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A “Dr. Death” Runs for President
national review online, via personal email ^ | September 4, 2003 | Wesley J. Smith

Posted on 09/07/2003 8:46:43 AM PDT by MarMema

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Wesley J. Smith is a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute and an attorney and consultant for the International Task Force on Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide. His revised and updated Forced Exit: The Slippery Slope From Assisted Suicide to Legalized Murder was recently published by Spence Publishing.
1 posted on 09/07/2003 8:46:45 AM PDT by MarMema
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To: Salvation; Polycarp; kimmie7; katnip; FormerLib
Kimmie, please do your ping....
2 posted on 09/07/2003 8:48:25 AM PDT by MarMema
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To: All
Forced starvation and dehydration of the brain-injured is happening with greater frequency. Look at my FR page to read a sampling of some of the people who have been killed for being disabled and unable to defend themselves.

We have gone from "letting people go" who were on ventilators, to starving people who have brain injuries from strokes or trauma, and the progression marches forward toward the simply disabled. Just as it did in Germany prior to the Holocaust.

Death from forced dehydration is a cruel and painful one, and we have no way to know if adequate doses of morphine are being given or if the doses are effective. The process takes anywhere from 5 days to 20 days, and it is not pretty. In some instances morphine may not even be given.

In this country we would be jailed for starving a horse, but it is becoming routine for the disabled to be starved/dehydrated in healthcare settings.

All of us should be concerned about the direction we are headed as the culture of death slowly comes to power.

3 posted on 09/07/2003 8:59:20 AM PDT by MarMema
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To: MarMema
"I will neither give a deadly drug to anybody who asked for it, nor will I make a suggestion to this effect. Similarly I will not give to a woman an abortive remedy."
4 posted on 09/07/2003 8:59:52 AM PDT by SwinneySwitch (Freedom isn't Free - Support the Troops!!)
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To: MarMema
I think individual physicians and patients have the right to make that private decision.

Of course they do. Dean is quite correct here.

5 posted on 09/07/2003 9:01:23 AM PDT by RJCogburn ("I want a man with grit."..................Mattie Ross of near Dardenelle in Yell County)
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To: MarMema
At least we know what his "social security" fix will be
6 posted on 09/07/2003 9:04:16 AM PDT by joesnuffy (Moderate Islam Is For Dilettantes)
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To: MarMema
Unfortunately, many or most medical schools now administer an amended Hippocratic Oath, which omits the sentence about not doing abortions and qualifies the pledge to do no harm. This attitude applies to some of the most prestigious medical schools, such as Harvard, and to some of the most prestigious journals, such as the New England Journal of Medicine.

The AMA is mostly holding the line on euthanasia, but who knows how much longer?
7 posted on 09/07/2003 9:08:24 AM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: RJCogburn; Cicero
CAN A "RIGHT TO DIE" BE TURNED INTO A FORCED FATE?
by Wesley Smith

Robert Wendland should die so that his family can "be allowed to live their lives," Dr. Ronald Cranford, a Minnesota neurologist and bioethicist, testified recently in the Stockton courtroom of Superior Court Judge Bob McNatt. The chosen method of death? Intentional dehydration and starvation.

What has Wendland, 45, done to deserve such a fate? He went into a coma in September 1993 from injuries sustained in an automobile accident. Sixteen months later, he awakened from the coma, paralyzed on one side and unable to walk, talk or swallow well enough to eat. He is physically and cognitively disabled and dependent on others for his care. He is not terminally ill. He is not hooked up to machines. He does require a feeding tube to sustain his life.

Those who seek to end Wendland's life downplay his physical and cognitive abilities. That is because people who are diagnosed as permanently unconscious are being dehydrated in this country, all perfectly legal thanks to several court decisions. Now, "right-to-die" activists such as Cranford who has testified in support of dehydration in most of the nation's major dehydration cases of brain-damaged patients, including that of Nancy Beth Cruzan want to stretch acceptable dehydration to disabled folk with brain damage who are awake and aware. This is the slippery slope in action.

A Wisconsin Supreme Court decision dealt a blow recently to the right-to-die crowd's hopes when it ruled that it is not acceptable in Wisconsin to dehydrate conscious, brain-damaged patients (who would feel pain and agony) absent clear and convincing evidence probably through a written declaration executed by the patient before illness or injury that dehydration is precisely and explicitly what the now-incapacitated patient wanted. In other words, general statements are not enough. The Michigan Supreme Court issued a similar ruling in 1995.

Cranford and others of his ideological persuasion were not amused by these decisions, seeing them as an impediment to the right to die. Wendland provides an opportunity to expand the law.

Rose Wendland, Robert's wife, claims Robert would not want to live in his current condition. She bases her claim primarily on her husband's statements made in the aftermath of her father's death, three months before Robert's injury, that he would not want to live if he could not "be a husband, father or a provider."

But is it right to kill someone because he might have said he would not want to live in a dependent state? Is it right to kill someone because he can't work and be productive? Is it right to kill someone because he is disabled? Robert Wendland's mother, Florence Wendland, and half-sister, Rebekah Vinson, say no. They sued to prevent the dehydration.

It is important to note that Wendland has slowly improved in the nearly two years since he awakened from his coma. For example, he:
Has maneuvered an electric wheelchair down hospital corridors and can now maneuver a manual wheelchair with his unparalyzed leg or arm.
Has written the letter "R" of his first name when asked, as well as some other letters of his name.
Has used buttons to accurately answer yes and no questions some of the time. (Is your name Robert? Yes. Is your name Michael? No.) In this regard, one of his doctors asked Wendland if he wanted to die. He didn't answer the question.

