• Death Wish

    From Lee Lofaso@2:203/2 to All on Tuesday, November 04, 2014 04:26:09
    Hello Everybody,

    She got her wish. Death. At the ripe old age of 29.
    She had approval from her husband and her family. As
    well as from her doctor, who gave her the pills to do
    herself in.

    Brittany Maynard was terminally ill, given only a few
    short months to live, and was in much pain and suffering.
    She ended her life in Oregon, one of five states in the
    US that allows doctors to help assist the terminally
    ill of sound mind to do so.

    Our society chooses to condem people who decide to end
    their own lives, and forbids doctors and other health care
    workers to help them do it. Even though five states have
    recently chosen to allow doctors to assist patients to end
    their own pain and suffering, society continues to give
    a cold shoulder to the idea.

    Five states - Oregon, Washington, Montana, Vermont and
    New Mexico. What is wrong with the rest of America?

    "She died as she intended - peacefully in her bedroom,
    in the arms of her loved ones." - Sean Crowley, spokesman
    for the advocacy group Compassion & Choices

    Why should anybody be denied the right to die with dignity?
    Why should anybody be forced to endure more pain and suffering
    than is necessary to maintain a decent standard of life?

    When it becomes an impossibility, or undue hardship, to
    maintain a quality of life worth living, then an individual
    should have an absolute right to end his/her own life.

    Suicide is illegal. In every state. The reason for such
    laws is to protect insurance companies. That is why doctor
    assisted suicide is also illegal in every state.

    Except in five states, where the termnilly ill of sound mind
    can choose to end their own life, with the help of a doctor.
    As long as the terminally ill individual does it alone, such
    as swallowing or injecting the drugs.

    No more accidental overdoses for folks in those five states.
    They can off themselves on purpose - and insurance companies
    are still on the hook for paying the beneficiaries.

    "First do no harm" - Doctors give death row inmates the juice,
    and now are allowed to give terminally ill patients the means to
    give themselves the juice. Or happy pills. Whatever works.

    More than 750 people in Oregon have chosen to off themselves
    since December 31, 2013. Most of those folks were old geezers,
    the median age being 71. But six of those people were under
    the age of 35. I wonder what society would think if one of
    those people was a child, say of about age 5 or 6?

    What about a baby born without a brain? Would it be okay
    for a doctor or a nurse to off the baby? I mean, the baby
    would not be able to do it alone, needing help from an
    adult. And I doubt that mommy (or daddy) would be up to
    the task ...

    How many terminilly ill people move to Oregon to die? Nobody
    knows since the state does not keep track, or really much care.

    "I think in the beginning my family members wanted a miracle;
    they wanteda cure for my cancer. When we all sat down and looked
    at the facts, there isn't a single person that loves me that isn't
    a single person that loves me that wishes me more pain and more
    suffering." - Brittany Maynard, interview with the AP, 10/8/2014

    She told the AP her husband and other relatives accepted
    her decision to end her own life. The question is, when will
    society as a whole ever accept the right of each individual
    to make such a decision.

    --Lee

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    * Origin: news://felten.yi.org (2:203/2)
  • From BOB KLAHN@1:123/140 to LEE LOFASO on Wednesday, November 12, 2014 20:06:00

    ...

    Brittany Maynard was terminally ill, given only a few
    short months to live, and was in much pain and suffering.
    She ended her life in Oregon, one of five states in the
    US that allows doctors to help assist the terminally
    ill of sound mind to do so.

    Our society chooses to condem people who decide to end
    their own lives, and forbids doctors and other health care
    workers to help them do it. Even though five states have

    ...

    When it becomes an impossibility, or undue hardship, to
    maintain a quality of life worth living, then an individual
    should have an absolute right to end his/her own life.


    This argument has been going on a very long time. Long ago I
    read a report on it, and it said there is no such thing as pain
    that can't be controlled. They gave England as an example, where
    the question didn't even come up.

    You see, in England they can give heroin to patients in extreme
    pain. That is a big difference.

    I don't know if it's true that there is no such thing as pain
    that can't be alleviated, but I do know there is pain that can
    be alleviated, but the drugs that do it are either illegal, or
    so controlled you can't give them enough.

    Then there's the fear of making terminal patients drug addicts.
    The other fear is, the drugs will shorten the patient's life.
    Chose, 6 weeks of extreme pain, or 4 weeks free from pain. Not
    hard by my thinking.

