[The Fertility of the Unfit by William Allan Chapple]@TWC D-Link book
The Fertility of the Unfit

CHAPTER VII
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They may be controlled, either by the individual himself or by the State.

Our reformatories are peopled by young persons whose distinguishing characteristic is that inhibition is undeveloped or defective.

This defect may be due to want of education, but it is more often hereditary.
Two things only can be done for them.

This faculty of inhibition can be trained by education, or external restraint can be provided by law.
But the distinguishing characteristic of all defectives, within or without our public institutions, is defective inhibition,--they are unable to control the spontaneous impulses that continually arise, and which may indeed be normal.
Impulses may be abnormal from hereditary predisposition, as _e.g._ the impulse to drink, but only through strengthening inhibition can these impulses be controlled,--their existence must be accepted.
But whether the defect is an abnormal impulse, or a normal impulse abnormally strong, or an abnormally weak or defective inhibition, the condition is hereditary, and such defectives propagate their kind.
It has been shown that they are more fertile than any other classes because of the very defect that makes them a danger to society.
The defective restraint that allows them to commit offences against person and property, also allows their procreative impulse unrestrained activity.
Defectives, therefore, are not only fertile, but they propagate their kind, and a few examples will serve to show to some extent the fertility, and to an enormous extent the hereditary tendencies, of the unfit.
CASE NO.

1, p.


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