Copyright © 2025 by Greg Wyatt
A Bittersweet Life – Our Lives are not Guaranteed.
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Life is bittersweet. At some point in our lives, we must all say goodbye. When that point is, is a mystery, although the older we get we can feel it getting closer. That is why it is important to live each day to the fullest and not waste a moment on things that do not matter.
History: 1937-1968
/0 CommentsSo who the f*** is Greg Wyatt anyway?
How the Evil of Eugenics Shaped Greg Wyatt.
This is just a brief synopsis and timeline of how eugenics shaped me into the person I am today.
Spring 1937 – At the age of 13 Herbert Wyatt is placed into the Nebraska State Home for Feeble-Minded Youth in Beatrice Nebraska by Nebraska Social Services. His crime? He was poor and came from a broken family with an alcoholic stepfather. He never went to court.
Fall 1948 – After 11 years of living in an insane asylum he was released at the age of 24. There was one condition for his parole. He would be (eugenically) sterilized so he could not ever have a child or family of his own.
Spring 1949 – Herbert meets Betty, a shy and overweight Minnesota farm girl. Six Weeks later they are married.
Spring 1954 – After 5 years of childlessness Herbert tearfully confesses his (eugenicial) incarnation in the asylum and his fear that if he would have told her the truth that she would not of married him.
Summer 1954 – Betty reads a mystery magazine about (eugenics) artificial insemination and the next week visits her doctor and explains the situation. He meets with both Betty and Herbert and they decide to go through the procedure. He assures them a donor will be selected that has the same physical characteristics as Herbert and that it should be a secret only known to them. They are to tell no one under any circumstances.
September 9, 1954 – Betty is inseminated via eutelegensis, (eugenicial) artificial insemination. There is only one donor available at the time. A tall broad-shouldered Dutch Immigrant who waited 6 years to immigrate and his wife to America. He is working on his doctorate at the University of Nebraska and his wife is pregnant and seeing the same doctor as Betty.
June 8, 1955 – Betty gives birth to a healthy baby boy. Herbert cannot believe that he is now a father. They name him Gregory.
1956 – Wanting a bigger family Betty tries artificial insemination again and again with no results.
1959 – Greg is now 4 years old. He is meeting his milestones at an astounding pace. It is evident that he is way ahead of children his age. Betty takes him to the University of Nebraska where his IQ is tested at 167.
1960 – The secret starts to fracture Betty and Herb’s fragile relationship. Herb works 60+ hours a week in a cement plant for minimum wage. Herbert loves his son Greg like his own flesh and blood. Wherever Herb goes he takes his son Greg with him stating proudly “That’s my boy.”
1961 – Bettys quest for a larger family becomes an obsession. They give up on artificial insemination and apply for adoption. Knowing of Herbs incarceration at the Nebraska State Home of Feebleminded Youth, the State of Nebraska, Department of Social Services deny the application
on the grounds that they are not fit for a larger family. Betty is crushed and the resentment towards Herbert festers and grows as her depression grows.
1962 through 1964 – Betty seeks out other alternatives and begins to take in foster children. She just wants to love and be loved. It is sad for Greg as not one foster child stays longer than 6 months. Greg longs for a brother and sister.
1965 – Betty hears on television of the plight of tens of thousands of abandoned orphans in Korea.
While social services would not approve the Wyatts for adoption of white American children they approved them for a mixed race international adoption. (eugenics/social engineering). The Wyatts begin the adoption process.
1966 – The adoption process is now complete and Lisa arrives. She is almost a year old. Betty, Herb and Greg are ecstatic. Several months later Betty begins her quest to adopt another Korean orphan.
1967 – The second adoption process is now complete and Jodi arrives from Korea. She is also almost a year old.
1968 – Betty becomes focused on her two new family members. Herb continues his 60+ hour work week, working at minimum wage. With the expanded family members it is no longer is enough to pay for the necessities and debt slowly begins to pile up.
