How did eugenics grow so quickly in social acceptance within America?
How did eugenics grow so quickly in social acceptance within America?

How did eugenics grow so quickly in social acceptance within America?

The science of eugenics, or classifying and grouping people into the categories of genetically “inferior” and “superior” thrived during the first two decades of the 20th century in America. Eugenics argued that the undesirable “inferiors” of America (immigrants, people of color, poor people, unmarried mothers, the disabled, the mentally ill, etc.) must be identified and controlled so their inferior hereditary traits could not spread within America. Proponents of eugenics promoted their ideas to the American people as being necessary for the future wellbeing of the country. In America, the outward acceptance of eugenics resulted in marriage laws enacted, immigration laws put in place, and state-sanctioned involuntary sterilization laws legalized. Ultimately, the American eugenics movement of the 1920s culminated with the decision of Buck v. Bell, which affirmed the eugenic fear of human differences as something that needed to be controlled by American Law.

Did the Civilian Conservation Corps improve the lives of the nation’s youth?
Did the Civilian Conservation Corps improve the lives of the nation’s youth?

Did the Civilian Conservation Corps improve the lives of the nation’s youth?

Author: Blake PearsallInterviewer: Gretchen Shahriari The Civilian Conservation Corps was President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's experimental answer to the nation's impoverished and under-educated youth.  The nation's young boys between the ages of 18...

How Does a Constitutional Republic Act as a Safeguard Against the Threat of Factions?
How Does a Constitutional Republic Act as a Safeguard Against the Threat of Factions?

How Does a Constitutional Republic Act as a Safeguard Against the Threat of Factions?

Author: Myles Peckham Interviewer: Carly Chisholm It is not their immediate impact on voters at the time of the ratification of the Constitution that The Federalist Papers are famous for. Instead, it is the insight they provide into the minds of the men...

Perversion and Pride: How Did Representation of Queer People in Hollywood Film Change During the 1970s?
Perversion and Pride: How Did Representation of Queer People in Hollywood Film Change During the 1970s?

Perversion and Pride: How Did Representation of Queer People in Hollywood Film Change During the 1970s?

  Author: Maggie Pacia Interviewer: Kaleigh Callis Killer queers, depraved bisexuals, predatory and vampiric lesbians, frustrated and suicidal gays. These were the queer characters of Hollywood cinema before gay liberation, if they even made it to...

The Addicted Soldier
The Addicted Soldier

The Addicted Soldier

Author: Jackson Irby
Interviewer: Henry Ford VI
Lurking in the forests and villages of Vietnam, a second force affected US soldiers during the Vietnam war. They confronted an enemy even more dangerous than the Viet Cong soldier: opium. The use of opium and marijuana was rampant throughout the Golden Triangle of Southeast Asia. It did not take much time for these drugs to spread into Vietnam and into the hands of the US Army. During the Vietnam War, U.S. Soldiers experimented with drugs as get away from the war experience. The drug culture in America during the 1970s bled into the warfront in Vietnam, infecting soldiers and affecting their lives back home. The U.S. was unable to control the drug scene during the 1970s and the return of the addicted soldier only elevated that culture. Despite the fact that many soldiers used heroin while in Vietnam very few came back to the U.S. with addictions