    ...

    What about a baby born without a brain? Would it be okay
    for a doctor or a nurse to off the baby? I mean, the baby

    An anacelephic baby doesn't live long and doesn't suffer.



    BOB KLAHN bob.klahn@sev.org http://home.toltbbs.com/bobklahn

    ... Careful, I'm liable to attack with my nitpick...and that hurts!
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  • From Lee Lofaso@2:203/2 to BOB KLAHN on Wednesday, November 19, 2014 23:50:23
    Hello Bob,

    Brittany Maynard was terminally ill, given only a few
    short months to live, and was in much pain and suffering.
    She ended her life in Oregon, one of five states in the
    US that allows doctors to help assist the terminally
    ill of sound mind to do so.

    Our society chooses to condem people who decide to end
    their own lives, and forbids doctors and other health care
    workers to help them do it. Even though five states have

    When it becomes an impossibility, or undue hardship, to
    maintain a quality of life worth living, then an individual
    should have an absolute right to end his/her own life.

    This argument has been going on a very long time. Long ago I
    read a report on it, and it said there is no such thing as pain
    that can't be controlled. They gave England as an example, where
    the question didn't even come up.

    Do fish feel pain? PETA argued that fish do in fact
    feel pain, and gave a tutorial on how fishermen should
    go about catching and storing their fish. PETA has
    also argued that Cajuns are cruel because we boil our
    crawfish alive. On that, Cajuns found allies from
    lobster fishermen in Maine ...

    Each individual has his/her own tolerance for pain.
    Different thresholds, or levels, of pain. In some cases
    it is only a state of mind, rather than anything physical.
    In other cases, what would be excruciating pain can be
    mentally blocked out by some people. All without the
    use of drugs.

    In most cases, when a person is in a significant amount
    of pain, he/she needs medication in order to continue
    functioning in a normal way. And in some cases, simply
    to continue to exist.

    A cancer patient, in his/her last stages of life, might be
    totally dependent on morphine - just to get through the
    day. He/she may or may not even be aware of his/her own
    surroundings. But without the morphine, that individual
    would be in so much pain and suffering that it would be
    absolute torture to endure.

    You see, in England they can give heroin to patients in extreme
    pain. That is a big difference.

    We give morphine to those we deem in need. And we justify
    it on the same grounds as do those in England who give heroin
    to patients.

    I don't know if it's true that there is no such thing as pain
    that can't be alleviated, but I do know there is pain that can
    be alleviated, but the drugs that do it are either illegal, or
    so controlled you can't give them enough.

    A few decades ago we had a problem in America with heroin
    addicts. Nobody cared about them, as they were junkies who
    lived in our ghettoes. The nation's poor. The trash of
    society.

    Flash forward to a few short years ago. Painkillers, such
    as oxy-contin, were prescribed by doctors nationwide, patients
    being told those drugs were not addictive. Less than one percent
    of those who took those drugs would get hooked on them, is what
    people were told by doctors. And what happened? Three to six
    months later, those patients were asking their doctors where
    they could get some more of those pills. Well, the doctor
    had done his job, and the prescription had run out, so folks
    had to find another source. So who did they turn do?

    The Pusher Man.

    And now today's addicts are the middle class. The boy
    next door. The man across the street. The secretary at
    your office. All once hooked on painkillers prescribed
    by their doctors, now hooked on heroin. Only today's
    heroin is far more deadly than yesterday's stash.

    Then there's the fear of making terminal patients drug addicts.

    It is not just terminal patients who are drug addicts.
    Rush Limbaugh was addicted to painkillers he got legally.
    How he got so many of them is beyond me. But then, maybe
    he was in a great deal of pain and being as big as he is
    well he probably needed them.

    The other fear is, the drugs will shorten the patient's life.

    Yeah. That's like saying pot will stunt your growth.
    Nobody on painkillers/heroin is going to believe that.

    Chose, 6 weeks of extreme pain, or 4 weeks free from pain. Not hard by my thinking.

    Hit me, man! Hit me! I wanna feel good hoo ha!

    What about a baby born without a brain? Would it be okay
    for a doctor or a nurse to off the baby? I mean, the baby

    An anacelephic baby doesn't live long and doesn't suffer.

