Title: Italian Art
1(No Transcript)
2Pro-life Arguments
- Moral Arguments
- Scientific Arguments
- Legal Arguments
3Moral Arguments
- Pro-choice argument 1
- My body my choice
4Moral Arguments
- This is argument cannot justify abortion because
of the following reasons - 1. The baby is not truly a part of the mothers
body because he/she has their own unique and
distinct DNA, whereas any other part of the
mothers body would have to have her DNA for her
to have any right to do anything to it. - The baby is clearly a distinct and separate being
from the mother. The mother is merely entrusted
with the care of the babys health and growth,
but has no right to make life and death decisions
for the baby.
5Moral Arguments
- Pro-choice argument 2
- We dont know or we cant prove when human life
begins, therefore abortion is permissible.
6Moral Arguments
- Exactly, which is why abortion cannot be
justified. Even if we dont know when human life
begins, we at least know that an unborn baby has
human DNA at the moment of conception, and
therefore there is evidence that there MAY be a
human life at stake
7Moral Arguments
- If this is indeed true then all abortions should
at the very least be suspended until we know with
100 certainty that the baby that is being
aborted is not a human person. - Man/Coat Analogy
8Moral Arguments
- This knowledge is extremely important because if
the baby is found to be a human person then their
right to life trumps any right to privacy that
the mother may claim to have over her child. - Life, Liberty, Pursuit of Happiness.
9Moral Arguments
- Pro-choice Argument 3
- Its better to abort unwanted children so
every child is a wanted child - Its ok to abort unborn babies because they are
not worth as much and dont contribute to
society.
10Moral Arguments
- For starters there is already a long waiting list
of parents who want to adopt unwanted children,
even children who are terminally ill. - Also, everyone has the same right to life no
matter who they are. Even though some people may
not CONTRIBUTE as much to society, everyone is
still WORTH the same.
11Moral Arguments
- We can look into the past for examples of what
happens when one group of people decide another
person or group of people are not worth as much
as everyone else. - Nazi Germany
- Slavery in the United States
12Moral Arguments
- Also, by the same logic, if we can arbitrarily
assign value to people based on their
contributions to society, murdering 5 school
children would be less wrong than murdering 5
doctors because the children are worth less
because they dont contribute as much to society.
- This is obviously not true which is why this
Pro-choice argument doesnt work or make any sense
13Moral Arguments
- Pro-choice Argument 4
-
- Abortion is ok because Society and the Law says
its ok and legal.
14Moral Arguments
- Society at one point once said that slavery was
ok and acceptable, and this was supported by our
own laws. - The same situation occurred in Nazi Germany. Laws
were created which made it legal to dehumanize
and kill Jews. - Simply because a law or society says something is
acceptable doesnt mean that it is right or true
15Moral Arguments
- One of the most interesting things to note in the
abortion debate are peoples aversion to seeing
pictures of aborted babies. - To this we have to ask Why is it so bad to show
these pictures and why dont people especially
those who are pro-choice have a problem with
seeing them. After all, if the baby isnt a
human being or a person then their shouldnt be a
problem with showing them to people, yet people
resist seeing it at all costs.
16Moral Arguments
- Also, at about 4,000 a day, abortions are the
most common surgical procedure in the US. Why
wont news stations like MSNBC, or CNN show this
procedure which is so common? - Once again, why the aversion to it if the baby
that is being aborted is really not a human
person?
17Moral Arguments
- What about cases of Rape and Incest?
18Moral Arguments
- I am personally opposed but
- What are you personally opposed to?
19Legal Arguments
- Pro-choice Argument 1
- The Supreme Courts decision in Roe vs. Wade
upheld a Womans Fundamental Right to have an
abortion
20Legal Arguments
- The US Constitution nowhere states that there is
a fundamental right to abortion. In fact the
Preamble of the Constitution contradicts the idea
of abortion - We the people of the United States, in order to
form a more perfect union, establish justice,
insure domestic tranquility, provide for the
common defense, promote the general welfare, and
secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and
our posterity, do ordain and establish this
Constitution for the United States of America.
