#abortion doctor
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if-you-fan-a-fire · 2 years ago
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"TORE OFF GAS PIPE IN CIVIC BUILDING," Toronto Star. September 24, 1912. Page 5. --- George Haddock Became Obstreperous When Locked Up in Station. ---- CASES IN POLICE COURT ---- Evidence Taken in the Charge Against Doctor - Donat to Jail for Wounding Wife. --- Yonge street police station was flooded with gas last night when Geo. Haddock, arrested in the street on a charge of being intoxicated, tried to tear down everything within reach. Besides throwing numerous benches and other articles around the station he grasped the gas pipe and wrenched it from the wall. The end of the pipe was temporarily plugged until a gas man arrived to make repairs.
Haddock did not remember anything about it when he appeared before Magistrate Ellis, but was sure he would never act like that. He was fined $1 and costs or 30 days.
Where They Can Brace Up. Robert Falconer has exhausted magisterial patience, his visits for drunkenness have been so frequent and ill-timed. This morning Magistrate Ellis committed him to the Industrial Farm for an indefinite period, not to exceed two years.
The complaint of Edward O'Donnell's family, in Trinity Square, has stopped the man's vagrancy for four months. O'Donnell is apparently young and muscular, but the police, as well as the relatives, gave him a record as a non-worker. "Lives on the family," said Inspector Geddes, so the man goes to the Central for four months.
Waiting For Witnesses. After three weeks in jail, so little could be proven against Harry Farrier that he was allowed out on his own bail till October 2nd, when he came before Magistrate Kingsford. Ferrier is the man who was alleged to have stolen money from the George A. Bingham drug store while working there last November.
"Our witnesses are still in the West," the Crown Attorney announced, as motive for giving the man his temporary freedom.
Dr. A. B. Cooke's Case. Dr. Allan B. Cooke, of 87 Roxborough west, appeared before Magistrate Kingsford again this morning on the charge of procuring an illegal operation upon Ruth Adams, a young woman, and the evidence taken at the inquest was put in again.
"There were no entries made in the doctor's books," the Crown Attorney said, "of this woman's visits, nor did he take her name. The conclusion I have made is that the doctor's evidence was extremely vague and contradictory, and that he did not desire to tell all he knew."
Dr. A. J. Harrington, of 813 Bathurst street, stated that it was not the practice of an ordinary, reputable physician to neglect to take the name, address, or to make entries in his books.
"That seems to me very, very unusual," Mr. Corley continued. The magistrate adjourned the case for another day.
For Wounding His Wife. There were two versions as to the motive for Herman Donatt of 99 Carlaw avenue throwing a knife at his wife. The woman received a wound about an inch deep in the side.
"It was his drunkenness," the wife complained.
"It was an epileptic fit," was the defence.
Of these, Magistrate Kingsford chose to accept the former.
Donatt goes to jail for 90 days.
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innocet · 8 months ago
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Space babies is such a rent-lowering gunshot of an episode I love it dearly
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ProPublica and the DNC genuinely think you are so stupid that you can't tell the difference between an abortion and a miscarriage.
fortunately, every single state with an abortion regulation differentiates between those two things in the law. you can find the law, read it, and understand it in the space of 5 to 10 minutes. so can every single doctor in this country.
every woman who has died at the hands of a hospital because they withheld miscarriage care from her was a victim of either incompetence or malice.
not the law.
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rapeculturerealities · 8 months ago
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(7) Texas is Fabricating Abortion Data - by Jessica Valenti
Texas doctors have been required to submit patients’ private medical information into a state-run website without their knowledge or consent—adhering to a mandate that forces them to report women as suffering from abortion complications even when they’re not.
This rarely reported on section of Texas law lists 28 medical issues as abortion complications—conditions that reproductive health experts point out often have nothing to do with abortion. Still, doctors are required to tell the state about any woman who develops one of these issues if she happens to have had an abortion at any point in her life.
Doctors who don’t make these reports can be fined for each ‘violation’; after three violations, they could lose their license.
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pintadorartist · 4 months ago
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“A House panel advanced the Kids Online Safety Act bill, also known as KOSA, on Wednesday, pushing forward legislation intended to boost online privacy and safety for children.”
