That's because the culture of death doesn't consider the elderly and disabled to be human beings.
And those same death mongers usually have no respect for our military or our vets.
Many of us who have volunteered at veteran’s hospitals have seen amazing recoveries from brain injury — some nearly total, others only partial, but which generated many social benefits in uniting the family, spreading solidarity among other survivor families and inspiring vast circles of love in which many citizens rallied in support, just as we saw with Terri Schiavo’s case.
The sacrifice of our severely wounded troops should never be thrown in their faces — especially since our president can have lobster flown in for his 400-person entourage at his Montana town hall, can fly his entire family all over the world on diplomacy trips, can fly chefs and exotic foods from Hawaii for lavish parties at the White House, our senators can fly around the world on junkets in the midst of a severe recession, and our majority speaker can burn carbon credits like there is no tomorrow with her personal jet at taxpayer’s expense, etc etc.
The Party of Death is a disgrace to humanity.
Amen, wagglebee. I would like to add this word of advice to every Christian veteran in America: When you get to the question, “What makes your life worth living?” write something like this: “The fact that Jesus is my Savior.”