--- Preamble to the US Constitution. - Also, the Supreme Court has made erroneous
rulings before such as in the Dred Scott case
where they said that a black man has no rights
that a white man need worry about - Also, the Supreme Court ruling that allowed
segregation in schools as long as separate was
equal this ruling was later overruled.
21Legal Arguments
- Pro-Choice Argument 2
- There is no legal precedent for overturning Roe
vs Wade
22Legal Arguments
- There was no legal precedent for Roe vs Wade to
have happened in the first place. - Just because there may or may not be legal
precedence for an issue doesnt mean it should be
allowed to happen. Legal precedent is by no means
infallible. - Or else, by that same logic, we could bring back
slavery because there is legal precedence for
it in the Dred Scott ruling.
23Legal Arguments
- Pro-choice argument 3
- The government has no right to tell me what I
can do in the privacy of my own bedroom
24Legal Arguments
- This is argument is obviously a false one because
- If that logic is true than killing someone in the
privacy of your home is ok because the
government has no right to interfere in
individuals private affairs and cant tell
you what to do in the privacy of your bedroom
25Legal Arguments
- Also, whenever the lives of a countrys citizens
are in jeopardy the government not only has the
right but the duty to step in and protect its
citizens no matter what the prevailing public
opinion of the time is - This is after all the fundamental role of the
government to first and foremost protect the
lives of its citizens.
26Legal Arguments
- "We need not resolve the difficult question of
when life begins. When those trained in the
respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy,
and theology are unable to arrive at any
consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the
development of man's knowledge, is not in a
position to speculate as to an answer." Supreme
Court Ruling in Roe vs Wade. - One of the most disturbing and dangerous things
about this passage is that the Supreme Court
never decided when life begins. - This legally and technically means that anyone in
the US may not be alive according to some
arbitrary standard made by the Supreme Court
27Legal Arguments
- The burden of proof in law is on the
prosecution. The benefit of doubt is with the
defense. This is also known as a presumption of
innocence. The defendant is assumed to be
innocent unless proven guilty. Again the burden
of proof is on the entity that would take away
life or liberty. The benefit of the doubt lies
with the defense. - The Supreme Court clearly stated that it does
not know when life begins and then violated the
very spirit of this legal principle by acting as
if it just proved that no life existed in the
womb.
28Legal Arguments
- The decision also seems unpretentious by
acknowledging that it did not know when life
begins. But if the Court did not know, then it
should have acted "as if" life was in the womb. A
crucial role of government is to protect life.
Government cannot remove a segment of the human
population from its protection without adequate
justification. - The burden of proof should lie with the
life-taker, and the benefit of the doubt should
be with the life-saver. Put another way "when in
doubt, don't." A hunter who hears rustling in the
bushes shouldn't fire until he knows what is in
the bushes. Likewise, a Court which doesn't know
when life begins, should not declare open season
on the unborn. ---Kerby Anderson
29Legal Arguments
- Another way in which the legalization of abortion
makes no sense is in the laws of several states
regarding pregnant women and their unborn
children. - An example of this is Laci Peterson who was
killed along with her unborn son and her husband
was charged with both of their murders.
30Legal Arguments
- The reason this is significant is because the
baby in this instance is being treated as a
human and a person because the baby was
wanted. - However, it would have been perfectly legal for
Laci to have had an abortion and no murder
charges could have been filed because in the case
of an abortion the baby is unwanted
31Legal Arguments
- So the baby is treated as a human person when
he/she is wanted as is treated as a non-person
and non-human when the mother does not want
them. - In order for this to make legal sense when the
mother makes the decision to have an abortion
rather than keep her child, the childs DNA and
personhood must magically change from person and
human to non-person and non-human as soon as the
mother makes that decision. And it can change
back and forth as much as the mother wants
depending on whether she wants the child or not
32Scientific Arguments
- Pro-Choice Argument
- The unborn baby is just a fetus or cluster
of cells and is not really a human so abortion
is scientifically permissible.