1) sign this petition and share it everywhere on social media @Twitter @Tiktok @Reddit https://www.youthagainstkosa.com/
2) call house leadership (see numbers here). This is a VERY important step. Again, use these call scripts: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1IyBUe6frFGF44rJQU3TahZ5zyG3tC7jai_hPneAKlnM/edit
3) Call the House Energy and Commerce Committee Here
There is a very big possibility this passes. We HAVE to put pressure on leadership and these politicians and show them this is a poision bill that WILL HARM children.
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redgoldblue · 20 days ago
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so assuming Avery is actually pregnant / doesn't early-trimester miscarry (which is not a given), there's two reasonable ways this can go, right. number one is she gets an abortion, the plotline is used to pull them all back together again, and they all have some collective hurt/comfort about it. number two, the one i would write - don't get me wrong, i'm all for women getting career-driven abortions, but hear me out - is the one where she does have the baby. under the cut bc it got long.
she goes to med school at first while pregnant - Max is right, it can be done, people in my cohort did it - and either gets lucky with the timing of the actual birth being during holidays, or just works her way to getting time off for a few weeks around it. And then... there's a baby. And you know what else there is? There's two dads (because we're 100% Mamma Mia-ing this bitch. they never find out who the bio dad is and they never seriously try. Baby comes out with Avery's exact skin tone so that's no clue.), and an entire cruise ship worth of backup babysitters. So Avery goes back to med school, and leaves the baby with Tristan and Max.
And, yes, raising a baby while also running an infirmary with a rotating cast of temporary substitute nurses filling Avery's role isn't the easiest thing they've ever done, but Robert loves fulfilling grandparent duties any time he's not on duty; Rosie gets one of those strap-on baby carriers and walks her (i don't know why i've decided the baby is a her but i have now) around the engine room pointing out parts and explaining concepts and hey, the baby never complains about her Michigan stories; Corey gets a cart and a bundle of clean sheets and pushes her down the corridors until the smell of laundry powder automatically makes her start laughing.
Max and Tristan make a pact to send Avery at least two photos a day - which ends up getting supplemented by everyone else who's with Baby - and FaceTime her most days, and whenever she gets a few days off she meets them in port. (The most expensive part of baby-raising ends up being her flights to wherever the Odyssey happens to be at the time, at least until Robert finds out and figures out a way to start paying her 'maternity leave', despite her insistence that the whole point of this is that she isn't maternity-leaving and he should probably be paying himself that and anyway, isn't she technically not an employee right now?)
And the thing is, during this time, Max and Tristan start... realising some things. Like how neither of them feel like they've lost their only partner, because they.. haven't. Like how the co-parenting's been working out better than either of them expected, because they fell instantly (minus a few minor bumps) into a shared rhythm. Like how sometimes they look at the other one holding Baby and feel like their heart's about to explode.
Also, they've both started sleeping in Max's bed. Because Baby's spent so much time sleeping in the corner of the infirmary that now if she wakes up at night and can't see both of them, she starts crying inconsolably. And obviously Max's suite is more suited to multiple inhabitants, and they're usually too damn exhausted to even remember the first time they were in this bed together.
(usually. most of the time. and when they're not, they don't make it the other's problem)
So at the end of the first year of this, the last two days of the year's last cruise have been packed with crisis after crisis after demanding patient after crisis, and as soon as they finally wave the last passenger off they hand Baby gratefully over to Robert and go crash out in Max's bed.
Avery was supposed to be meeting them on board tomorrow, but her last exam gets unexpectedly moved up by a day (believe me, med school loves to pull that kind of shit on you), so a couple hours after the passengers have gone, she shows up to surprise them. And finds Robert (a known ody3 shipper) first, who lets her take Baby with minimal captainly sulking about it, and while she rocks and kisses Baby, tells her (as a known ody3 shipper) that the two dads will be on the Pelican deck, but they're probably asleep.
Avery kinda frowns at him, but doesn't question it, and takes Baby up with her to Max's suite to find them. And they are both fast asleep, on either side of Max's bed with a space carefully preserved between them (because it's usually where Baby would be and they're both terrified of accidentally rolling onto her in the middle of the night). She's also exhausted after exams, so she crawls into it, lies on her back with Baby on top of her chest, and goes straight to sleep.
Tristan and Max wake up before her, and when they look across at each other, at Avery and Baby between them, they both simultaneously realise, oh. oh. oh, this - this three, two-and-half, four people, all together - this is it. this is the love, this is the children, this might even be the home - the second, third, fourth bucket list items to happen in this bed.
