Posted on 08/14/2013 8:01:14 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
"Ow. Brain no work."
“It isn’t a quality life” is the liberal answer. “Can’t afford it” is another response.
Yet when it comes to a lifetime sentence in an 8’x10’ prison cell, it is “preferable” to the “cruel and inhumane” punishment of a death sentence.
Stalinists lie. Always.
I have a friend who was in near total paralysis after having a major stroke. It took him several weeks to be able to open (and close) his eyes. He could also move one hand (including make a variety of hand gestures). He had some difficulty moving his arm and eventually with muscle atrophy, he lost use of his hand.
I have inquired of friends how he is today (years later) but no one will respond and it seems they are afraid to learn how he lives in care.
He may go “crazy” from his situation after a prolonged period but he was not brain dead.
{insert “FDA Tested on Joe Biden” punchline here}
Had three good days with him before he passed away. He had served 4 US Presidents in ways most of us would never know.
Folks write off the elderly way too easily. Some have good days and bad days, but each day is precious. And each day you give to them is one less year of regrets.
wish this available before the murdered terry schiavo
It was. It just wasn’t available to her. Her parents petitioned the court to have one done, but Greer denied it on the grounds that it was experimental. My husband had one after his stroke in 2008. It was routine at that time.
“I can’t imagine anything more frightening than being conscious trapped inside a body in a vegetative state.”
My husband died of brain cancer. It was a progressive degeneration of his body. Toward the end, his body was paralyzed but he was still able to communicate by blinking his eyes. Then, that capability went away, but I knew he could still hear. Hearing is the last capability to cease functioning.
His mother and brothers stopped visiting when he couldn’t talk and he lasted weeks after that. His sister and I were the only ones who would go see him after he couldn’t talk. It was terrible to see him slowly die but I was there every day and I knew he was aware I was there. My pain watching that was nothing compared to his and that’s what I concentrated on - I would never have left him alone.
Abolishing the death penalty, in my opinion, is just one step along the way to abolishing prisons. Once the death penalty goes, the new target will become life without parole. Then life sentences, and so on.
It’s not a principle. It’s an agenda.
judge greer the husband and his attorney will rot in hell.
the evil btwn these men is mind boggling.
That made my screen go blurry.
“That made my screen go blurry.”
Mine did, too, when I wrote it. It happens every time I think of that terrible time in 2011.
May God bless you.
He was blessed to have such a faithful, devoted wife.
If you have ever eaten a Pringles potato chip, he was the engineer that developed the process to make them all look alike and stack in the tube. See, he touched your life.
If you live in Texas, he wrote the law that the Texas legislature passed that determines how you vote gets counted at the end of the day in the central counting room of your county. Every county has to use his law when choosing people to work in central counting so each party is represented. His law also determines who will be the judge and alternate judge in central counting.
See post 17.
This has been known for a long time, that some are alert and others are not.
I live in Texas and love Pringles, too!
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