Susan Komen for the Cure to cut funds to Planned Parenthood

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Susan Komen for the Cure to cut funds to Planned Parenthood

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Feb 01, 2012 5:39 pm

fuckin' right to lifers....

Internet heats up over Komen's Planned Parenthood decision

Komen Foundation's decision to stop funding Planned Parenthood resulted in some people pulling support for the group and its fundraising efforts, such as races. (Brian Chilson / Associated Press)

February 1, 2012, 1:01 p.m.
The recent announcement from Susan G. Komen for the Cure to cut funds to Planned Parenthood has prompted lively discussions on public message boards, Twitter and Facebook arguing both for and against the decision.

Though anti-Komen sentiments still seem to be the majority, vocal supporters of the decision seemed to be gaining numbers Wednesday. In a story a day earlier, it was reported that Komen, a breast cancer awareness and research group, was cutting funding to Planned Parenthood for breast cancer exams and other breast-health programs. The group said its decision was based on a new rule that doesn't allow support of organizations that are under government investigation.

But detractors are crying foul, saying Komen's position is purely political.

On Twitter, @rick_vosper said, "#Komen's position is perilously close to 'women who visit #PPlandParenthood might get abortions, so they don't deserve cancer screening.' "

Said @SassyEditrix: I'm really tired of living in a country where providing comprehensive women's healthcare is treated like a crime."

"Let's say it like it is," said @legaleagle. "#Komen didn't 'cave' to the right wing. They are part of it." Wrote @Dcdebbie: "Pink is the new wire hanger."

Americans United for Life, a national anti-abortion organization, tweeted this in support of Komen: "Please RT if you want to thank @komenforthecure for dropping funding to Planned Parenthood!"

And @tomf80 said, "@komenforthecure Thank you for ending the support for abortionist Planned Parenthood. Your decision will save many live(s)."

On the public forums on the Komen site, men and women were still voicing their strong feelings a day after the news was released. On the Sound Off! board, Amapolla wrote, "I withdraw all support from your organization. Your decision not to support Planned Parenthood is a decision not to help women in need. Anyone who agrees with your decision should look beyond the name and go to the services Planned Parenthood provides. I urge you to reconsider. I applaud the people who are voicing their displeasure both in written and in monetary form."

"I, too, will no longer support SGK," said Jennifer Rose. "It is a sad day when politics overshadows the need of women to get the help and access to doctors that they need."

Among those who applauded Komen's decision was klm, who wrote, "Thank you for severing ties with Planned Parenting. I am now willing to offer my financial support of your organization." Said God_is_Good, "There are many people who SUPPORT you in this decision. Those of us who have lost a loved one to cancer know the frailty of life. That is why I stand up and speak out AGAINST abortion and PP -- why I thank you and ask you to STAY STRONG in this decision. Let's end ALL funding of Planned Parenthood by the end of 2012. Keep fighting."

By Wednesday at noon Pacific time, Komen's Facebook page had more than 3,000 comments to a post explaining its position to cut funding to Planned Parenthood. Among them was one from Molly Holder who wrote, "Well, there goes the 'Think Pink' and the Komen brand. No one with a brain is going to come back to you after this. Course, it appears that's not the demographic you're going for, I guess."

Said Marie Bober, "Unexcusable to make this political. We want care for everyone, not excluding those who need care from Planned Parenthood because they have limited means."

On the pro-Komen side, there was this from Kacie Cole: "Why are we even having this discussion. It appears that all the baby murder supporters have enough to support PP themselves. Since this seems to be the case, why are you guys so mad at SGK for pulling support. After all, the money they make will still be used for the same purpose. It just won't go to fund abortions too. YAY SGK!"

"I have stayed away from the Susan G. Komen organization because of its connection to Planned Parenthood," said Dawn Franzen. "Now I can fully support it. Thank you for taking this courageous stand for the total health of women. One cannot heal a woman if she is never allowed to live. Thank you!!"

