International
Review of Natural Family Planning. A very clearly written summary of
Catholic Church teaching on sexual morality. Topics include the Bible
and sex; formation of conscience; chastity, virginity, and Christian
marriage; and Church teaching on sex.
Carol Levine (Editor). Taking Sides: Clashing Views on
Controversial Bio-Ethical Issues.
Dushkin Publishing Group, Inc.,
Guilford, Connecticut. 1984, 297 pages. Leading thinkers on both sides
of bioethical issues express their opinions in scholarly essays on
subjects including abortion, in-vitro fertilization, surrogate
motherhood, involuntary sterilization of the retarded, informed consent,
active euthanasia, withholding treatment from handicapped newborns,
suicide, the insanity defense, animal experimentation, prisoners
volunteering for research, justifiable deception in research, organ
harvesting from the dead, and genetic engineering. A good primer on the
bioethical issues.
Pope Paul VI. Humanae Vitae ("Human Life: On the
Regulation of Birth").
Pope Paul's historic Encyclical Letter dated
July 25, 1968. This letter may be obtained in booklet form from the
United States Catholic Conference Publishing Service, 3211 Fourth
Street, N.E., Washington, D.C. 20017-1194, telephone: 1-800-541-3090, or
from any Archdiocesan office. Also available from Life Issues Bookshelf,
Sun Life, Thaxton, Virginia 24174, telephone: (703) 586-4898. This and
other encyclicals that are landmarks in Catholic social teaching are
available from the Daughters of St. Paul, 50 St. Paul Avenue, Boston,
Massachusetts 02130, telephone: (617) 522-8911.
H.J. Roberts, M.D. Is Vasectomy Safe?
West Palm Beach,
Florida: Sunshine Academic Press. 1979. Reviewed by Charles Norris,
M.D., in the Winter 1979 issue of the International Review of Natural
Family Planning, pages 356 and 357. Even though mass vasectomy is a
modern process, like abortion, it has hidden dangers.
Roman Catholic Church. "Sterilization: Recent Declarations of
Popes and Bishops."
19 pages, October 1983, 55 cents. Available
from the Life Ethics Centre, St. Joseph's College, University of
Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2J5. Telephone: (403) 467-4489.
© American Life League BBS 1-703-659-7111
This is a chapter of the Pro-Life Activists Encyclopedia published
by American Life League.
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