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Nevilledog

(55,171 posts)
Sun Jul 24, 2022, 01:33 PM Jul 2022

She survived a forced sterilization. She fears more could occur post-Roe. [View all]



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Laurence Tribe
@tribelaw
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“For many activists and legal experts, Dobbs isn’t a far cry from Buck v Bell, which used similar legal reasoning to allow the government to prevent certain people from becoming pregnant in the first place.”

washingtonpost.com
She survived a forced sterilization. She fears more could occur post-Roe.
Tens of thousands of women, a disproportionate share of them Black, were forcibly sterilized in the 20th century, a practice upheld by the Supreme Court.
10:18 AM · Jul 24, 2022


https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2022/07/24/forced-sterilization-dobbs-roe/

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https://archive.ph/Nh0Vs

Elaine Riddick was 13 years old when she says she was raped by a neighbor in Winfall, N.C. Nine months later, in 1968, she was involuntarily sterilized in the hospital while delivering her first and only child.

“I had no idea,” she told The Washington Post, adding that she didn’t find out about the operation until five years later, at age 19, after she had married and hoped to have more children.

The doctors “butchered” her — cutting, tying and cauterizing her fallopian tubes — she said she was told when she learned of her sterilization during a medical examination. After the sterilization, Riddick had lost blood and fallen ill frequently. “I didn’t have a childhood because of the hemorrhaging and passing out,” she said. “This is how badly they damaged my insides.”

Riddick, who is now 68 and lives in Marietta, Ga., is one of tens of thousands of survivors of forced sterilization in the 20th century — a disproportionate share of them Black, like Riddick. She was subjected to a eugenics program by the state of North Carolina, which sterilized 7,600 people between 1929 and 1974 because they were deemed “unfit” to be parents. In 2017, after fighting for compensation for almost 50 years, she received $47,000 from the state.

*snip*

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