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Hans Asperger, Who Discovered Autism, Participated in Nazi Germany’s Child Euthanasia Program
LIFE NEWS ^ | April 30, 2018 | Alex Schadenberg

Posted on 04/30/2018 10:22:30 AM PDT by Morgana

It is important that we understand our past to protect future societies from making similar tragic errors. The German T4 euthanasia program is nearly hidden within history, an event that few people want to talk about and fewer want to acknowledge how we are repeating history.

Nonetheless, research uncovering the involvement of Hans Asperger, who became known for his research related to Autism Spectrum, identifies that he was also involved in killing approximately 5000 people with disabilities as an active participant in the German T4 euthanasia program.

Studies by Albert Bandura, a psychologist who developed the social cognitive theory known as Moral Disengagement, answers the question – How People Do Harm and Live with Themselves? Moral Disengagement theory helps to explain how people like Hans Asperger can be a respected scientist and yet responsible for killing people with disabilities as part of the German T4 euthanasia program.

A recent article by Swedish researcher Fabian Stahle, examines Moral Disengagement and the Mechanisms Propelling the Euthanasia/Assisted Suicide movement. Several years ago I published an article by historian Götz Aly titled: The Victims of Nazi Euthanasia Have Been Forgotten. Götz states in his article that people didn’t talk about the family members who were euthanasia victims because they were people with disabilities. Thus the silence surrounding the euthanasia victims helped to keep information about the euthanasia program hidden.

The Atlantic Magazine published an article (April 25, 2018) by John Donvan examining – How Asperger’s involvement in the German euthanasia program remained unknown. The Atlantic article suggests that Asperger’s euthanasia past remained unknown because Asperger remained relatively unknown until after his death and because the language barrier kept his involvement in killing unknown. According to the Atlantic:

The new, novella-length study by the medical historian Herwig Czech answers many of the questions that have dogged Asperger for decades, except for one: why it took so long for the story to come out in full.

Two things have protected Asperger’s reputation up till now. The first was a geographical and language barrier. Asperger, who lived between 1906 and 1980, never published in English, and spent almost no part of his professional life outside of Austria. This mundane fact proved critical. Starting at the conclusion of World War I—when scientists from Belgium, France, and the United Kingdom shut out their German and Austrian peers from Western European conferences, journals, and the like—the German language began to lose its position as a lingua franca of science and research. …Moreover, following World War II, there was a taint to virtually all Nazi-era medical scholarship, owing to the disgusting and well-documented ethical breaches associated with some of the research conducted. This unquestionably dampened international discussion of Asperger’s ground-breaking 1944 paper, in which he wrote about four intellectually capable but socially struggling Austrian boys and for the first time described the syndrome that he called “autistic psychopathy.”

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For the next four decades, that paper went virtually unnoticed and was minimally cited in the main centers researching autism, which were located in Britain and the United States. It was only in 1981 that the influential British psychiatrist Lorna Wing drew attention to it. Wing was just then beginning to develop the now familiar concept of the autism spectrum, and saw Asperger’s account of autistic psychopathy as an important demonstration of autistic traits in a wider range of individuals than previously documented. Historically, the autism label had been used more narrowly, applied to individuals profoundly challenged in areas like learning, communication, or self-care. For the sake of discussion around the Austrian’s work, she also urged adoption of a less jarring name for it: Asperger’s syndrome.

Donvan indicates that several earlier researchers had concerns about Asperger, but without proof Asperger’s murderous past remained hidden.

Based on comments by his daughter, a “good” mystic developed about Asperger suggesting that he was a Nazi resister. Donvan credits historian Herwig Czech for uncovering the truth about Asperger. Donvan writes:

I got a call from Jeremiah Riemer, the freelance translator I’d asked to check the English translation I was using to quote Asperger’s writing in German. Riemer asked me if I’d ever heard of Herwig Czech—the historian whose work has just appeared in Molecular Autism. It seems my friend, frankly suspicious of the hero narrative (which he said had a great deal to do with being a Jew well acquainted with the history of postwar patterns of Austrian denial of responsibility), had googled around in German, and come across an interview Czech gave to an Austrian newspaper raising questions. I had never heard of Czech, but we were to become well acquainted over the next two years, as he gradually shared with my coauthor and me most of the details that he has now made public in full.

I don’t claim to be a historian but unlike Donvan, I think that an investigation needs to be done into the research that Asperger published. Considering the inhumane treatment of people with Autism and other disabilities, it is likely that the four Austrian boys that were featured in his 1944 research article were not treated humanely. Also, did the four Austrian boys die by euthanasia? I don’t know, but I ask the question based on the fact that much of the human research done at this time in history was condemned based on the way the research was done and how the research “subjects” were treated.

A good outcome from identifying Asperger’s involvement in the German euthanasia program is that, once again, it gives the world the opportunity to examine the outcome of giving physicians the right in law to kill.

Lest we forget.


TOPICS: History
KEYWORDS: hansasperger; nazi; prolife

1 posted on 04/30/2018 10:22:30 AM PDT by Morgana
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To: Morgana

If you ever read the trilogy by Richard Evans, the second book “The Third Reich in Power, 1933 - 1939: How the Nazis Won Over the Hearts and Minds of a Nation” details the T4 program and how totally horrific it was.

Great three book set. Highly recommended for the WWII history buff looking for an all sides of the coin explanation of the Third Reich.


2 posted on 04/30/2018 10:30:22 AM PDT by Reagan Disciple (Peace through Strength)
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To: Morgana

And in Jonas Salk’s book in 1972 “Survival of the Wisest”, he wrote that vaccines should be used to control population. He also said that the people that rule over us are parasites (they don’t contribute to society) and believes that is not only normal but preferable.


