Dr. R. Albert Mohler Jr.
The Briefing.
From the terminally ill to the mentally ill: Europe's ever-expanding euthansia laws
Washington Post (Charles Lane) —
Europe’s morality crisis: Euthanizing the mentally ill
Canadian doctor helps 94-yr-old commit suicide who wasn't terminally ill but feared he was a burden
PLAY 5:01
National Post (Brian Hutchinson) —
The right to die on one’s own terms: At 94, sick, tired and living alone, ‘Dad got the death he wanted’
Denying coverage for terminal illness, insurance offers California mother suicide pills—for $1.20
PLAY 5:57
TweetShareEmail
Washington Times (Bradford Richardson) —
Assisted-suicide law prompts insurance company to deny coverage to terminally ill California woman
TRANSCRIPT
Comment by Heine Strømdahl:
First they came up with the perverse idea of killing the weak and terminally ill in the name "the right to die". It has since been expanded to those who suffer mentally - ohh "how merciful" (irony intended). It opens the floodgates of Hell and death, potentially killing a host of people, the victims will mostly be depressed and sick/elderly people, who feel that they they are a burden - nowadays we are so "merciful" and "enlightened" that we come along and offer them a suicide pill so they can escape the depression and the pain, it's the the easy way out. and certainly the easy way out for those of us who aren't sick or depressed but can entertain ourselves in front of our Televisions with TV-shows about those who survived a severe illness - such as the Danish TV2 "Knæk Cancer" - while we sit comfortably down in our chairs and drink our warm coffee ) , As always , such measures hit hardest upon those who are the weakest and cannot speak for themselves. Not long before we begin killing many depressed people in the perverse name of "the right to die". Teenagers and children will also be killed/murdered on that account too, as ALREADY has happened in Holland or Belgium - they opened up for the floodgates of Hell years ago. A poor society, apparently not too much place for those who suffer or those with Down syndrom.. Makes me think of Mother Teresa who went to those who were alone and abandoned, the weakest of the weak, the dirty and most unattractive. May they not be forgotten in the busyness of our 21. century lives. That being said, Many people (in Denmark), religious (professing a faith) or not religious, do already work hard - paid or unpaid - caring for the disabled, sick and weak and homeless, they deserve recognition for that.
Addition: Link added 30-11-2016: http://jyllands-posten.dk/international/europa/ECE9191223/41aarig-mand-fik-hjaelp-til-at-doe-fordi-han-var-alkoholiker/
Ingen kommentarer:
Send en kommentar