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Cirsium

(3,124 posts)
28. Why?
Sat Sep 27, 2025, 04:17 PM
Sep 27

I think they are targeting people deemed unworthy, similarity to what was done in Germany during the early stages of the Nazi regime. "Lebensunwertes Leben." It is the predictable next step in the catastrophic course down which we are being driven.

In a time when the voices of neurodivergent individuals are only beginning to be heard and valued on their own terms, it is deeply disturbing to witness public figures—especially those seeking high office—revive narratives that dehumanise and diminish them. Recent comments by Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., suggesting that autistic individuals are a “burden” on society due to their inability to “work” or “pay taxes,” warrant not just outrage—but reflection. These are not merely careless remarks; they are emblematic of a deeper, more insidious problem: the resurgence of a logic that history has already exposed as deadly.

To understand the gravity of such rhetoric, we must revisit one of the most chilling ideological and bureaucratic programmes of the 20th century: Aktion T4 in Nazi Germany. Between 1939 and 1945, this state-sanctioned “euthanasia” programme targeted individuals deemed “Lebensunwertes Leben”—“life unworthy of life.” The victims were not soldiers, criminals, or political opponents; they were disabled children, neurodivergent individuals, people with mental illness or intellectual disabilities—those who, in the regime’s cold estimation, failed to meet a standard of economic or biological “fitness.”

Before the gas chambers of Auschwitz and Sobibor, before the industrialised murder of millions, came the sterilisation clinics and “mercy killings” in German hospitals. These early atrocities were justified not on the grounds of hatred or vengeance, but on economics. The Nazi regime framed the existence of disabled and neurodivergent people as a financial burden on the state. In internal documents and propaganda, their continued care was described as wasteful, inefficient, and unfair to the productive majority. The German term Ausmerzen, meaning “to eradicate,” was used to describe this policy of quiet, systematic elimination.

The machinery of death began not with bullets or gas—but with ideas. With speeches. With normalised conversations about who “contributes” to society, and who does not. And now, nearly a century later, we are hearing faint but unmistakable echoes of that same logic.

https://publichealthpolicyjournal.com/life-unworthy-of-life-historical-amnesia-ausmerzen-and-the-rhetoric-surrounding-autism/

Recommendations

4 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

leucovorin-I have no doubt that some Republicans are making a ton of money off this stuff Walleye Sep 27 #1
You didn't see them generations ago bc they were warehoused in insane asylums. . . . nt Bernardo de La Paz Sep 27 #2
Exactly. Timeflyer Sep 27 #6
Or the family attic Hekate Sep 27 #29
Or died. RedArkGuy Sep 27 #38
it wasn't REPORTED as much generations ago Skittles Sep 27 #3
Yes and just lived out their lives "Hermits" and 'Non-social" or "Anti-social" or "Non-conformists" LiberalArkie Sep 27 #5
wow, another post worth of its own thread Skittles Sep 27 #22
Something I did not figure out until about a year ago, A lot of us can not say NO. LiberalArkie Sep 27 #24
had never thought of that Skittles Sep 27 #26
You must tell him as most guys do not know or realize it. I wondered most of my life why I could not keep anything LiberalArkie Sep 27 #30
alas my brother passed in 2021 Skittles Sep 27 #33
I am so sorry to hear that. LiberalArkie Sep 28 #41
Why? Cirsium Sep 27 #28
For personal reasons............... Lovie777 Sep 27 #4
same Skittles Sep 27 #23
What?! yardwork Sep 27 #7
Apparently he has never heard of science or history. mwmisses4289 Sep 27 #8
Good Lord. yardwork Sep 27 #9
It's not in their "world" (that they are willing to admit to) BumRushDaShow Sep 27 #10
Dr. Malarky Marthe48 Sep 27 #11
There is definitely a strong genetic component. High-functioning autism runs in our family across 4 generations Martin68 Sep 27 #12
It's definitely a continuum. yardwork Sep 27 #16
"I don't believe" PSPS Sep 27 #13
Quack, Quack, Quack, Quack, Quack, Quack, BootinUp Sep 27 #14
Quack back at ya. twodogsbarking Sep 27 #15
The modern-day phenomenon liberalgunwilltravel Sep 27 #17
I think there is a genetic component NH Ethylene Sep 27 #18
Autism is not new. ananda Sep 27 #19
But recognition and diagnosis have changed drastically over the years. eppur_se_muova Sep 27 #31
I don't exactly consider autism a defect. ananda Sep 27 #32
Call it a 'condition', then. Whatever you call it, it is something which only slowly came to be recognized. eppur_se_muova Sep 27 #34
Of course it exists. ananda Sep 27 #35
This message was self-deleted by its author valleyrogue Sep 27 #37
What I don't understand is why a high functioning and low functioning autism are both autism womanofthehills Sep 27 #36
He is shockingly uninformed. Tanuki Sep 27 #20
I would have been 14. I remember that article vividly. 3catwoman3 Sep 27 #21
I don't think he knows what he's talking about struggle4progress Sep 27 #25
Rosemary Kennedy was given a frontal chelsea0011 Sep 27 #27
We are different. Aussie105 Sep 28 #39
Sigh lonely bird Sep 28 #40
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