|
In the early 1970s some people accused Pauling of being a racist after hearing him lecture on abnormal hemoglobin and disease.
For example, at Michigan State University in July 1972 a female audience member charged Pauling of promoting genocide and
superior racism when he said that carriers of genetic diseases should not procreate. Pauling replied to her comment: “It’s
alright for her [a mother] to be allowed to determine the extent to which she will suffer, but she should not be allowed to
produce a child who will suffer. This is immoral. It is wrong to produce a little black child who will lead a life of suffering.
I would say this is not racism. I advocate the very same thing to Jewish people who have the gene for Tay-Sachs disease, and
to people of all kinds who carry these abnormal genes.”
The audience’s reactions to Pauling’s statements demonstrate the change in views developing at this time as a result of the
Civil Rights Movement. In the early 1970s eugenic statements about sickle cell diseases, like those made by Pauling, came
under attack by civil rights activists, who were wary of compulsory screening for the disease. By early 1972 not only was
sickle cell anemia a major focus of the United States government because of the National Sickle Cell Anemia Control Act of
1972, but also discussions flared about the inferiority stigma associated to African-Americans because they were the primary
carriers of sickle cell hemoglobin.
Pauling, who openly supported controversial opinions throughout his lifetime (by refusing to comply with anti-communism demands,
promoting the test ban treaty, and advocating the benefits of vitamin C), took an unusual course in the case of sickle cell
disease. After fifteen years of supporting genetic counseling and eugenic programs, he became silent about eugenic issues
around 1972 at the height of the controversy. The difference between Pauling’s other crusades and sickle cell anemia is that
Pauling took a liberal stance against communism, nuclear weapons testing, and conventional medical practices; but with sickle
cell anemia he expressed more conservative opinions.
|