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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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In rapid succession, <strong>Bush</strong> introduced legislation to create a National Center for<br />

Population and Family Planning and Welfare, and to redesignate the Department of the<br />

Interior as the Department of Resources, Environment and Population.<br />

On the foreign policy front, he helped shift U.S. foreign assistance away from funding<br />

development projects to grapple with the problem of hunger in the world, to underwriting<br />

population control. "I propose that we totally revamp our foreign aid program to give<br />

primary emphasis to population control," he stated in the summer of 1968, adding: "In<br />

my opinion, we have made a mistake in our foreign aid by concentrating on building<br />

huge steel mills and concrete plants in underdeveloped nations...."<br />

One of <strong>Bush</strong>'s more important initiatives on the domestic side was his sponsorhip of the<br />

Family Planning Services and Population Research Act of 1970, brainchild of Sen.<br />

Joseph Tydings of Maryland. Signed into law by President Nixon on December 24, 1970,<br />

the Tydings-<strong>Bush</strong> bill drastically increased the federal financial commitment to<br />

population control, authorizing an initial $382 million for family planning sevices,<br />

population research, population education and information through 1973. Much of this<br />

money was funnelled through private institutions, particularly local clinics run by <strong>Bush</strong>'s<br />

beloved Planned Parenthood. <strong>The</strong> Tydings-<strong>Bush</strong> measure mandated the notorious Title X,<br />

which explicitly provided "family planning assistance" to the poor. <strong>Bush</strong> and his zerogrowth<br />

cohorts talked constantly about the importance of disseminating birth control to<br />

the poor. <strong>The</strong>y claimed that there were over 5 million poor women who wanted to limit<br />

their families, but could not afford to do so.<br />

On October 23, 1969, <strong>Bush</strong> praised the Office of Economic Opportunity for carrying out<br />

some of the "most successful" family planning projects, and said he was "pleased" that<br />

the Nixon administration "is giving them additional financial muscle by increasing their<br />

funds 50 percent--from $15 million to $22 million."<br />

This increased effort he attributed to the Nixon administration's "goal to reach in the next<br />

five years the 5 million women in need of these services"--all of them poor, many of<br />

them from racial or ethnic minorities. He added: "One needs only to look quickly at the<br />

report prepared by the Planned Parenthood-World Population Research Department to<br />

see how ineffective federal, state, and local governments have been in providing such<br />

necessary services. <strong>The</strong>re is certainly nothing new about the fact that unwanted<br />

pregnancies of our poor and near-poor women keep the incidence of infant mortality and<br />

mental retardation in America at one of the highest levels of all the developed countries."<br />

<strong>The</strong> rates of infant mortality and mental retardation <strong>Bush</strong> was so concerned about, could<br />

have been significantly reduced, had the government provided sufficient financing to prenatal<br />

care, nutrition, and other factors contributing to the health of infants and children.<br />

On the same day he signed the Tydings-<strong>Bush</strong> bill, Nixon vetoed--with <strong>Bush</strong>'s support- -<br />

legislation that would have set up a three-year, $225 million program to train family<br />

doctors.

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