AI-powered
podcast player
Listen to all your favourite podcasts with AI-powered features
The Weaponization of Eugenics in Nazi Germany
In Nazi Germany, the anxiety about declining birth rates and concerns about the racial stock being corrupted were common, but it was in Nazi Germany that this attitude was weaponized to an extreme degree. While eugenics was present globally, including in the United States, Britain, and France in the early 20th century, it was in Nazi Germany that eugenics was pushed to its fullest extent. The Nazis made eugenics a top priority and passed laws in July 1933 for the prevention of hereditary disease offspring, which mandated compulsory sterilization for various medical conditions including schizophrenia, cerebral palsy, hereditary epilepsy, hereditary deafness, blindness, manic depressive psychosis, severe alcoholism, and a vague category termed congenital feeble mindedness.