We have a feeling this won't go away anytime soon.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
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Re: Susan Komen for the Cure to cut funds to Planned Parenth

Postby wordspeak2 » Wed Feb 01, 2012 5:42 pm

That's sad. Planned Parenthood is good, even if it has eugenics roots.
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Re: Susan Komen for the Cure to cut funds to Planned Parenth

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Feb 01, 2012 5:51 pm

Planned Parenthood gave me free pap smears for years...gave me free birth control for years, never once gave me an abortion....far from it....they saved my life...they saved my daughters' life.... fuck these right wing fascists assholes...I'm so pissed about this, I'm in tears
Last edited by seemslikeadream on Wed Feb 01, 2012 5:57 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Susan Komen for the Cure to cut funds to Planned Parenth

Postby Pele'sDaughter » Wed Feb 01, 2012 5:53 pm

This made my blood boil. PP is so important when one doesn't have insurance or money. I went there back in the day and my d-i-l went there when she found out she was pregnant in order to get a required official pregnancy test in order to apply for Medicaid. They definitely do not push abortion, and they treat all the patients with respect.

One thing about these effing religious conservatives. Once that child is born, they want nothing more to do with him/her and would happily cut entitlements until the child starves to death. I can't imagine more callous, uncaring, hypocritical sob's.
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Re: Susan Komen for the Cure to cut funds to Planned Parenth

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Feb 01, 2012 6:22 pm

Tell the board of Susan G. Komen for a Cure: Don't throw Planned Parenthood under the bus!
Image
The Republican plan to defund Planned Parenthood is working -- but if we take action now we may be able to stop the latest attack on women's right to health care.

It was just announced that Susan G. Komen for a Cure, America's largest charity to fight breast cancer, will no longer fund a program that provides free or low-cost breast cancer screenings for millions of women who get their health care from Planned Parenthood.1 This is a huge blow.

In abruptly pulling nearly $1,000,000 in funding for breast cancer screenings, the Susan G. Komen foundation cited a sham "investigation" into Planned Parenthood launched by Republican Rep. Cliff Stearns, one of the most militant anti-choice members of Congress.2 We have to stand up and fiercely defend Planned Parenthood -- and show Susan G. Komen and others who are considering caving to the radical right that we will not let extremists defund health care for women that includes reproductive services.

Tell the board of Susan G. Komen: Don't throw Planned Parenthood under the bus! Don't cave to anti-woman extremists and cut off funding for breast cancer screenings at the largest provider of health care for women.

You may recall the so-called investigation was launched by Rep. Stearns last fall after Congress failed to pass bill after bill to defund reproductive health services to women. Stearns' investigation, which was challenged by over 100,000 CREDO Action members, was nothing more than a blatant attempt to tie up Planned Parenthood's staff and resources in a politically motivated investigation. And now its being used by anti-woman activists to go after Planned Parenthood's non-governmental funding.

It's clear that Planned Parenthood and its affiliates have not broken the law and didn't deserve the investigation launched against them. The Department of Health and Human Services Inspector General along with state Medicaid programs already audit Planned Parenthood. These audits have not revealed any pattern of behavior that would warrant Congressional investigation.

Millions of women support the Susan G. Komen charity through its Race for the Cure and other programs to fight breast cancer, many of whom support Planned Parenthood and are clients of its clinics. But now the board of Susan G. Komen, is supporting the Republicans' attacks on Planned Parenthood by citing the politically motivated Congressional investigation as the basis for its decision to defund Planned Parenthood.

Because many of the women who support Susan G. Komen also support Planned Parenthood, a massive and immediate pushback from us could make them reverse their decision.

Tell the board of Susan G. Komen: Don't throw Planned Parenthood under the bus! Don't cave to anti-woman extremists and cut off funding for breast cancer screenings at the largest provider of health care for women.

It is appalling that Susan G. Komen would end their funding of a program that benefited millions of women who could otherwise not afford breast cancer screenings just because the health care provider is Planned Parenthood. But this is not an isolated event. It's part of a devastatingly effective strategy by extremists on the right to destroy progressive institutions.

After the demise of ACORN, Planned Parenthood has become Enemy Number One for Republicans in the increasingly extremist House of Representatives. We can't allow Susan G. Komen to cave to these extremists and end its relationship with Planned Parenthood, giving Rep. Stearns and his anti-woman allies in Congress a big win.

Republicans hoped that by instigating this investigation, without a shred of evidence to support it, they could weaken Planned Parenthood. And if we don't fight back and reverse this decision that is exactly what will happen.

Tell the board of Susan G. Komen: Don't throw Planned Parenthood under the bus! Don't cave to anti-woman extremists and cut off funding for breast cancer screenings at the largest provider of health care for women.

