Thread by Sun.
Republican Bob Turner won handily over the Democratic candidate in a district that no a Republican has won since 1923. His opponent's vote in favor of same-sex "marriage" in the New York legislature played an important role in the Republican's victory. Every significant GOP candidate for president is pro-life; snip
Social conservatives make up a significant percentage of the Tea Party movement snip
With 33 Senate seats up for grabs in 2012, the Democrats will have to defend 23 while the Republicans must defend only 10, snip
When Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels (R) called on conservatives to declare a "truce" on social issues and "agree to disagree," he clearly "shot himself in the foot" and ended his presidential prospects.
(Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...
Thread by me.
Justice Baker ruled last week that the 52-year-old patient known publicly only as M should not be allowed to starve to death because her life still contained some positive elements.
Her family had argued that Ms daily routine was too limited for her to want to continue living.
She cannot enjoy a drink, a cup of tea or anything. She has got no pleasures in life, Ms sister told the court. Just a daily routine of being taken out of bed, put in a chair and put back in bed. Shower, doubly incontinent. It is just awful. Its not life. Its existence. And I know she would not want that.
But Justice Baker said that he accepted the witness of caretakers testifying that M, who is not fully alert but still conscious, should be allowed to live and continue treatment. M does have positive experiences and although her life is extremely restricted, it is not without pleasures, albeit small ones, he stated.
The familys lawyer, Yogi Amin, told the press that the familys ordeal caring for M has been extremely heartbreaking and criticized the judge for ruling M should be given food and water.
The law has been clarified and, going forward, in all such cases of patients who are in a minimally conscious state, the High Court does now have the power to decide on whether it is in that patients best interests for treatment to continue, or whether the patient should be allowed to die naturally, with dignity, said Amin.
Alex Schadenburg of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition lamented that the decision whether M ought to be subjected to an excruciating death by dehydration came to rest on the quality of life she was deemed to have.
All forms of euthanasia reduce the value of certain human beings and deny equality and dignity to every human being, wrote Schadenburg on his blog.
The leader notes that the UK has routinely dehydrated to death individuals who were not dying but deemed to be in a Persistent Vegetative State (PVS) ever since a 1993 court ruling. This case is different, he notes, because M is clearly conscious - but the case was still too close for comfort.
We applaud the decision by Justice Baker, while recognizing that until the Bland decision is redefined, that other cognitively disabled people, such as M will intentionally die by dehydration, even though they would not be otherwise dying, he said.