33Scientific Arguments
- This argument is incorrect because we know that
at the moment of conception a new life with
totally different and unique DNA is created - Unborn children are simply humans in the fetal
stage of development, similar to how an infant is
considered a human person in the infant stage of
development - This makes them no more or less human then you or
me
34Scientific Arguments
- There is no fundamental difference between a 3
month year old unborn baby and an 80 year old
man. - The only difference is time and level of
development which doesnt add or take away from a
persons humanity
35Scientific Arguments
- What some leading doctors and researchers have to
say about when life begins.
36Scientific Arguments
- The late Dr. Jerome LeJeune, Professor of
Genetics at the University of Descartes in Paris,
and discoverer of the genetic cause of Down
Syndrome said, "After fertilization has taken
place and a new human being has come into being.
It's no longer a matter of taste or opinion, and
not a meta-physical condition, it is plain
experimental evidence." 5 - Professor Micheline Matthews-Roth, Harvard
University Medical School It is incorrect to
say that biological data cannot be decisive...It
is scientifically correct to say that an
individual human life begins at conception." 6 - Professor Hymie Gordon, Mayo clinic "By all
criteria of modern molecular biology, life is
present from the moment of conception." 7
37Scientific Arguments
- Dr. Bradley M. Patten's textbook, Human
Embryology, states, " It is the penetration of
the ovum by a spermatazoan and the resultant
mingling of the nuclear material each brings to
the union that...marks the initiation of the life
of a new individual." 1 - Dr. Louis Fridhandler in the medical textbook
Biology of Gestation, refers to fertilization as
"that wondrous moment that marks the beginning of
life for a new individual." 2 - Time and Rand McNally's Atlas of the Body states,
"In fusing together, the male and female gametes
produce a fertilized single cell, the zygote,
whch is the start of a new individual." 3 - Encyclopedia Britannica, says, "A new individual
is created when the elements of a potent sperm
merge with those of a fertile ovum, or egg." 4
38Sources
- http//www.law.cornell.edu/constitution/constituti
on.preamble.html - http//www.leaderu.com/orgs/probe/docs/arg-abor.ht
ml - http//www.modestopolice.com/laci/
39Sources
- http//www.wpclinic.org/parenting/fetal-developmen
t/first-trimester/ - http//www.goodsearch.com/Image.aspx?imgurlhttp/
/www.praize.com/teens/jesusfreak1p211/7weeks.jpgt
hurlhttp//sp1.mm-a1.yimg.com/image/2000604309ru
rlhttp//www.praize.com/teens/jesusfreak1p211/bab
y_pics.shtmltt716no1name7weeks.jpgw300h4
85size83.3typejpeg - http//www.webmd.com/baby/guide/understanding-conc
eption - http//youtube.com/watch?vO2l1-kvKomg
- Goodsearch.com
- http//www.nebcathcon.org/Proof20of20Life.htmRe
veal
40Suggested Readings
- Three Approaches to Abortion by Peter Kreeft
- The Apple Argument Against Abortion by Peter
Kreeft http//www.priestsforlife.org/articles/appl
eargument.htm - Ending Abortion by Fr. Frank Pavone
- The Grand Illusion by George Grant
41Questions/Comments?
42(No Transcript)
43Stem Cell Research
A stem cell is essentially a blank cell,
capable of becoming another more differentiated
cell type in the body, such as a skin cell, a
muscle cell, or a nerve cell. Microscopic in
size, stem cells are big news in medical and
science circles because they can be used to
replace or even heal damaged tissues and cells in
the body. They can serve as a built-in repair
system for the human body, replenishing other
cells as long as a person is still alive.
44Stem Cell Research
- There are two basic types of stem cells used in
research - These are embryonic and adult stem cells
45 Stem Cell Research
- In both cases the point of researching stem cells
is to help find cures or treatments for different
diseases - Stem cells do this by being manipulated by
researchers to create the types of cells a
patient in a particular type treatment might need.
