Judie Brown
Do not go bye-bye in hospice!
By Judie Brown
What could happen to you or your loved one upon entering the hospital or hospice? Remain vigilant; in today's world, you never know.
The lines from this Dylan Thomas poem ring particularly true today. The poem, "Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night," begins:
If this sounds a bit off the wall to you, then you have no clue what the culture of death has in store for those entrusted to the care of healthcare providers in the coming years. Such things have actually been going on for a long time, but usually nobody gets caught. As the New York Times reported nearly 20 years ago, "'passive euthanasia' in hospitals is the norm."
So is it any wonder that today a hospice administrator would try to do his best to see to it that beds are emptied in a fiscally timely way?
Texas Right to Life's John Seago has it right, saying that morally challenged thinking is at the root of "value judgments being made in the healthcare system in Texas where anti-life ethics are actually what's considered" rather than the good of the patients themselves.
It is practices like the one in the Texas hospice that have left some medical researchers abroad, and perhaps here as well, arguing "for the right to take organs from euthanasia patients before they die." Several physicians from the Netherlands and Belgium penned an article extoling the practice.
In other words, a gullible public is a malleable public, and that is what proponents of direct killing – be it abortion or euthanasia – depend on in order to sell their deadly wares.
And now you know why Dylan's poem is so very relevant to current news. As that poem concludes:
Combat the evil with truth! Join American Life League in defiance of the culture of our day – this culture of death. Through your actions and words, become a part of our movement to build a culture of life. Pray, be informed, and educate others.
For pro-life information, go to all.org.
For pro-life educational tools including Euthanasia: An Introduction for high school students, visit cultureoflifestudies.com.
To see documented proof of Planned Parenthood's debauchery and to learn ways to stop its spread, go to stopp.org.
To join with youth outreach for a pro-life generation, go to lifedefender.org.
© Judie Brown
April 7, 2016
What could happen to you or your loved one upon entering the hospital or hospice? Remain vigilant; in today's world, you never know.
The lines from this Dylan Thomas poem ring particularly true today. The poem, "Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night," begins:
-
Do not go gentle into that good night,
Old age should burn and rave at close of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
If this sounds a bit off the wall to you, then you have no clue what the culture of death has in store for those entrusted to the care of healthcare providers in the coming years. Such things have actually been going on for a long time, but usually nobody gets caught. As the New York Times reported nearly 20 years ago, "'passive euthanasia' in hospitals is the norm."
So is it any wonder that today a hospice administrator would try to do his best to see to it that beds are emptied in a fiscally timely way?
Texas Right to Life's John Seago has it right, saying that morally challenged thinking is at the root of "value judgments being made in the healthcare system in Texas where anti-life ethics are actually what's considered" rather than the good of the patients themselves.
It is practices like the one in the Texas hospice that have left some medical researchers abroad, and perhaps here as well, arguing "for the right to take organs from euthanasia patients before they die." Several physicians from the Netherlands and Belgium penned an article extoling the practice.
-
Writing in the Journal of Medical Ethics, they report valuable unpublished information about the prevalence of the procedure. So far, it has been performed only about 40 times in the two countries. However, there is "a persisting discrepancy between the number of organ donors and the number of patients on the waiting lists for transplantation" – which euthanasia patients could help to balance.
The authors stress that euthanasia is not a cure-all for the organ shortage. Most euthanasia patients suffer from cancer, which is a contraindication for organ transplantation. However, 25 to 30 percent of them do not, so there is obviously a real possibility of expanding the supply.
Furthermore, the authors say, public perception of this formerly abhorrent practice is increasingly positive.
In other words, a gullible public is a malleable public, and that is what proponents of direct killing – be it abortion or euthanasia – depend on in order to sell their deadly wares.
And now you know why Dylan's poem is so very relevant to current news. As that poem concludes:
-
And you, my father, there on the sad height,
Curse, bless, me now with your fierce tears, I pray.
Do not go gentle into that good night.
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
Combat the evil with truth! Join American Life League in defiance of the culture of our day – this culture of death. Through your actions and words, become a part of our movement to build a culture of life. Pray, be informed, and educate others.
For pro-life information, go to all.org.
For pro-life educational tools including Euthanasia: An Introduction for high school students, visit cultureoflifestudies.com.
To see documented proof of Planned Parenthood's debauchery and to learn ways to stop its spread, go to stopp.org.
To join with youth outreach for a pro-life generation, go to lifedefender.org.
© Judie Brown
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