    Scientists have successfully cloned frogs without a brain.
    In theory, the same could be done with humans. Would cloning
    humans for body parts be ethical? I doubt it. Which is why
    we should clone neandertals instead.

    --Lee

    --- MesNews/1.08.05.00-gb
    * Origin: news://felten.yi.org (2:203/2)
  • From BOB KLAHN@1:123/140 to LEE LOFASO on Thursday, December 04, 2014 01:09:00

    ...

    You see, in England they can give heroin to patients in extreme
    pain. That is a big difference.

    We give morphine to those we deem in need. And we justify
    it on the same grounds as do those in England who give
    heroin to patients.

    Except that Heroin is not legal here, yet, from what I have
    read, much more effective.

    Then there's the fear of making terminal patients drug addicts.

    It is not just terminal patients who are drug addicts.

    Yeah, but worrying about making terminal patients into drug
    addicts is terminal stupidity.

    The other fear is, the drugs will shorten the patient's life.

    Yeah. That's like saying pot will stunt your growth.
    Nobody on painkillers/heroin is going to believe that.

    Any patient dying in agony might consider that a blessing.

    Chose, 6 weeks of extreme pain, or 4 weeks free from pain. Not hard by my
    thinking.

    Hit me, man! Hit me! I wanna feel good hoo ha!

    SMACK! Now behave yourself.

    In theory, the same could be done with humans. Would
    cloning humans for body parts be ethical? I doubt it.
    Which is why we should clone neandertals instead.

    No, repubicans will do just as well.


    BOB KLAHN bob.klahn@sev.org http://home.toltbbs.com/bobklahn

    ... If any word is improper at the end of a sentence, a linking verb is.
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  • From Lee Lofaso@2:203/2 to BOB KLAHN on Friday, December 05, 2014 02:07:58
    Hello Bob,

    You see, in England they can give heroin to patients in extreme
    pain. That is a big difference.

    We give morphine to those we deem in need. And we justify
    it on the same grounds as do those in England who give
    heroin to patients.

    Except that Heroin is not legal here, yet, from what I have
    read, much more effective.

    So is a quick punch to the head. But with morphine, or heroin,
    one does not have to break a hand or crack a skull.

    Then there's the fear of making terminal patients drug addicts.

    It is not just terminal patients who are drug addicts.

    Yeah, but worrying about making terminal patients into drug
    addicts is terminal stupidity.

    The medical establishment has been making nonterminal patients
    into drug addicts for years. Doctors write a scrip for painkillers.
    Their patient takes the pills for three to six months, and becomes
    addicted. No longer being able to get a scrip for those [legal]
    drugs, patients turn to other sources. A few decades ago we called
    folks like that `junkies'. Today we call those same folks our
    next door neighbors.

    The other fear is, the drugs will shorten the patient's life.

    Yeah. That's like saying pot will stunt your growth.
    Nobody on painkillers/heroin is going to believe that.

    Any patient dying in agony might consider that a blessing.

    At least they get a high when going out the door.

    Chose, 6 weeks of extreme pain, or 4 weeks free from pain. BK>>Not hard
    by my thinking.

    Hit me, man! Hit me! I wanna feel good hoo ha!

    SMACK! Now behave yourself.

    Thanks! I needed that!

    In theory, the same could be done with humans. Would
    cloning humans for body parts be ethical? I doubt it.
    Which is why we should clone neandertals instead.

    No, repubicans will do just as well.

    I'm not sure anybody would want any of John Boehner's
    body parts. I mean, the guy does smoke like a chimney ...

    --Lee

    --- MesNews/1.08.05.00-gb
    * Origin: news://felten.yi.org (2:203/2)
  • From BOB KLAHN@1:123/140 to LEE LOFASO on Sunday, January 11, 2015 00:03:00

    ...

    In theory, the same could be done with humans. Would
    cloning humans for body parts be ethical? I doubt it.
    Which is why we should clone neandertals instead.

    No, repubicans will do just as well.

    I'm not sure anybody would want any of John Boehner's
    body parts. I mean, the guy does smoke like a chimney ...

    A clone does not inherit the contaminents.

    BOB KLAHN bob.klahn@sev.org http://home.toltbbs.com/bobklahn

    ... ♫To everything spin spin spin, there is a republican spin spin spin...♫
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