Eugenics – Greg Wyatt on NBC’s “NOW” TV Magazine Show with Tom Brokaw 3-30-94
/1 CommentOn March 30, 1994, my story was featured on the TV magazine “NOW” with Tom Brokaw. It was just one of dozens of media appearances that year telling my story of how I came to be in this world through eugenics, human sterilization and artificial insemination.
Now (TV Series 1993–1994) – IMDb
In the United States, members of the Progressive movement embraced eugenic ideas, especially immigration restriction and sterilization. Indiana enacted the first eugenic sterilization law in 1907, and the US Supreme Court upheld such laws in 1927. State programs targeted institutionalized, mentally disabled women. Beginning in the late 1930s, proponents rationalized involuntary sterilization as protecting vulnerable women from unwanted pregnancy. By World War II, programs in the United States had sterilized approximately 60,000 persons. After the horrific revelations concerning Nazi eugenics (German Hereditary Health Courts approved at least 400,000 sterilization operations in less than a decade), eugenic sterilization programs in the United States declined rapidly. Simplistic eugenic thinking has faded, but coerced sterilization remains widespread, especially in China and India. In many parts of the world, involuntary sterilization is still intermittently used against minority groups.
Keywords: heredity; immigration restriction; population control.
Hard Copy TV Magazine Show Appearance
/1 CommentOn April 6, 1992, the Hard Copy TV Magazine Show featured a story about Dr. Kristopher Kip Wendler, a sperm donor to about 500 children. I was also interviewed extensively regarding my experiences.
Eugenics – Greg Wyatt on NBC’s “Real Life” TV Show – March 12, 1996
/0 CommentsOn March 12, 1996, I was featured on NBC’s “Real Life” Magazine TV show. I was filmed in Lincoln, Nebraska, and syndicated with over 100 affiliates nationwide. This is where I told my story. I was conceived through U.S Government eugenics programs.
My segment was recorded at the Beatrice State Home for Feeble-Minded Youth. That is where my father, Herbert Wyatt, was forcibly sterilized. This occurred in 1949 as a condition of his release and part of the 1927 Supreme Court ruling Buck vs. Bell. This ruling allowed state and local governments to do so as part of its stealth depopulation/eugenics programs.
It was filmed at Lincoln Northeast High School. I graduated in 1973. Unknowingly almost dated my half-sister, who was conceived using the same sperm donor. The donor was a graduate student named Wybe Kroontje at the University of Nebraska Lincoln. He immigrated from Rotterdam, the Netherlands. He was a member of the Dutch Resistance, where he participated in the saving of many Jewish lives. He was caught by the Nazis and placed in a labor camp.
I searched for 8 years looking for him. This was all done by hand as the internet and social media did not exist like today,
I tracked him down to his home in Blacksburg, where he retired after teaching as a Professor at Virginia Tech for 31 years.
I received a form letter from his attorney warning me to have no further contact. My heart was broken.:(
The rest is history.
Greg Wyatt on the Joan Rivers Show
/0 CommentsI was conceived through an anonymous sperm donor on Sept 8, 1955. On August 8th, 1988, I was a guest on the Joan Rivers Show sharing that story. I was honored to be selected as a guest, where I could share the story of my two fathers. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joan_Rivers
Over the next several decades, my advocacy efforts lead to the elimination of the use of anonymous sperm donors which is now outlawed in all 50 states. https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/26/magazine/sperm-donor-questions.html
I Just Can’t Walk Away
/2 CommentsThis energizer rabbit’s batteries are growing dim 🙁
“Always remember to begin with the end in mind”:
It has been one hell of a journey!
Greg Wyatt – My Swan Song – The True Story of Two Fathers
/1 CommentOn September 9, 1954, I was conceived in secret by an anonymous sperm donor, to replace the sperm of a man who was sterilized and deemed unfit to propagate his own offspring and have a family. My parents were told never to tell me the truth of my conception. Almost 40 years later, my mother broke the silence, and told me the truth… a truth that would change my life, and many others forever.
This video is the third in a series I call “My Swan Song.”