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Wednesday October 4, 2000


Media Silent On Ru-486’s Nazi Death Camp Pedigree

from https://www.newsmax.com
Oct. 2, 2000
Reprinted with permission

Lost in all the commentary on last week’s FDA approval of the abortion pill RU-486 is an inconvenient and extraordinarily chilling detail about the company that invented the drug, Rousell-Uclaf.

Rousell, based in France, developed RU-486 in the 1980s, and after extensive testing the French government approved it for use in 1988. But Rousell’s West German parent company, Hoechst AG, did not.

Hoechst had two problems with the idea of making easy abortions available to a mass market. Not only was abortion illegal in largely Catholic pre-unification West Germany, but RU-486 was sure to conjure up memories of the darkest chapter in German history – the Holocaust.

The chiefs at Hoechst AG, now one of the largest chemical companies in the world with over 145,000 employees, did not want their overseas customers to be reminded – or perhaps learn for the first time – about Hoescht’s direct link to the National Socialist (Nazi) death camps of World War II.

Hoechst itself was born of the Nuremberg War Tribunal, which disbanded its precursor, the Nazi chemical giant IG Farben. The tribunal convicted twelve Farben executives of war atrocities, including “crimes against humanity, murder, extermination and enslavement.”

Hoechst, Bayer and BASF became Farben’s direct postwar corporate descendants.

Farbenworks factories at Hoechst, Degesch and Leverkusen worked overtime producing toxic gases for the Third Reich, including the deadly agent Zyklon B – the very poison that was used to exterminate millions in Hitler’s gas chambers.

The Buna Rubber facility at Auschwitz was also part of Farbenworks’ Nazi operations, which even included a special corporate concentration camp at the site known as Monowitz. But Monowitz was just one of several slave labor camps operated by Hoechst’s corporate ancestor throughout the Nazi empire before Hitler’s defeat in 1945.

No wonder today’s pro-abortion journalists don’t want to remind their readers about the connection between America’s new abortion pill and the deadly history of the company that invented it.


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