3 posted on 04/30/2018 10:37:33 AM PDT by Vic S
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To: Reagan Disciple
Josef Ratzinger (later Pope Benedict XVI) had a mentally handicapped younger cousin who was picked up in a Nazi sweep through the area and killed in one of the genocide centers. This was recounted by Ratzinger and his brother George in explaining one reason why his whole family was opposed to Nazism. The Bavarians (at any rate) saw this as nothing but murder.

The British had participated in the euthanasia of the mentally handicapped in about the same period. I'm thinking many of them saw this as a minor thing in the larger scheme of things.

The barbarism of "advanced" societies.

4 posted on 04/30/2018 10:40:57 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o ("Just the facts, ma'am, just the facts." - Sgt. Joe Friday)
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To: Reagan Disciple

Those were very good books.


5 posted on 04/30/2018 10:48:20 AM PDT by jalisco555 ("In a Time of Universal Deceit Telling the Truth Is a Revolutionary Act" - George Orwell)
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To: Morgana

“Moral Disengagement theory helps to explain how people like Hans Asperger can be a respected scientist and yet responsible for killing people with disabilities as part of the German T4 euthanasia program.”

Also known as the God complex.


6 posted on 04/30/2018 10:49:54 AM PDT by dubyagee ("I can't complain, but sometimes I still do.")
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To: Morgana
I read a story once about the German doctor who pioneered cardiac catheterization in the '30s. The medical powers that be were convinced that the procedure would cause the heart to stop and wouldn't let him do it in humans. They were only convinced when he catheterized himself. A real advance in medicine.

My point is that this pioneer is largely unknown because during the war he was an SS doctor. Medicine was the most nazified profession.

7 posted on 04/30/2018 10:52:30 AM PDT by jalisco555 ("In a Time of Universal Deceit Telling the Truth Is a Revolutionary Act" - George Orwell)
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To: Mrs. Don-o
Thanks for this info. I hadn't heard it before. It brought to mind the recent article I read about Bavaria putting crosses in all government buildings.

"The German state's government said it would reflect its 'cultural identity and Christian-Western influence.'"

Article here: Catholic Herald

8 posted on 04/30/2018 10:54:30 AM PDT by mass55th (Courage is being scared to death - but saddling up anyway...John Wayne)
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To: dubyagee

“Also known as the God complex.”

What is the difference between God and a doctor?

God knows he is not a doctor.


9 posted on 04/30/2018 11:08:43 AM PDT by alternatives? (Why have an army if there are no borders?)
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To: Morgana

Was he really British?


10 posted on 04/30/2018 11:32:34 AM PDT by Midwesterner53
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To: Mrs. Don-o

The eugenics movement actually spread to Germany from the “progressives” in the United States. They were never able to achieve their goals of mass euthanasia over here, but they did export their ideas.


11 posted on 04/30/2018 11:45:14 AM PDT by Boogieman
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To: Morgana

The autistic being among those who “needed to be eliminated.”


12 posted on 04/30/2018 11:54:04 AM PDT by TBP (Progressives lack compassion and tolerance. Their self-aggrandizement is all that matters.)
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To: Morgana

Not surprising again it is in Germanic Europe, a place plagued with authoritarian paternalistic pride and shame.

We all have this. A deep shame at not having a perfect child. As if a child with disabilities reflects on your own morality or worth. Sweep them under the (abortion) rug. Most discovered disabled babies conceived are indeed aborted. Nothing has changed.

Gd doesn’t create failures. Babies with disabilities are perfect souls, just some broken parts, is all. And sometimes life is sadder and harder and shorter.

It’s too bad that parents are more shamed by seen imperfections than by the true moral failing of murdering the physically imperfect.


13 posted on 04/30/2018 11:58:54 AM PDT by Yaelle
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To: Yaelle

Well said -— beautifully well said, Yaelle.


14 posted on 04/30/2018 12:33:19 PM PDT by Mrs. Don-o (Philosophy is a battle against the bewitchment of our intelligence bymeans of language.-Wittgenstein)
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To: dubyagee

Funny how history works. Werner Von Braun built rockets for the Nazis that killed hundreds. And then we bought him here and he created our space program.


15 posted on 04/30/2018 1:24:43 PM PDT by jmacusa ("Made it Ma, top of the world!'')
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To: Boogieman

Margarette Sanger is it’s patron saint.


16 posted on 04/30/2018 1:25:27 PM PDT by jmacusa ("Made it Ma, top of the world!'')
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To: Yaelle
What it really stems from is an inadequacy in ones own self image and worth.
17 posted on 04/30/2018 1:26:38 PM PDT by jmacusa ("Made it Ma, top of the world!'')
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To: Morgana

Leftists are always protected: Dewey, Sanger.


18 posted on 04/30/2018 5:44:37 PM PDT by YogicCowboy ("I am not entirely on anyone's side, because no one is entirely on mine." - J. R. R. Tolkien)
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To: Yaelle

The soul: This is why I am focussing on certain such characters in my science-fiction series.


19 posted on 04/30/2018 5:47:01 PM PDT by YogicCowboy ("I am not entirely on anyone's side, because no one is entirely on mine." - J. R. R. Tolkien)
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To: YogicCowboy

Very cool.

(I have “written in my mind” science fiction stories which isn’t right, as I never read them. Not fair. Lol. Much success with yours.)


20 posted on 04/30/2018 6:07:35 PM PDT by Yaelle
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