CREDO is proud to be the largest corporate funder of Planned Parenthood. Every time the rightwing attacks Planned Parenthood, we will be there to defend them. Thanks for joining us in this fight.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Susan Komen for the Cure to cut funds to Planned Parenth

Postby Project Willow » Wed Feb 01, 2012 7:17 pm

I'm not surprised. Komen screwed over a friend of mine recently. We had to do our own little fundraiser for her so she wouldn't be evicted during recovery from a double mastectomy. It went something like this, Komen said they'd cover her but then backed out, after her surgery.
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Re: Susan Komen for the Cure to cut funds to Planned Parenth

Postby Nordic » Wed Feb 01, 2012 8:34 pm

Komen has alkso been running around blowing through contributor money suing anyone and everyone from using the term "for the cure" in their names.

This was a controversy a few months ago. Not as big as this one, but demonstrated what kind of scumbags have taken it over.
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Re: Susan Komen for the Cure to cut funds to Planned Parenth

Postby Simulist » Wed Feb 01, 2012 11:55 pm

Pele'sDaughter wrote:One thing about these effing religious conservatives. Once that child is born, they want nothing more to do with him/her and would happily cut entitlements until the child starves to death. I can't imagine more callous, uncaring, hypocritical sob's.

Neither can I.

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Re: Susan Komen for the Cure to cut funds to Planned Parenth

Postby Twyla LaSarc » Thu Feb 02, 2012 3:03 am

I posted this on another board in response to a litany of Komen's good deeds.

http://thinkbeforeyoupink.org/?page_id=1454
Public Relations and Cancer

by Judy Brady (article appeared in the October 1998 issue of The Source)

Excerpted with permission from the Women’s Cancer Resource Center’s Center News, Fall 1997



Breast Cancer Awareness Month (BCAM) is here. For those who don’t know, BCAM is a very slick public relations campaign designed by Zeneca’s once-parent company, Imperial Chemical Industries. Zeneca, now an independent chemical/pharmaceutical corporation, has been joined by many other companies who have discovered that aligning themselves with the breast cancer movement is good for their public image and thus, their profit margins. Zeneca maintains control and final veto power over the financing and publicity of BCAM and its message: raise more money for research and get a mammogram. It’s a smooth move for an outfit like Zeneca. These folks are the fourth largest producer of pesticides in the U.S., the manufacturer of the most widely prescribed drug for breast cancer (tamoxifen, also listed under Proposition 65 as a carcinogen), and now sole owner of Salick, Inc., a management company which runs a chain of cancer care centers. With BCAM it’s got breast cancer all wrapped up in the pretty little pink ribbon. And it gets thousands of well-meaning women to wear that pink ribbon, converting those women into tools for the cheapest public-relations masquerade ever designed.

The principal purpose of BCAM is to divert attention from the causes of the cancer epidemic (like pesticides produced by Zeneca and ionizing radiation from Hanford’s government-owned nuclear reactors) and focus instead on that which is profitable for the industry (e.g., drugs and mammograms). Since this ploy has been highly successful, other industries and organizations have followed suit and joined in the chorus of denial. After all, you’ve got to protect your investments.

Here are a few examples:

It is finally coming to light that Americans have been irradiated to a much greater extent than most of us have known. For instance, the 1986 Chernobyl accident is by conservative estimate responsible for a 30% increase in leukemias among American children.1 When my first child was born in Iowa (25 years earlier), the doctors were anxious that I breastfeed instead of using a bottle because they feared that formula had been contaminated by Strontium 90 — fallout from nuclear bomb testing. Now we find that people as far away as the East Coast states were also exposed. But the nuclear industry has a powerful friend in the American Cancer Society (ACS). One of the organization’s vice presidents, Dr. Clark Heath, who can always be counted upon to defend industry, says, “I would not be greatly concerned.”2
We in California are still facing the possibility of a nuclear waste dump in Ward Valley, which will definitely leak and absolutely guarantee many more cancers a few years down the road.
Harvard University, which enjoys a reputation as one of the world’s most prestigious academic institutions, recently released from the Harvard Center for Cancer Prevention a report on cancer which made the astonishing announcement that only 2% of cancers were due to “environmental pollution.” That’s puzzling until you see the list of funders for the Harvard Department of Health Policy and Management which reads like the Fortune 500 of industrial polluters: Chemical Manufacturers Association, Chevron, Dow Chemical, DuPont, Monsanto, Texaco, etc.3

