Ok, why is this worth posting, though? The article is from 2017, and it's talking about something that happened in the thirties. Not saying it was a bad thing but is it even relevant, right now?
"BY LUCY DIAVOLO
SEPTEMBER 20, 2017"
"On May 6, 1933, Nazi demonstrators raided the libraries of the Institut für Sexualwissenschaft, a German name that roughly translates to the Institute of Sexology. The Institute was a privately operated research space for studies of human sexuality. More than 20,000 books were taken from shelves and burned days later in the streets by Nazi youth groups."
Ok, why is this worth posting, though? The article is from 2017, and it's talking about something that happened in the thirties. Not saying it wasn't a bad thing but is it even relevant, right now?
"BY LUCY DIAVOLO
SEPTEMBER 20, 2017"
"On May 6, 1933, Nazi demonstrators raided the libraries of the Institut für Sexualwissenschaft, a German name that roughly translates to the Institute of Sexology. The Institute was a privately operated research space for studies of human sexuality. More than 20,000 books were taken from shelves and burned days later in the streets by Nazi youth groups."
Ok, why is this worth posting, though? The article is from 2017, and it's talking about something that happened in the thirties. Not saying it was a bad thing but is it even relevant, right now?
"BY LUCY DIAVOLO
SEPTEMBER 20, 2017"
"On May 6, 1933, Nazi demonstrators raided the libraries of the Institut für Sexualwissenschaft, a German name that roughly translates to the Institute of Sexology. The Institute was a privately operated research space for studies of human sexuality. More than 20,000 books were taken from shelves and burned days later in the streets by Nazi youth groups."
Ok, why is this worth posting, though? The article is from 2017, and it's talking about something that happened in the thirties. Not saying it wasn't a bad thing but is it even relevant, right now?
"BY LUCY DIAVOLO
SEPTEMBER 20, 2017"
"On May 6, 1933, Nazi demonstrators raided the libraries of the Institut für Sexualwissenschaft, a German name that roughly translates to the Institute of Sexology. The Institute was a privately operated research space for studies of human sexuality. More than 20,000 books were taken from shelves and burned days later in the streets by Nazi youth groups."