46 Stem Cell Research
- There are significant medical and scientific
differences between embryonic and adult stem cell
research and therapy. Here is a comparison
between the two types, including some of the
advantages and disadvantages of each.
47Stem Cell Research
- Adult Stem Cell Advantages 1. Special adult-type
stem cells from bone marrow and from umbilical
cord have been isolated recently which appear to
be as flexible as the embryonic type - 2. Already somewhat specializedinducement may be
simpler - 3. Not immunogenicrecipients who receive the
products of their own stem cells will not
experience immune rejection - 4. Relative ease of procurementsome adult stem
cells are easy to harvest (skin, muscle, marrow,
fat), while others may be more difficult to
obtain (brain stem cells). Umbilical and
placental stem cells are likely to be readily
available - 5. Non-tumorigenictend not to form tumors
- 6. No harm done to the donor
48Stem Cell Research
- Adult stem cells are a natural solution. They
naturally exist in our bodies, and they provide a
natural repair mechanism for many tissues of our
bodies. They belong in the microenvironment of an
adult body, while embryonic stem cells belong in
the microenvironment of the early embryo, not in
an adult body, where they tend to cause tumors
and immune system reactions.
49Stem Cell Research
- Most importantly, adult stem cells have already
been successfully used in human therapies for
many years. As of this moment, NO therapies in
humans have ever been successfully carried out
using embryonic stem cells. New therapies using
adult type stem cells, on the other hand, are
being developed all the time.
50Stem Cell Research
- Adult Stem Cell Disadvantages 1. Limited
quantitycan sometimes be difficult to obtain in
large numbers - 2. Finitemay not live as long as ES cells in
culture - 3. Less flexible (with the exception of 1
above)may be more difficult to reprogram to form
other tissue types
51Stem Cell Research
- Where do they come from?
- Adult type stem cells come from Umbilical
Cords, Placentas and Amniotic FluidAdult type
stem cells can be derived from various
pregnancy-related tissues. - Adult TissuesIn adults, stem cells are present
within various tissues and organ systems. These
include the bone marrow, liver, epidermis,
retina, skeletal muscle, intestine, brain, dental
pulp, and elsewhere. Even fat obtained from
liposuction has been shown to contain significant
numbers of adult type stem cells. - CadaversNeural stem cells have been removed
from specific areas in post-mortem human brains
as late as 20 hours following death.
52Stem Cell Research
- These are some of the diseases that adult stem
cell research has helped provide treatments for. - Brain Cancer
- Retinoblastoma
- Ovarian Cancer
- Skin Cancer Merkel Cell Carcinoma
- Testicular Cancer
- Tumors abdominal organs Lymphoma
- Non-Hodgkins lymphoma
- Hodgkins Lymphoma
- Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia
- Acute Myelogenous Leukemia
- Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia
- Juvenile Myelomonocytic Leukemia
- Chronic Myelomonocytic Leukemia
- Cancer of the lymph nodes Angioimmunoblastic
Lymphadenopathy
53Stem Cell Research
- Multiple Myeloma
- Myelodysplasia
- Breast Cancer
- Neuroblastoma
- Renal Cell Carcinoma
- Various Solid Tumors
- Soft Tissue Sarcoma
- Ewings Sarcoma
- Waldenstroms macroglobulinemia
- Hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis
- POEMS syndrome
- Myelofibrosis
54Stem Cell Research
- Auto-Immune Diseases
- Diabetes Type I (Juvenile)
- Systemic Lupus
- Sjogrens Syndrome
- Myasthenia
- Autoimmune Cytopenia
- Scleromyxedema
- Scleroderma
- Crohns Disease
- Behcets Disease
- Rheumatoid Arthritis
- Juvenile Arthritis
- Multiple Sclerosis
- Polychondritis
- Systemic Vasculitis
- Alopecia Universalis