According to Cranford, these and other of Wendland's activities mean little. He also opined in his testimony that Wendland's therapists, who believe he has slowly improved, should be disregarded by McNatt because they are only "seeing what they want to see." Perhaps it is Cranford who is not seeking what he does not want to see.

It is disturbing that McNatt did not dismiss Rose Wendland's desire to end her husband's life out of hand when the case first came to his court two years ago. It is especially disturbing that a noted neurologist such as Cranford believes that one reason to dehydrate Wendland is to benefit his family, even though Rose Wendland has said she now only visits her husband once a month for about 30 minutes, and his children do not visit at all.

Dehydration begins when the feeding tube is removed, and death occurs usually within six to 30 days. Ironically, in order to ensure Wendland doesn't feel the pain of dehydration, Cranford testified it might be necessary to put him back into a coma with morphine.

It is said that a society is judged by the way in which it treats its weakest and most vulnerable members. Increasingly in the United States, we kill them. Let us hope that McNatt does not add Wendland to the list.

8 posted on 09/07/2003 9:12:34 AM PDT by MarMema
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Comment #9 Removed by Moderator

Comment #10 Removed by Moderator

To: ventana
euthanasia ping!
11 posted on 09/07/2003 11:17:31 AM PDT by MarMema
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To: seamole
What I see happening is the use of the conservative platform for family rights to help people kill off family members who have become expensive or cumbersome, have large funds waiting to be dispensed after their "natural" death, or who are in the way of the next lover/future spouse.

In the meantime, these neurologists are trying to run the show. In one particularly ugly writing I found, a head neuro at a major hospital in St. Louis is telling a hesitant family to go ahead and let him hook up their relative to all the tubes, because if the patient fails to respond in about six months, he will be happy to then pull the tubes, he promises!

It occurred to me after reading it that the hospital and neuro are going to get their full insurance payments in about that same six months, after which much of it may be gone? Time to pull the tubes, but in the meantime the doc and facility made their income.

12 posted on 09/07/2003 11:22:58 AM PDT by MarMema
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To: pram
ping!
13 posted on 09/07/2003 11:25:58 AM PDT by MarMema
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To: MarMema
Moreover, patients who do not ask for euthanasia are almost routinely dispatched — and rarely with any legal or professional consequences. This includes babies born with birth defects based on quality-of-life determinations (eugenic infanticide) and approximately 1,000 patients a year who are lethally injected even though they have not asked to be euthanized. (The Dutch even have a term for non-voluntary euthanasia; they call it "termination without request or consent.")

Fancy words for murder.

15 posted on 09/07/2003 11:51:53 AM PDT by katnip
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To: Theodore R.; phenn
In case you are interested ping...
16 posted on 09/07/2003 12:36:34 PM PDT by MarMema
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To: MarMema
From the article (?): Howard Dean's support for assisted suicide/euthanasia strikes at the very heart of the compassionate, liberal values to which he claims to be devoted. He needs to rethink his position. It glares ominously that what is advised is changing his 'position', yet he stands for what he truly believes so changing his position would be tantamount to saying what it takes to be elected, yet holding to his deathcultist beliefs for when he gets elected, if he gets elected. [Oh wait! That's what most democrats do! How silly of me to expect something different from anti-Republic democrats.] I believe he's also a serial killer via his 'work' at PP-hood during residency, so let's pray he doesn't gain any greater power than he has already been granted by his father.
17 posted on 09/07/2003 2:54:11 PM PDT by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote life support for others.)
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To: MarMema
Two sides to the evil. On the one hand, "right to die" = either murder or suicide. On the other hand, keep the body (shell) "alive" long after its natural time. The motives? Money, convenience, and trying to play God. Instead of accepting the natural order, that it is Nature and Nature's God Who controls the entrance and exit times of all. And His timing is always the the correct time, whether we see it or not. Scott Peck wrote a book about assisted suicide (I lent it out and they won't return it, I can't remember the name). I certainly don't agree with Peck about everything, but he hits the nail on the head more than a few times. (If anyone knows the name of the book, ping me, I want to get it for my library.)
He said that the end of life is an invaluable opportuntiy to learn, to heal family rifts, and most important, to get closer to God, to surrender and make repentence. By artifially hastening the end of earthly life, the one exiting is losing one of life's most precious times. I saw something of this take place with my mother, who was bedridden with cancer for 5 months at home (I was her main caretaker).
Moral relativists screw up and destroy every aspect of life (which includes death) that they touch.

They see the purpose of life solely as personal pleasure, with no rules even. People of faith (and I am not being sectarian) generally see the purpose of life as something higher than hedonistic gratification (by hedonist I include mental gratification and satisfaction as well). Ultimately, surrender in love to God. Or at least fulfilling His purpose, which means learning about that purpose, striving for finding out His will, and making it my own.
Moral relativists, if allowed, will destroy civilization. They're halfway there.
18 posted on 09/07/2003 3:45:47 PM PDT by First Amendment
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To: pram
Is this the book?

Denial of the Soul

Escerpt from a review

Peck here discusses a complex and timely matter?euthanasia. Peck wants to address the "spiritual" aspects of the decision, which he feels have been ignored in this too-secular world. He's taken on a huge task: to define physical and emotional suffering, to come up with guidelines for considering physician-assisted suicide, and to foster further dialog by society as a whole on these issues. This is not a book of answers; Peck instead encourages discussion about "learning through dying," what a soul consists of, and choosing hospice care when it's clear the end is near

19 posted on 09/07/2003 4:33:36 PM PDT by syriacus ( Prankin' Al Franken: "My letter to Ashcroft was not a lie...it was a prank." 9/7/03)
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To: syriacus
That's it! Thanks, I'm going to look for a copy. He definitely comes out against doctor assisted suicide.
20 posted on 09/07/2003 4:38:57 PM PDT by First Amendment
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