I used to spend days in libraries researching a subject that it takes just a few hours to complete on the internet today. Harder still, research back then was a waste of time, because people kept on believing whatever they'd been taught in school, or heard on some TV or radio show, or a couple paragraphs they'd read in some magazine or newspaper.
In college we spent three months studying the eugenics movement. Back then, documentation had been so well hidden, the best we could do was address the ideology. Nonetheless, back in the early 1970s, efforts to remove eugenics ideology from K-12 biology courses was intense.
Unfortunately, outside of college, no one had even heard of eugenics. Of particular concern, school teachers and curriculum experts insisted they were teaching biology, science, and facts and trying to convince them they were teaching racist ideology was like talking to a wall.
In 2020, I thought to see if anything new had surfaced. To my surprise, there was so much information available on the internet, it took me a couple years to wade through it.
My purpose in writing these articles on eugenics was to give people with a following a starting point for research. And maybe a framework for thinking about eugenics as well.
That was the long way of saying, I agree with you. :)