- Buergers Disease
55Stem Cell Research
- Cardiovascular
- Acute Heart Damage
- Chronic Coronary Artery Disease
- Ocular
- Corneal regeneration
- Immunodeficiencies
- Severe Combined Immunodeficiency Syndrome
- X-linked Lymphoproliferative Syndrome
- X-linked Hyper immunoglobulin M Syndrome
- Neural Degenerative Diseases and Injuries
- Parkinsons Disease
- Spinal Cord Injury
- Stroke Damage
56Stem Cell Research
- Anemias and Other Blood Conditions
- Sickle Cell Anemia
- Sideroblastic Anemia
- Aplastic Anemia
- Red Cell Aplasia
- Amegakaryocytic Thrombocytopenia
- Thalassemia
- Primary Amyloidosis
- Diamond Blackfan Anemia
- Fanconis Anemia
- Chronic Epstein-Barr Infection
- Wounds and Injuries
- Limb Gangrene
- Surface Wound Healing
- Jawbone Replacement
- Skull Bone Repair
57Stem Cell Research
- Other Metabolic Disorders
- Hurlers Syndrome
- Osteogenesis Imperfecta
- Krabbe Leukodystrophy
- Osteopetrosis
- Cerebral X-Linked Adrenoleukodystrophy
- Liver Disease
- Chronic Liver Failure
- Liver Cirrhosis
- Bladder Disease
- End-Stage Bladder Disease
- There are over 70 treatments that have come from
adult stem cell research
58Stem Cell Research
- These are how many treatments and therapies have
come from embryonic stem cell research
59Stem Cell Research
60Stem Cell Research
- Embryonic Stem Cell Advantages1. Flexibleappear
to have the potential to make any cell 2.
Immortalone ES cell line can potentially provide
an endless supply of cells with defined
characteristics 3. Availabilityembryos from in
vitro fertilization clinics
61Stem Cell Research
- Embryonic Stem Cell Disadvantages 1. Difficult
to differentiate uniformly and homogeneously into
a target tissue 2. ImmunogenicES cells from a
random embryo donor are likely to be rejected
after transplantation - 3. TumorigenicCapable of forming tumors or
promoting tumor formation - 4. Destruction of developing human life
62Stem Cell Research
- This last point makes it obvious that embryonic
stem cell research should be outlawed. No matter
what potential good the treatments might do, it
is not worth killing innocent people to get them.
63Stem Cell Research
- Where do they come from?
- As their name suggests, embryonic stem cells come
from living, human embryos. They are harvested
from two sources. EmbryosEmbryonic stem cells
are obtained by harvesting living embryos which
are generally 5-7 days old. The removal of
embryonic stem cells invariably results in the
destruction of the embryo. FetusesAnother
kind of stem cell called an embryonic germ cell
can be obtained from either miscarriages or
aborted fetuses.
64Stem Cell Research
- Another one of the problems of embryonic stem
cell research could be the exploitation of women - The following is a quote from Dr. Pia de Solenni
65Stem Cell Research
- Advocates of embryonic stem cell research are
poised to create an industry built on the bodies
of millions of women. The industry needs women
because it needs our eggs. Somatic cell nuclear
transfer involves transferring the nucleus from
one of the specialized cells in the human body
into an egg in which its own nucleus has been
removed. No matter whether the clones or embryos
are created for research or reproductive
purposes, they must be created by using a woman's
egg.
66Stem Cell Research
- Dr. David Prentice, formerly a professor of life
sciences at Indiana State University, now at
theFamily Research Council, has crunched the
numbers to show how many women would be involved
just to cure diabetes. To date, the highest
cloning efficiency with animals has been 20-30
percent. This means about 50 eggs per animal
treatment are required. In the US, there are 17
million diabetes patients. Given the best
successes with animal cloning, scientists would
have to obtain a minimum of 850 million eggs,
harvested from at least 85 million women.