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odinsblog · 8 months ago
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Funny how SCOTUS “originalists” ignore this history
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Benjamin Franklin is revered in history for his fixation on inventing practical ways to make everyday life easier. He was a prolific inventor and author, and spent his life tinkering and writing to share his knowledge with the masses.
One of the more surprising areas Franklin wanted to demystify for the average American? At-home abortions.
Molly Farrell is an associate professor of English at the Ohio State University and studies early American literature. She authored a recent Slate article that suggests Franklin’s role in facilitating at-home abortions all started with a popular British math textbook.
Titled The Instructor and written by George Fisher, which Farrell said was a pseudonym, the textbook was a catch-all manual that included plenty of useful information for the average person. It had the alphabet, basic arithmetic, recipes, and farriery (which is hoof care for horses). At the time, books were very expensive, and a general manual like this one was a practical choice for many families.
Franklin saw the value of this book, and decided to create an updated version for residents of the U.S, telling readers his goal was to make the text “more immediately useful to Americans.” This included updating city names, adding Colonial history, and other minor tweaks.
But as Farrell describes, the most significant change in the book was swapping out a section that included a medical textbook from London, with a Virginia medical handbook from 1734 called Every Man His Own Doctor: The Poor Planter’s Physician.
This medical handbook provided home remedies for a variety of ailments, allowing people to handle their more minor illnesses at home, like a fever or gout. One entry, however, was “for the suppression of the courses”, which Farrell discovered meant a missed menstrual period.
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“The book starts to prescribe basically all of the best-known herbal abortifacients and contraceptives that were circulating at the time,” Farrell said. “It's just sort of a greatest hits of what 18th-century herbalists would have given a woman who wanted to end a pregnancy early.”
“It's very explicit, very detailed, also very accurate for the time in terms of what was known ... for how to end a pregnancy pretty early on.”
Including this information in a widely circulated guide for everyday life bears a significance to today’s heated debate over access to abortion and contraception in the United States. In particular, the leaked Supreme Court opinion that would overturn Roe v. Wade and states that “a right to abortion is not deeply rooted in the nation's histories and traditions.”
Farrell said the book was immensely popular, and she did not find any evidence of objections to the inclusion of the section.
“It didn't really bother anybody that a typical instructional manual could include material like this,”she said. “It just wasn't something to be remarked upon. It was just a part of everyday life.”
(continue reading) more ←
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awesomecooperlove · 5 months ago
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diyasgarden · 2 months ago
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if you're an american who lives in a place where your reproductive rights may be on the line and use a period tracker, please delete it. i'm not the first person to say it, nor will i be the last, but i will repeat it for hours if needed. this is the time to delete it.
with the results of this election (specifically in congress) many have already acknowledged the effect it will have on access to abortion in this country. rightly so, but it is important to remember that this isn't a solitary issue. at the core of the abortion debate, is an inherent discussion on the self-autonomy of women's bodies. the republican's party disguises it's qualms with this autonomy as qualms on abortion, a procedure which they know draws up strong sentiments across political, socioeconomic, and racial lines. by creating legislature that bans abortion, these states are crafting a legal basis to go after any procedure regarding women's health. you may think this is point of view is extreme, but it's a process we've already seen unfold when alabama threatened the right to ivf earlier this year. banning abortion has never been the end goal, but simply a starting point.
do what you can to take care of your health. and if that means deleting anything that could comprise you, please do it. many of these apps have been instructed to share their data with the state and some already have. it is simply not worth the risk.
and please know that regardless how it may feel right now, there are doctors who stand with you. doctors who will work for you. if you are blessed with the ability to pick your healthcare provider, be intentional with it. find these doctors because they are the ones who will have your back more than any politicians ever will.
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juicebox72664 · 19 days ago
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Always
Knock knock knock.
“Osamu? You’ve been there for a while, you okay?” Came Chuuya’s concerned voice from the other side of the door.
Dazai knew if he didn’t respond Chuuya would assume he tried to kill himself.
So, doing his best—which was pretty damn good—to keep the shakiness out of his voice, he responds. “Yeah, sorry, had some trouble with the bandages.”
There was silence in the other side of the door, and then, “I can help.”
“No!” Dazai yells instantly, and he knows any chance he had at lying his way out of this won’t work anymore.
He was gonna try anyways.
He quickly opens a cabinet door and puts the pregnancy test in there, he’d tell Chuuya, but not right now; actually maybe he wouldn’t tell him at all.