There are more ways than one to cover up the causes of cancer and protect industry profits. The ACS does it by endorsing products for money. They recently made a $4 million deal with a nicotine-patch company and Florida orange juice companies for the use of their name in commercials. The orange juice commercials tout the wonders of Vitamin C, but needless to say, the ACS never supported Linus Pauling when he proposed that it could prevent cancer. And there is, of course, no mention of the pesticides used in Florida orange groves, Monsanto’s Round-Up (glyphosate, which produces cancer in test animals) being the most common.

Then there’s the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation, which indiscriminately accepts money from polluting industries.4 Every year in October they stage the multimillion dollar “Race for the Cure” in cities all around the country. The event promotes mammograms despite the fact that even so well-known a breast cancer specialist as Susan Love does not advocate screening mammograms for premenopausal women.5 There is never a word about the causes of cancer in any of the promotional materials for the race.

In April the Komen Foundation is going one better; this year they are staging the “Drive for the Cure.” In a deal made with BMW, the Komen Foundation hopes to raise $1 million. In each city in nearly every single state, guests will be invited to test drive specially marked BMW cars, and for each mile driven the Komen Foundation will get one dollar. True to form, the Komen Foundation ignores the fact that cars and cancer are like matches and fire—one is sure to produce a certain amount of the other. The chemical benzo(a)-pyrene is part of the exhaust of cars, and it is one of the most powerful carcinogens known. That same chemical, present also in cigarette smoke, has been isolated as the element which causes cells in the lungs of smokers to become cancerous, and it undoubtedly figures in the lung cancers of nonsmokers, largely because of gas-powered vehicles. It was connected directly to breast cancer by the Peralta Cancer Research Institute in the 1980s.

Unfortunately, some grassroots cancer groups, often chronically underfunded, are also lured into overlooking cancer causes by the promise of a few more greenbacks. For instance, the Breast Cancer Fund (which lists Chevron as one of their corporate supporters) is hosting a fundraising golf tournament (in October, naturally) at the Crystal Springs Golf Course. They seem to have forgotten—perhaps they never knew?—that breast cancer among women golfers has become a serious issue because golf courses are routinely soaked with herbicides and pesticides, ten of which, according to scientists with the National Coalition Against the Misuse of Pesticides, are known carcinogens.6

At the First World Conference on Breast Cancer in Kingston, Ontario, a French corporation, Rhône-Poulenc Rorer, had a booth among the breast cancer groups. Rhône-Poulenc Rorer is one of the largest chemical corporations in the world, specializing in the production of organochlorine pesticides. They have one plant in West Virginia identical to the Union Carbide plant in Bhopal, India—which leaked thousands of pounds of the deadly chemical methyl isocynate into the air 11 years ago—and the West Virginia plant is the only one in the world that has taken no safety measures to protect the surrounding community.7 But Rhône-Poulenc Rorer has given money to the National Alliance of Breast Cancer Organizations. Allowing them a presence at the conference in Kingston was a coup for their public image.

The “art” of public relations creates an effective cover-up for the dirty practices of Rhône-Poulenc Rorer, Zeneca, government, industry and others evading questions of primary cancer causation in favor of profits.

1 British Medical Journal, 1997; 314:1202.

2 “Nuclear Test ‘Hot Spots’ Probably All Over Country,” San Francisco Chronicle, July 26, 1996.

3 Crowley, Ellen, “Follow the Money,” Women’s Community Cancer Project Newsletter, Spring 1997.

4 Including Chlorine Chemical Council, a trade association for the chemical/pesticide industries.

5 “Mammography Madness,” Women’s Health Advocate Newsletter, May 1997.

6 Porter, Jerry, “LPGA Learns Realities of Breast Cancer,” USA Today, Nov. 7, 1991.

7 A letter from the Cancer Prevention Coalition to the Women’s Environment and Development Organization, Feb. 24, 1995.
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Re: Susan Komen for the Cure to cut funds to Planned Parenth

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Feb 02, 2012 10:30 am

Image

I have a vagina as well as a more PG-friendly pair of breast....Breasts YES Vaginas NO!