Scientist Peter Membaerts gives an even higher
estimate of 100 eggs per treatment. According to
the 2000 census, there are about 60 million
American women of reproductive age. Where will
the other eggs come from? And would all 60
million American women be amenable to this?
67Stem Cell Research
- Women whose eggs are harvested undergo a long,
uncomfortable, painful, and potentially dangerous
process called ovarian hyper stimulation. Some of
the drugs used have never been approved for this
use by the FDA. Complications from the procedure
include a potential link to ovarian cysts and
cancers, severe pelvic pain, rupture of the
ovaries, stroke, possible negative effects on
future fertility, and even death. - In clinical studies using Pergonal for ovarian
hyper stimulation, 2.4-5.5 percent of women
developed complications. If we're talking about
80 million women, that means at least 800,000 of
them would develop complications. 224,000 would
be classified as severe cases. Similarly, the
FDA's data on Lupron, another drug used for
ovarian hyper stimulation, records a death rate
of .5 percent. That means we could expect 400,000
deaths in the group of 80 million women required
to treat diabetes - just one disease.
68Stem Cell Research
- So, for these reasons and the most important
reason that embryonic stem cell research (on a
large scale) requires the destruction of a human
person to obtain the stem cells and quite
possibly the death of hundreds of thousands of
women, we can see why adult stem cell research
should be pursued and embryonic stem cell
research should be ended immediately
69Sources
- http//www.stemcellresearchfacts.com/pros_cons.htm
l - http//www.stemcellresearchfacts.com/articles/PiaD
eSolenniTestimony.pdf - http//www.newscientist.com/article/dn13170-stem-c
ell-breakthrough-leaves-embryos-unharmed.html - http//www.21stcenturysciencetech.com/articles/win
ter01/stem_cell.html - http//www.stemcellresearch.org/facts/treatments.h
tm
70(No Transcript)
71Euthanasia
72Euthanasia
- The Practice of Euthanasia is often referred to
as mercy killing - This generally occurs when a person near the end
of their life or who has a serious debilitating
disease or terminal illness is killed to put
them out of their misery
73Euthanasia
- Many times people who are pro-euthanasia will use
an argument similar to the choice argument for
abortion, such as Its my body so I have the
choice about when and how I should be able to
die. And this kind of argument is used to
justify the practice.
74Euthanasia
- There are several problems with logic like this
when it comes to legalizing a practice such as
euthanasia.
75Euthanasia
- 1. Legalizing the deliberate killing of humans
(other than in legitimate self-defense/war or
possibly for the most heinous of crimes)
fundamentally undermines the basis of law and
public morality. - 2. No system of safeguards could ever be
foolproof, so in practice legalizing voluntary
euthanasia would result in legalizing
involuntary euthanasia. This has been the
experience in both Nazi Germany and, currently,
in Holland.(ref) - 3. Legalizing voluntary euthanasia on the basis
of excruciating hard cases would result in its
being routinely practiced on a large scale. Bad
cases do not make good law. One leading medical
ethicist said more than twenty years ago "We
shall begin by doing it because the patient is in
intolerable pain but we shall end up doing it
because it is Friday afternoon and we want to get
away for the weekend"1. The precedent of
abortion is chilling "Aging Advisory Services"
would offer a 1-stop shop where you could pop in
your inconvenient relatives and, for a suitable
fee, euthanize them in your lunch-hour.
76Euthanasia
- 4. Even if someone sincerely wants to be
euthanasia this may well be due to depression or
to a misapprehension of their true prognosis.
Palliative specialists report that such requests
are often used by patients to assess their worth
and value to others. A positive response merely
confirms their worst fears and such a decision,
once acted upon, is irreversible. - 5. Legalized euthanasia would produce huge social
pressures on very vulnerable people to
volunteer, causing much stress and suffering. - 6. It would undermine the financing and provision
of proper geriatric and palliative care with
stretched budgets euthanasia would be seen as the
cost-effective option. Indeed it would be very
"cost effective". - 7. It would also undermine funding of research
into these areas.
