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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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stop rulers from favoring, from even imposing upon their people, the method of<br />

contraception which they judged to be most efficacious?" For poorer countries with a<br />

high population rate, the encyclical identified the only rational and humane policy: "No<br />

solution to these difficulties is acceptable which does violence to man's essential<br />

dignity....<strong>The</strong> only possible solution ... is one which envisages the social and economic<br />

progress both of individuals and of the whole of human society...."<br />

This was a direct challenge to the cultural paradigm transformation which <strong>Bush</strong> and other<br />

exponents of the oligarchical world outlook were promoting. Not for the first time nor for<br />

the last time, <strong>Bush</strong> issued a direct attack on the Holy See. Just days after Humanae Vitae<br />

was issued, <strong>Bush</strong> declared: "I have decided to give my vigorous support for population<br />

control in both the United States and the world." He also lashed out at the Pope. "For<br />

those of us who who feel so strongly on this issue, the recent enyclical was most<br />

discouraging."<br />

During his four years in Congress, <strong>Bush</strong> not only introduced key pieces of legislation to<br />

enforce population control both at home and abroad. He also continuously introduced<br />

into the congressional debate reams of propaganda about the threat of population growth<br />

and the inferiority of blacks, and he set up a special Republican task force which<br />

functioned as a forum for the most rabid Malthusian ideologues.<br />

"<strong>Bush</strong> was really out front on the population issue," a population- control activist recently<br />

said of this period of 1967-71. "He was saying things that even we were reluctant to talk<br />

about publicly."<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s open public advocacy of government measures tending towards zero population<br />

growth was a radical departure from the policies built into the federal bureaucracy up<br />

until that time. <strong>The</strong> climate of opinion just a few years earlier, in December 1959, is<br />

illustrated by the comments of President Eisenhower, who had said, "birth control is not<br />

our business. I cannot imagine anything more emphatically a subject that is not a proper<br />

political or governmental activity ... or responsibility."<br />

As a congressman, <strong>Bush</strong> played an absolutely pivotal role in this shift. Shortly after<br />

arriving in Washington, he teamed up with fellow Republican Herman Schneebeli to<br />

offer a series of amendments to the Social Security Act to place priority emphasis on<br />

what was euphemistically called "family planning services." <strong>The</strong> avowed goal was to<br />

reduce the number of children born to women on welfare.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s and Schneebeli's amendments reflected the Malthusian- genocidalist views of Dr.<br />

Alan Guttmacher, then president of Planned Parenthood, and a protege of its founder,<br />

Margaret Sanger. In the years before the grisly outcome of the Nazi cult of race science<br />

and eugenics had inhibited public calls for defense of the "gene pool," Sanger had<br />

demanded the weeding out of the "unfit" and the "inferior races," and had campaigned<br />

vigorously for sterilization, infanticide and abortion, in the name of "race betterment."

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