For instance, Komen allowed KFC to sell “pink ribbon” buckets of fried chicken, even though it was obvious that KFC was trying to distract from scientific evidence showing that a diet high in saturated fat is linked to breast cancer. They don’t want anti-choicers tarnishing their brand of chaste, you-go-girl health with lurid right-wing fantasies. The dirty girls they paint as the only kind who need below-the belt-healthcare, and I imagine Komen fears its corporate sponsors want it even less.

.....

This all means that American women have the power to vote with their dollars. The pink ribbon on a product used to symbolize health, safety, and a general pro-woman attitude. Now, for increasing numbers of women, it symbolizes capitulation to the belief that women don’t deserve healthcare that addresses all their needs, not just those above the belt. We need to let corporations know that if they want to market to women, they have to market to the whole woman, the one who has a vagina as well as a more PG-friendly pair of breasts.


For the same reason, Bank of America has a strong need to appeal not just to women, but specifically to the stable, often married women that make up the majority of organizers and runners for Komen’s Race for the Cure. Women tend to handle more of the household finances than men, meaning that anyone trying to get families to switch banks needs to address themselves directly to wives and mothers. Enter the pink ribbons.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Susan Komen for the Cure to cut funds to Planned Parenth

Postby crikkett » Thu Feb 02, 2012 10:31 am

Nordic wrote:Komen has alkso been running around blowing through contributor money suing anyone and everyone from using the term "for the cure" in their names.

This was a controversy a few months ago. Not as big as this one, but demonstrated what kind of scumbags have taken it over.

Yes, that's hardly charitable, is it?
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Re: Susan Komen for the Cure to cut funds to Planned Parenth

Postby sunny » Thu Feb 02, 2012 11:03 am

Choose love
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Re: Susan Komen for the Cure to cut funds to Planned Parenth

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Feb 02, 2012 11:56 am

.

Little to add, except that this is also high on my Rage Radar for the day, week and month. (#Anger: Trending) What stupidity would compel them to start wrecking their own work like this?
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Re: Susan Komen for the Cure to cut funds to Planned Parenth

Postby sunny » Thu Feb 02, 2012 12:52 pm

Are they wrecking their work or showing their hand? Did SGK have no idea who they hired for VP?:

Susan G. Komen Foundation Begins Backpedaling for the Cure

When Susan G. Komen for the Cure announced that they'd no longer be providing support to Planned Parenthood, many of its supporters smelled a right wing political agenda at work and took to the group's Facebook page to express their disappointment. After working tirelessly to delete negative comments from the page for several hours yesterday, the foundation has released a statement insisting that their decision to defund Planned Parenthood wasn't political, because they're not a political organization. Bullshit.

Komen's absolutely a political organization, and one of their most recent political moves was to hire as it's Vice President of Communications one Karen Handel, a Sarah Palin-endorsed, rabidly anti-choice failed gubernatorial candidate from Georgia. Even though the services that Komen grants support at Planned Parenthood are breast exams for poor women, Handel was vocally in favor of defunding the organization as a candidate. In addition, Komen's founder Nancy Brinker was a major donor to George W. Bush.


In spite of the fact that it's clear Komen for the Cure has prioritized fetuses over women, they're in damage control mode now, insisting in the face of evidence to the contrary that their actions are the result of high-minded concern for women and not mythology-based concern for ideology. An update from their Facebook page reads,

At Susan G. Komen for the Cure, the women we serve are our highest priority in everything we do. Last year, we invested $93 million in community health programs, which included 700,000 mammograms. Additionally, we began an initiative to further strengthen our grants program to be even more outcomes-driven and to allow for even greater investments in programs that directly serve women. We also implemented more stringent eligibility and performance criteria to support these strategies. While it is regrettable when changes in priorities and policies affect any of our grantees, such as a longstanding partner like Planned Parenthood, we must continue to evolve to best meet the needs of the women we serve and most fully advance our mission.


It is critical to underscore that the women we serve in communities remain our priority. We are working directly with Komen Affiliates to ensure there is no interruption or gaps in services for women who need breast health screening and services.


Grant making decisions are not about politics—our priority is and always will be the women we serve. Making this issue political or leveraging it for fundraising purposes would be a disservice to women.