“Osamu, I’m coming in.” Chuuya’s voice states, cutting straight through his thoughts.
Dazai quickly touches his face making sure he hadn’t cried at all, and then unlocks the door so his hotheaded husband doesn’t knock it down.
Chuuya’s eyes instantly trail over him, looking for any signs of injury, finding none he looks behind him at the bathroom; no blood or anything, and there weren’t any blades out.
“I think Chibi’s a worry wort.” Dazai says, putting on his mask to cover up the storm of emotions threatening to overwhelm him; and they would if Chuuya tried probing.
“Are you okay?” And of course he would.
Dazai felt like crying, because Chuuya wouldn’t look at him like that if he knew; he’d probably look at him with disgust.
Dazai brushed past him, making it seem like he wanted to sit down as he flops on the bed, laying on his back; but really he just didn’t want to look into Chuuya’s concerned eyes.
“Of course I’m okay.” He knows Chuuya won’t buy it, but he still tries.
Chuuya doesn’t say anything at first, just sits beside him in the bed. “You know you can tell me anything.” He remarks, taking Dazai’s hand in his.
For once Chuuya wasn’t wearing his gloves, and the cold metal of his ring was in stark contrast to the warmth of his palm.
“I know.” Dazai responds, cursing himself for the crack in his voice.
Chuuya squeezes his hand. “Then tell me what’s wrong.” He all but whispers, looking at Dazai with a love he didn’t deserve.
Dazai averts his gaze, and then, not feeling like it was enough, he covers his face with his arm that isn’t holding Chuuya’s hand. “I’m pregnant.” He admits quietly.
Chuuya doesn’t say anything, and Dazai’s too scared to look at his face.
Chuuya’s hand comes and removes his arm from his face, and much to Dazai’s surprise, there wasn’t disgust or anger, just love, and concern. “And you were scared to tell me?” He asks.
Asks as if he’d done something wrong.
Dazai shrugs, not knowing how to reply.
Not knowing how to put his emotions into words.
Chuuya presses a soft kiss to his forehead, “Are you okay?”
Dazai wanted to both laugh and cry, he was concerned about him, of course he was, he wasn’t even sure why he was so worried about Chuuya’s reaction anymore.
“I don’t know.” He admits, voice shaky.
Chuuya pulls him into a sitting position and holds him against him, running his fingers through his hair. “You can do whatever you want Osamu, I’ll make sure of it.”
Dazai felt his eyes fill with tears as he buries his face in Chuuya’s chest, why did he always have to know just what to say to bring him to tears?
“I don’t know what to do.” He sobs, clutching onto the gingers shirt desperately.
“Sh, that’s okay, you don’t have to decide right now, you can take as long as you want; I’ll be here.” He comforts softly.
“Promise?” He pleads.
“Isn’t that what our wedding vows were?” He asks with a chuckle. “I’m not going anywhere, and most certainly not because of this.”
“Even if I abort it?” He asks quietly.
“Even if you abort it.” He assures.
“What if I want to keep it?” He wonders, voice still shaky.
“Then you can keep it, and I’ll be right here.” Chuuya presses a kiss to the top of his head.
“I love you.” The brunette tells his husband, just wanting to hear it said back.
“I love you too, darling, always.” The shorter man tells him.
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paddysnuffles · 6 months ago
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Why I love Doctor Who's Space Babies episode (and you should too)
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Cute babies.
2. "Nobody grows up wrong. You are what you are and you are wonderful and magnificent."
3. Ruby: So the planet below wouldn't allow the babies to be stopped from being born, but wouldn't take care of them afterward? Jocelyn: Yes. Strange planet, I know. Ruby: Not that strange.
4. "They don't go and fetch refugees. That's the fate of every refugee in the universe. You physically have to turn up on someone else's shore."
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high-quality-tiktoks · 2 years ago
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Care about healthcare? You should care about whats happening in Idaho
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fordpinesmpreg · 8 months ago
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what if you wrote a timeford fic and it was mp- (gunshots)
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I’m back everybody
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agentthirsty · 2 months ago
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The lady going into labor while I'm Coming Out plays had me screaming that baby will be gay in the future no doubt about it but anyways moving on to the preview for next week nOT THE GODDAMN THREESOME BABY MYSTERY
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the-tenth-arcanum · 2 months ago
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I can't believe trump is winning the elections...
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There’s something very funny about Doctor Who suggesting that tumblr will be outdated by 3, maybe 4 generations come 2049.
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