Medical slavery in Connecticut
I'm against suicide, but I'm even more against statism. This is a direct affront to individuality. After this and the gun control they're pushing up there, I'd strongly advise anyone interested in freedom to move out of Connecticut.
Previous comments... You are currently on page 3.
+1000 if I could.
I would further posit this: how are we supposed to expect our teenagers to make good decisions when outside the home if we as parents make all their decisions for them prior to that time? If they have never been forced to exercise their judgement skills and reap the consequences until the moment they leave the home, I think it pretty unreasonable to expect them to magically (and I do mean magically) acquire such wisdom in the two steps they take leaving the house.
(Personal aside - I knew of one such young man who lived next door to me whose mother was, shall we say, "over-protective". He was never allowed to make any decisions and his mother frequently overrode them anyway. It took this young man nearly a decade after leaving the house to finally take charge of his own life.)
I would also point out several potential fallacies involved:
1) That the parents actually know what is best for the daughter. I would contend that this is precisely the logic the government is using to say that it gets to override the parents. I think that this reasoning must be cut off at the source or one must concede a slippery slope argument.
2) That ANYONE - doctors included - actually can predict with any degree of certainty the outcomes involved. Though there have been great medical advances, I can tell you from VERY personal experience in the life/death of a child that doctors often have their own agenda in such high-cost practices. Their objectivity can very easily be called into question here.
3) Probably the most important - that somehow the parents' will SHOULD override the will of a daughter who in this case I would deem to be fully competent in making her own decisions. Most states allow 17-year-olds to make their own decisions to graduate early. Most allow driving at sixteen. Most set the age of consent at 16. And are not those similarly life-defining events?
Parent Liberty
http://www.quaqua.org/commonlaw.htm
A seventeen year old simply does not have the wisdom/life experience to make a decision of this magnitude. A teenager's brain is not even fully formed (that doesn't finish until about 25), and one of the key components missing is the ability to recognize consequences of actions, "forecasting", etc.
For decisions of life and death, parents must be benevolent dictators.
It sounded to me like they had discussed the matter as a family and that the young lady had persuaded her parents on the matter. I think it's pretty presumptuous of us to armchair quarterback.
In this case, though, the mom needs to smacked. What kind of parent let's their teenage child have the final decision about chemo to treat their cancer? Yes, it's awful while it's happening, but the alternative is death.
Having been through this as a family, I can definitively say, it's worth it. State has no business in this issue, AND the mom needs to get her head screwed on straight.
http://wyomingwhiskey.com/wp/
Haven't tried it yet.
But that will change soon.
I made up my mind to get out right after the SCOTUS Kelo vs New London decision.
Cheyenne is a city that feels like a small town.
In the short time we've been here, Joan and I have identified a few "like-minded-enough" people:
A homesteader (Farm fresh eggs and 12 acres for a farming co-op)
A sausage-maker (Made on site - found that one yesterday, we got anduille. Woo-hoo!)
An auto-mechanic (The Tea Party candidate for governor stops by the garage often for coffee).
As for firearms companies, I believe Mag-Pul moved to WY from CO after Hickenlooper and the Marxocrats tried their BS.
Joan know about a couple of other, I will PM you with info.
Seriously, why stay?
Plus, I read yesterday that that fault line through CT that everyone's been warning about since I was a kid went active last week?
5 quakes in less than a week?
One of them 3.3 another 3.1?
The worst WY has is that you're sitting atop a mega-volcano ;)
Oh yeah, and Cheyenne is probably #2 on the list of places in the US to get the crap nuked out of it.
Load more comments...