Thread by kellynla.
Unable to pay its rent, an Oakland abortion clinic in business for 36 years has announced it is closing. The Womens Choice Clinic at 570 14th Street, which claims to be the oldest abortion clinic in the U.S., made the announcement Tuesday afternoon.
The clinic and its leadership have long been associated with the radical Bay Area Coalition for Our Reproductive Rights (BACORR), which in January organized counter-demonstrations to the West Coast Walk for Life and has characterized pro-lifers as anti-abortion bigots.
Linci Comy, executive director of the clinic for 21 years and on its staff since 1977, is a longtime member of BACORR. She told the Oakland Tribune on Tuesday, "We haven't been able to make our rent payments. We've been waiting for the checks from Medi-Cal and they're not forthcoming. To balance the state budget, California has frozen payments for services already provided, and for us, that is a fatal decision. With that and issues of the economy, it all came down on us in March. Our landlord let us know we have to be out in a couple of weeks. We're looking at bankruptcy.
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Thread by nickcarraway.
BEFORE the Nazis began the mass murder of Jews, they started to sterilize or kill hundreds of thousands of their own non-Jewish Germans, including children, who were considered mentally or physically defective. They even issued a Ten Commandments for Choosing a Mate that advised against marrying a person with an undesirable characteristic, or the possibility of inheriting one: Never marry the one good person from a bad family.
This intensive war against the genetically unfit is one of the areas explored in Deadly Medicine: Creating the Master Race, a handsome and harrowing exhibition about the Nazis use of science, at Charles B. Wang Center at Stony Brook University through June 12. The exhibition, a traveling version of one that opened at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington in April 2004, will be accompanied by 10 public events and lectures by experts in fields like medicine, history and philosophy.
Besides the extent of Nazi mutilation and murder, its also surprising how accepted it was by the medical establishment in Germany, said Jack Coulehan, a Stony Brook professor emeritus who still teaches medical ethics and was involved in bringing the exhibition to the university. These were all doctors who had devoted their lives to healing, Dr. Coulehan said as he walked through the display, which includes photos, explanatory texts, excerpts from Nazi literature and eight screens showing Nazi propaganda films with English subtitles and other footage.
One film shows people in asylums, while a voiceover says that the money spent on them could be better used elsewhere. A wall of photographs focuses on 8 of the 5,000 children killed by injection or starvation. Another film features interviews with Jewish survivors, including victims of Nazi experiments on twins. . .