Dystopian Utopia

Juxtapositions

138 notes

longreads:

A group of Marines discover they have breast cancer—a diagnosis that is rare in men, and even more startling given they all had previously lived in the same area, Camp Lejeune in North Carolina:

It all started with Mike Partain, a.k.a. Number One. A barrel-chested father of four with a goatee and a predilection for aviator sunglasses, Partain was born at Camp Lejeune, the North Carolina base where his father, a first lieutenant in the US Marine Corps, was stationed in the late 1960s. Now he lives in Tallahassee, Florida, where he makes his living as an insurance claims adjuster.
Five years ago Partain’s wife noticed a grape-size bump next to his right nipple. ‘I thought it was from an ingrown hair or something. I blew it off,’ he recalls. But a couple of weeks later he decided to get it checked out. When his doctor ordered a mammogram, he remembers, ‘a chill went down my spine.’ Then came a sonogram: Partain watched in amazement as an image emerged on the screen looking like one of the globular star clusters he knew as an astronomy hobbyist. ‘I never even knew men could get breast cancer!’ he says.

“The Marines’ Breast Cancer Epidemic.” — Florence Williams, Mother Jones
More from Mother Jones

longreads:

A group of Marines discover they have breast cancer—a diagnosis that is rare in men, and even more startling given they all had previously lived in the same area, Camp Lejeune in North Carolina:

It all started with Mike Partain, a.k.a. Number One. A barrel-chested father of four with a goatee and a predilection for aviator sunglasses, Partain was born at Camp Lejeune, the North Carolina base where his father, a first lieutenant in the US Marine Corps, was stationed in the late 1960s. Now he lives in Tallahassee, Florida, where he makes his living as an insurance claims adjuster.

Five years ago Partain’s wife noticed a grape-size bump next to his right nipple. ‘I thought it was from an ingrown hair or something. I blew it off,’ he recalls. But a couple of weeks later he decided to get it checked out. When his doctor ordered a mammogram, he remembers, ‘a chill went down my spine.’ Then came a sonogram: Partain watched in amazement as an image emerged on the screen looking like one of the globular star clusters he knew as an astronomy hobbyist. ‘I never even knew men could get breast cancer!’ he says.

“The Marines’ Breast Cancer Epidemic.” — Florence Williams, Mother Jones

More from Mother Jones

(via reagan-was-a-horrible-president)

Filed under breast cancer men north carolina Camp Lejeune

  1. purplemetoikos reblogged this from nomoretexasgovernorsforpresident
  2. thedustatdawn reblogged this from longreads
  3. loves-anodyne reblogged this from theemptybookoftides
  4. brasspistol reblogged this from theemptybookoftides and added:
    Whoa
  5. jingwencom reblogged this from motherjones
  6. awesomeocelot reblogged this from motherjones
  7. batchix reblogged this from aquapunk
  8. lilanth reblogged this from aquapunk
  9. descomic reblogged this from aquapunk
  10. aquapunk reblogged this from thepoliticalfreakshow
  11. dystopianutopiacom reblogged this from reagan-was-a-horrible-president
  12. kdclmedia reblogged this from motherjones
  13. flying-boars reblogged this from motherjones
  14. condoreav reblogged this from motherjones
  15. humboldtoctober reblogged this from motherjones
  16. haushinka reblogged this from motherjones
  17. notyetasurvivorbutnotavictim reblogged this from longreads
  18. millenniumiv reblogged this from lady-amalthea
  19. lady-amalthea reblogged this from reagan-was-a-horrible-president
  20. collectivejudas reblogged this from motherjones
  21. madeleinethomas reblogged this from motherjones
  22. buddhassecret reblogged this from motherjones
  23. localcreature reblogged this from motherjones
  24. cuhristeena reblogged this from truth-has-a-liberal-bias
  25. this-is-somestuff reblogged this from reagan-was-a-horrible-president
  26. armchairsoapbox reblogged this from motherjones and added:
    Article, especially conclusion, is very well-written and worth reading.
  27. kpbuick reblogged this from motherjones
  28. lightsofcanopus reblogged this from motherjones and added:
    Male breast cancer is extremely rare, and yes, like with all other cancers, may have an environmental component in...
  29. cimness reblogged this from motherjones
  30. benjaminldaniel reblogged this from motherjones