Posted on 01/17/2006 7:07:26 AM PST by SoFloFreeper
BREAKING ON THE AP WIRE:
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court has upheld Oregon's one-of-a-kind physician-assisted suicide law, rejecting a Bush administration attempt to punish doctors who help terminally ill patients die.
So true.
All satanic powers involve grasping for the power of God.
As our nation treads down that road, we cannot claim rights from the God we do not respect.
Smoking is not legal for the PURPOSE of killing people.
Cause and effect. One could argue about that for much harder drugs as well, but imagine if they tried to legalize something like PCP or heroin.
Who gets to decide what the patient's wish is? As we saw with Terri Schiavo, it isn't always the patient who decides. A rogue judge can easily decide that a patient wants to commit suicide, even when there is strong evidence against such a ruling.
That much is clear.
If a state can overrule the right to life, it can overrule the right to every expression of liberty, and soon will.
Let me ask you, who do you believe possess that "right to life"? And who's life? You can only have a right to life if it is actually your own, if it belongs to someone else then it is THEIR right to your life, which is hence not a right for an individual at all.
Your attempt to associate American prolifers and Christians with the mullahs is a contemptible one.
The Islamists have no regard for the right to life and for liberty, whereas Christianity is the source of respect for life and liberty.
All satanic powers involve grasping for the power of God.
As our nation treads down that road, we cannot claim rights from the God we do not respect.
States do that all the time when they tell you have to keep your life whether or not you want to. So it becomes the state's life, and neither the person's or God's life. They become God in a sense, which is quite a scary thing IMHO.
By reading the Bible YOU STUPID MORON
We all intrinsically know that our lives belong to God. It's self-evident.
Unfortunately, humanists think THEY are god, and the statists think the state is...
Speaking from someone who is always in pain and suffers from depression what I might want one day may not be the same as next week. Things like this always start out one way then change and the next thing you know anybody but you is the one making the decision if you should die. Birth control was suppose to make abortions go down?
Absolutely right...and, sadly Justice Thomas' dissent notes that the scope of federal power under the Controlled Substances Act is "sweeping and troubling" (i.e. an unconstitutional infringement on an area that belongs with the states) but that is "water over the dam now"
Thomas' opinion is the most illuminating again as he notes (with some obvious bemusement) that most of the same Justices holding that assisted is a matter for the states held, just 7 months ago in the Raich case, that the federal government had the authority to criminalize purely intrastate medical marijuana...
Remember, if Algore had been President when 9/11 happened, he'd still be negotiating the size of the conference table with the Taliban and Oregon would be a black, smoking pit.
Hey, isn't that what Oregon is anyway?
I do hope Kennedy, Souter, Ginsburg, Stevens and her little friend retire there soon.
Heck, one could argue that everything, in one way or another, leads to our death. Death is the inevitable result of birth. The second we take our first breath, it's downhill from there. ;-)
Back to the point. The "Death with Dignity" law of Oregon has one purpose, and it's not a side-effect: death for an innocent person. Death codified in the law. Death regulated by the state.
It's simply wrong and dangerous to open that door.
She whispered that in your ear, I'm sure...
Can't. She "decided" she wanted to be tortured to death.
When the outcome of a judicial decision is that an innocent person will die, it is the wrong decision every single time.
""The authority desired by the government is inconsistent with the design of the statute in other fundamental respects. The attorney general does not have the sole delegated authority under the (law)," Kennedy wrote for himself, retiring Justice Sandra Day O'Connor and Justices John Paul Stevens, David Souter, and Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and Stephen Breyer. Roberts and Justices Clarence Thomas and Antonin Scalia dissented."
Actually, the position of every state is that such questions belong to God. All states recognize God's authority in their constitutions, and do not suppose the power to determine your life for you.
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