77Euthanasia
- 8. Even without it being explicitly stated,
legalizing euthanasia (and presumably making it
available on the NHS) would mean that the state
was offering it as an alternative to people who
were seeking benefits for sickness or
unemployment or to pensioners, to refugees and
people with disabilities. If it were legalized,
why not then insist that such people have
euthanasia counseling before they receive care
or benefits
78Euthanasia
- 9. It would fundamentally undermine the
relationships between elderly or dependent
relatives and their families, with overwhelming
pressures being applied on people to take the
honorable course and not be a burden. - 10. It would fundamentally undermine the basis of
trust between doctors and patients that is at the
heart of effective medicine. Many people in
Holland are rightly terrified of going to
hospital and being euthanized against their will.
Far from being the 'ultimate expression of
patient autonomy' legalized euthanasia becomes
the ultimate act of medical paternalism.
79Euthanasia
- 11. Any form of suicide is devastating for the
people left behind who love the person who has
decided that his or her life is no longer worth
living it is especially damaging for children. - 12. Whereas the advocates of euthanasia are
mostly members of the chattering classes who seem
to be having difficulty in coming to terms with
their own mortality, the victims would
predominantly be the most disadvantaged members
of society the old, poor, disabled, infirm and
unemployed.
80Euthanasia
- Euthanasia would not only be for people who are
"terminally ill -
- Euthanasia can become a means of health care cost
containment - Euthanasia will become non-voluntary
-
- Euthanasia is a rejection of the importance and
value of human life - It also would significantly cheapen the value of
life
81Euthanasia
- Euthanasia would not only be for people who are
"terminally ill." - There are two problems here -- the definition of
"terminal" and the changes that have already
taken place to extend euthanasia to those who
aren't "terminally ill." - There are many definitions for the word
"terminal." For example, when he spoke to the
National Press Club in 1992, Jack Kevorkian said
that a terminal illness was "any disease that
curtails life even for a day." The co-founder of
the Hemlock Society often refers to "terminal old
age." Some laws define "terminal" condition as
one from which death will occur in a "relatively
short time." Others state that "terminal" means
that death is expected within six months or less.
82Euthanasia
- The movement from voluntary to involuntary
euthanasia would be like the movement of abortion
- from "only for the life or health of the mother"
as was proclaimed by advocates 30 years ago to
today's "abortion on demand even if the baby is
half born". - Euthanasia people state that abortion is
something people choose - it is not forced on
them and that voluntary euthanasia will not be
forced on them either. They are missing the main
point - it is not an issue of force - it is an
issue of the way laws against an action can be
broadened and expanded once something is declared
legal. - You don't need to be against abortion to
appreciate the way the laws on abortion have
changed and to see how it could well happen the
same way with euthanasia/assisted suicide as soon
as the door is opened to make it legal.
83Euthanasia
- Past history shows us what happens when a society
starts to devalue human life - 1960s Pope Paul VI
- Current history shows us what legalizing
Euthanasia can lead to. It could lead to
involuntary euthanasia which is currently
practiced in Denmark.
84Euthanasia
- The Terri Schiavo case
- This is one example of what terrible effects
legalizing euthanasia could have on our society
and our world. Slippery Slope
85Euthanasia
- When is it ok to pull the plug?
86Euthanasia
- There is nothing wrong with letting a disease or
an illness take its natural course even if it
leads to death if the patient involved has
refused treatment - we can never take direct action to end someones
life or be the direct cause of someones death in
an end of life situation, even if they request it.
87Sources
- http//www.euthanasia.com/argumentsagainsteuthanas
ia.html - http//www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/8270/herron.h
tm - http//www.terrisfight.org/pages.php?page_id32
- http//www.mercatornet.com/articles/60_years_after
_nuremberg_how_much_have_we_learned/ - http//www.starcourse.org/euthanasia.htm
- http//www.cyberessays.com/Politics/97.htm