Facebook users aren't buying it. In response to Komen's weak defense, one detractor wrote,

I will never donate another dime to nor participate in any SGK-related event after this cowardly decision to cave to right wing extremists. Shame on you for saying you support women's health when you pull a stunt like this.

Another wrote,

Nothing you say will change your decision, and now nothing I buy will support it either.

And another,

If your priority was really the women you serve and not to promote the anti-abortion agenda of those on your board, you wouldn't have stopped funding Planned Parenthood. PP saves women's lives on a regular basis and consistently promotes women's health, including catching breast cancer as early as possible. If this weren't about politics, these grants would never have come into question.

As of this post's writing, there have been over 1,000 comments on that Komen post alone, most of them negative, many of them promising to withdraw financial support, which, according to whoever wrote Komen's defense, is "hurting women."


With this maneuver, though, Komen for the Cure's anti-choice political agenda appears to have backfired. Planned Parenthood's been flooded with support and promises for contributions from supporters. The organization doesn't yet have figures on how much money flowed in from donors over the last 24 hours, but we'll keep you up to speed.


In the meantime, the family planning organization has launched a Breast Health Emergency Fund to assure that services for low income women aren't interrupted, because unlike Susan G Komen For the Cure, cancer doesn't care if you're poor or pro-choice. Link



JadeMorey Jade Morey
Just like a pro-abortion group to turn a cancer orgs decision into a political bomb to throw. Cry me a freaking river.
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Re: Susan Komen for the Cure to cut funds to Planned Parenth

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Feb 02, 2012 1:01 pm

Top Susan G. Komen Official Resigned Over Planned Parenthood Cave-In
By Jeffrey Goldberg

Feb 2 2012, 9:28 AM ET 137

Sources with direct knowledge of the Koman decision-making process said recent policies were adopted specifically to cut funding to Planned Parenthood.

KomenCure-Post.jpg

An entirely avoidable, and deeply regrettable, controversy has been raging this week over the decision by the (formerly highly esteemed) Susan G. Komen For the Cure foundation, the world's leading breast-cancer research advocacy group, to cut its support for Planned Parenthood, which used Komen dollars (about $600,000 annually) to pay for breast-screening exams for poor people. (The Atlantic's Nicholas Jackson has an excellent summary of the controversy so far.)

Komen, the marketing juggernaut that brought the world the ubiquitous pink ribbon campaign, says it cut-off Planned Parenthood because of a newly adopted foundation rule prohibiting it from funding any group that is under formal investigation by a government body. (Planned Parenthood is being investigated by Rep. Cliff Stearns, an anti-abortion Florida Republican, who says he is trying to learn if the group spent public money to provide abortions.)

But three sources with direct knowledge of the Komen decision-making process told me that the rule was adopted in order to create an excuse to cut-off Planned Parenthood. (Komen gives out grants to roughly 2,000 organizations, and the new "no-investigations" rule applies to only one so far.) The decision to create a rule that would cut funding to Planned Parenthood, according to these sources, was driven by the organization's new senior vice-president for public policy, Karen Handel, a former gubernatorial candidate from Georgia who is staunchly anti-abortion and who has said that since she is "pro-life, I do not support the mission of Planned Parenthood." (The Komen grants to Planned Parenthood did not pay for abortion or contraception services, only cancer detection, according to all parties involved.) I've tried to reach Handel for comment, and will update this post if I speak with her.

Three sources told me the organization's top public health official, Mollie Williams, resigned in protest immediately following the Komen board's decision to cut off Planned Parenthood.

The decision, made in December, caused an uproar inside Komen. Three sources told me that the organization's top public health official, Mollie Williams, resigned in protest immediately following the Komen board's decision to cut off Planned Parenthood. Williams, who served as the managing director of community health programs, was responsible for directing the distribution of $93 million in annual grants. Williams declined to comment when I reached her yesterday on whether she had resigned her position in protest, and she declined to speak about any other aspects of the controversy.

But John Hammarley, who until recently served as Komen's senior communications adviser and who was charged with managing the public relations aspects of Komen's Planned Parenthood grant, said that Williams believed she could not honorably serve in her position once Komen had caved to pressure from the anti-abortion right. "Mollie is one of the most highly respected and ethical people inside the organization, and she felt she couldn't continue under these conditions," Hammarley said. "The Komen board of directors are very politically savvy folks, and I think over time they thought if they gave in to the very aggressive propaganda machine of the anti-abortion groups, that the issue would go away. It seemed very short-sighted to me."

