@bluestein This may be out of your bailiwick but I don't know who else to contact.
Wellstar's closing downtown reminded me of Atlanta's long history of medical care.
When I was at GSU in the 70's there was an "infirmary" or dorm for nurses on Piedmont that was later closed.
I was aware because I met someone at GSU who had a room there.
When we lived in VA-Highland we were very aware of Grady, of course, because part of our property tax went for "Atl-Fulton County Hospital Authority."
As an Army Medic x-ray tech I once explored the notion of that
as a post-retirement job & at that time I got to interview Grady & have a tour.
Grady was later saved when a crisis galvanized a consortium of other metro hospitals to find salvation (lest all those poor people flood their ERs) & Emory became the final salvation.
My mother's final days were at A.G Rhodes, one of the best nursing homes in Atlanta which also happens to be non-profit with an impressive humanitarian history, a large endowment and smooth connections with Medicaid (essential for all long-term nursing care).
A web search turned up this interesting link about the history of Atlanta hospitals & other facilities. mdatl.com/2019/11/southe…
I'm tossing all this in your lap in case you or someone you know is interested in looking into the backstory of that Wellstar facility.
Something tells me that yet another closure of a badly-needed facility which I'm confident is overloaded with "charity care" is just another step in a long history in America of healthcare systems providing top-quality care to those with money and crumbs to those without.
• I get that the wheels of justice grind slowly, and that trump as used that to his advantage over the years, but is it likely that there will ever be an end to this? That he (& those who aided and abetted him) will ever be held accountable? Serious question from a non-attorney.
• "A wild card untethered to the law".....describes the 3 SCOTUS members Trump installed.
• We must remove “wild card” judges who ignore the law.
• are all items located during the search which implicate for other crimes still viable despite this review?
You are reading this thread from a very old Twitter account, deactivated over a decade ago, which somehow got picked up (I suspect by a hacker) and linked to my Google account by some mistake - probably mine.
When I first saw it my first instinct was to drop it and recover the account I have used for many years.
But in the confusion of backup passwords, email validations and phone texts I now somehow see my old @Hootsbudy links but cannot recover the use of that account.
None of my followers will now receive anything I post, but the real problem is not with Twitter.
When I attempted to "add an existing account" I ran into the ID problem which involves getting Google Chrome into the mix. And that's where my real problems are located.
I am having a hard time moving @Twitter and other accounts to a new Chromebook. The security systems are excellent to the point of impenetrable.
One problem - I have been web active for nearly two decades and have a multitude of footprints, including an old blog I lost years to a
phishing scam.
I also do not use a cell phone which makes texting a problem (other than email) although numbers can easily be sent via the land line which I do have.
That was used in the past a couple of times but apparently is no longer available.
I am posting this
thread on an old Twitter account I must have had long ago that someone (I suspect a troll or hacker) has grabbed or the bots just made a mistake.
I used my Twitter account for years in part because of the excellent private message feature. I have been in touch with a few