In challenging emotional and ethical decisions related to the end of life, we are often told that no one can make that decision. "These matters belong to God," for example. Regardless of your religious beliefs, there is something false in such statements. By taking the ownership and responsibility for a life away from the person living that life, the control doesn't disappear completely; instead, it goes elsewhere and typically to those who neither know nor love the person facing the di...
In challenging emotional and ethical decisions related to the end of life, we are often told that no one can make that decision. "These matters belong to God," for example. Regardless of your religious beliefs, there is something false in such statements. By taking the ownership and responsibility for a life away from the person living that life, the control doesn't disappear completely; instead, it goes elsewhere and typically to those who neither know nor love the person facing the dilemma. The answer to the "whose life is it?" question simply cannot be the government, insurance agencies, hospitals, or politically active strangers.
Different Drummer: Reba McEntire
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