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12-12-2007, 12:46 PM | #1 | |||
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Senior Member
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I think the following passage from the story sums up the conflicts and complexities, and also directly addresses the "cruelty" of PD:
"The evenly divided numbers in Oregon may be an indication, she suggests, that women are being pushed toward deaths they wouldn’t otherwise embrace. That type of push — gentle, perhaps, but impelling — is what frightens State Senator Margarita Prentice for minorities and, too, for all of us. Mexican-American, Prentice has been a liberal state legislator in Washington for almost 20 years, going back to Gardner’s time as governor, and she was a nurse for more than three decades before that; she speaks with affection about Gardner and with pity about his illness. “I’ve always thought Parkinson’s was the worst thing to have,” she told me, as we sat in a booth in a coffee shop in the town of Renton. “Alzheimer’s is better — you don’t know what’s happening. Parkinson’s you know. It’s a cruel disease. I don’t know why the Lord does these things to us. But I’m damned scared of this law he’s trying to pass. I’m scared of the loosening.” She wore a necklace with the Ten Commandments inscribed into 10 tiny gold pages, but her opposition to Gardner’s campaign didn’t seem to rely on religion. She spoke about the rising Latino population in the state and the country, about the resentments and fears this engendered, and about the effect this might have, no matter how unconscious, on physicians’ approaches to caring for Latino patients, on their regard for Latino lives."
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Carey “Cautious, careful people, always casting about to preserve their reputation and social standing, never can bring about a reform. Those who are really in earnest must be willing to be anything or nothing in the world’s estimation, and publicly and privately, in season and out, avow their sympathy with despised and persecuted ideas and their advocates, and bear the consequences.” — Susan B. Anthony |
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12-12-2007, 06:46 PM | #2 | |||
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Member aka Dianna Wood
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My take on ending your life because of pain, is it is an act of anger and hurts those who are left behind. They will wonder all their lives if they should have been their for you.
We don't live in a vacumn. We are all in this togeather and what affects one affects all. None of us are getting out alive. Vicky |
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12-13-2007, 03:27 AM | #3 | ||
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Member
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I saw him fighting for each breath before he died. He was given days but fought for weeks, battling for life.
Somehow assisted suicide doesn't feel like the answer for me and I'm damn sure it wasn't on my Dad's agenda. Neil. |
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