Interesting report from The Sentencing Project, demonstrating the connection between draconian habitual offender sentencing schemes and the troubling eugenics movement of the late 19th and early 20th century.
“Habitual offender” laws first spread across the country in
the early 1900s as part of the eugenics movement, which grew in the 1880s and
reached its peak in the 1920s. The aim of the eugenics movement was to create a
superior race in order to address social problems such as crime and disease,
which the movement assumed had a biological basis. Applying pseudoscience, laws
and policies were created to prevent those who were deemed inferior, such as
the mentally ill, those convicted of criminal offenses, or the physically
frail, from reproducing. Eugenics and racism are deeply entwined, and the
“projects” of eugenics supported “racial nationalism and racial purity.” One
example of the relationship between race and eugenics is found in Nazi Germany,
where "Nazi planners appropriated and incorporated eugenics as they
implemented racial policy and genocide.”
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