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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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waging such unusual warfare against Third World populations. Gray knows how these<br />

things are done.<br />

When Boyden Gray was four and five years old, his father organized the pilot project for<br />

the present worldwide sterilization program, from the Gray family household in North<br />

Carolina.<br />

It started in 1946. <strong>The</strong> eugenics movement was looking for a way to begin again in<br />

America.<br />

Nazi death camps such as Auschwitz had just then seared the conscience of the world.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Sterilization League of America, which had changed its name during the war to ``<br />

Birthright, Inc., '' wanted to start up again. First they had to overcome public nervousness<br />

about crackpots proposing to eliminate `` inferior '' and `` defective '' people. <strong>The</strong> League<br />

tried to surface in Iowa, but had to back off because of negative publicity: A little boy<br />

had recently been sterilized there and had died from the operation.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y decided on North Carolina, where the Gray family could play the perfect host.<br />

Through British imperial contacts, Boyden Gray's grandfather, Bowman Gray, had<br />

become principal owner of the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. Boyden's father, Gordon Gray,<br />

had recently founded the Bowman Gray (memorial) Medical School in Winston-Salem,<br />

using his inherited cigarette stock shares. <strong>The</strong> medical school was already a eugenics<br />

center.<br />

As the experiment began, Gordon Gray's great aunt, Alice Shelton Gray, who had raised<br />

him from childhood, was living in his household. Aunt Alice had founded the `` Human<br />

Betterment League, '' the North Carolina branch of the national eugenical sterilization<br />

movement.<br />

Aunt Alice was the official supervisor of the 1946-47 experiment. Working under Miss<br />

Gray was Dr. Claude Nash Herndon, whom Gordon Gray had made assistant professor of<br />

`` medical genetics '' at Bowman Gray Medical School.<br />

Dr. Clarence Gamble, heir to the Proctor and Gamble soap fortune, was the sterilizers'<br />

national field operations chief.<br />

<strong>The</strong> experiment worked as follows. All children enrolled in the school district of<br />

Winston-Salem, N.C., were given a special `` intelligence test. '' Those children who<br />

scored below a certain arbitrary low mark were then cut open and surgically sterilized.<br />

We quote now from the official story of the project@s3@s7:<br />

In Winston-Salem and in [nearby] Orange County, North Carolina, the [Sterilization League's]<br />

field committee had participated in testing projects to identify school age children who should be<br />

considered for sterilization. <strong>The</strong> project in Orange County was conducted by the University of<br />

North Carolina and was financed by a `Mr. Hanes,' a friend of Clarence Gamble and supporter of<br />

the field work project in North Carolina. <strong>The</strong> Winston-Salem project was also financed by Hanes.

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