Hammarley explained that the Planned Parenthood issue had vexed Komen for some time. "About a year ago, a small group of people got together inside the organization to talk about what the options were, what would be the ramifications of staying the course, or of telling our affiliates they can't fund Planned Parenthood, or something in-between." He went on, "As we looked at the ramifications of ceasing all funding, we felt it would be worse from a practical standpoint, from a public relations standpoint, and from a mission standpoint. The mission standpoint is, 'How could we abandon our commitment to the screening work done by Planned Parenthood?'" But the Komen board made the decision despite the recommendation of the organization's professional staff to keep funding Planned Parenthood.

Hammarley was laid off by Komen last year as part of a reorganization of the group's media division, but he says he has no bitter feelings toward the group: "This organization has saved lives and raised consciousness all over the world. It's an extraordinarily successful story, and I couldn't find a single bad word to say about its work. But it has had some growing pains in its politics and we see that with the Planned Parenthood story."

He called the controversy over Planned Parenthood funding "a burr in the saddle of Komen, but it withstood the issue for years and years." Hammarley said the issue became newly urgent after Handel was brought on last year. "The internal debate on a senior level rose in the past eight months or so, coinciding with her hiring."

Another source directly involved with Komen's management activities told me that when the organization's leaders learned of the Stearns investigation, they saw an opportunity. "The cart came before the horse in this case," said the source, who spoke to me on condition of anonymity. "The rule was created to give the board of directors the excuse to stop the funding of Planned Parenthood. It was completely arbitrary. If they hadn't come up with this particular rule, they would have come up with something else in order to separate themselves from Planned Parenthood."

Komen officials have denied that the decision has had anything to do with external pressure. In an internal Komen memorandum I obtained entitled "Updated Granting Criteria/Reactive Statement and Talking Points," distributed in December, Komen officials deny to their employees that politics had anything to do with the decision. The memo, written as a Q&A, reads in part:

Q(uestion) 7: Is Komen giving into pressure from the Catholic Church/anti-abortion groups/the political right in making this change?

A(nswer) 7: Komen's decision to fund ANY grant is based on our mission priorities, a thorough community assessment, and strict eligibility and performance standards. Our granting criteria reflect our dedication to our mission and our consistent effort to invest our donors' dollars responsibly in support of our efforts to end breast cancer.

Q8: Planned Parenthood provides health services in many of the nation's poorest communities. How does your new policy align with your mission of serving women who lack resources to pay for important breast health services?

A8: Susan G. Komen is deeply committed to providing breast health services to women throughout the U.S. It is our belief that where a woman lives should not determine whether she lives. Komen provided funds for 700,000 breast screenings last year alone, and provided financial and social support to another 100,000 women, as part of our $93 million investment in education, public health outreach and service to vulnerable women last year alone. That work will continue. We believe these new standards will further enhance the integrity of our granting process and strengthen our overall community health program.

Another memo, this one from Elizabeth Thompson, the president of Komen, outlines to employees the new grant-making criteria:

In order to align the terms of the grant contract with our grant eligibility criteria and to ensure that our granting meets the highest standards, several important updates will become effective January 1, 2012. Specifically:

Currently, a Komen grant may be terminated if, among other things, the grantee loses or changes its tax exempt status, is barred from receiving federal or state funds, or if we learn of any financial and/or administrative improprieties. Going forward, these same standards will now also be used in determining eligibility for Komen grants.

Further, should Komen become aware that an applicant or its affiliates are under formal investigation for financial or administrative improprieties by local, state or federal authorities, the applicant will be ineligible to receive a grant. An organization may regain its eligibility once the investigation is concluded if the organization and its related affiliates are cleared of any wrongdoing.

This last condition, of course, is troubling on its face. Any legislator or prosecutor opposed to any aspect of a breast-cancer-care organization's work could affect its Komen funding merely by announcing the opening of an investigation. (Please read this Atlantic piece by Linda Hirshman for more on the dangerous politics of this decision.) The whole episode is troubling, and quite sad, because it will inevitably affect Komen's ability to do its work, which is of paramount importance to the cause of women's health.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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