Saturday, September 5, 2009

NHS's Forced Euthanasia



The new media is exposing the euthanasia scandal in Britain's National Health Service.

You can read about it at hotair.com.

Basically, government health care wants to save as much money as possible, so they push people toward a quick death rather than pay the money for the expensive surgeries Americans are used to getting.

The NHS decides which patients are close to death and can withhold basic nursing services such as food and water with the patient's consent. Some doctors are getting upset because these patients are dehydrated and are not able to think clearly.

A person should never have the legal right to end their own life. This should be prosecuted, not encouraged or pushed upon people by the government as a matter of expediency.

The patients who are deemed "very close to death" are put on permanent sedation medication. Doctors are speaking out against this practice. Some are taking these patients off the sedation death cycle after discovering they were nowhere near death.

This is, by the way, the same health care that only authorized people to get anti-blindness medication once the patient had already gone blind in one eye.

The government's plan is to save money by refusing treatment and cutting off their costs (or as Obama put it "pulling the plug on Grandma").

If you doubt there will be death panels under Kennedy/Obamacare you should think again!

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