Canadian Disabled Woman Opts for Euthanasia Because She Can’t Get Timely Assistance

abandonment, bioethics, Bowmanville, Canada, CBC, compassion, Culture & Ethics, disability, disabled people, doctors, euthanasia, health care, housing, Inclusive Solutions, MAiD, medical assistance in dying, Medicine, nurse practitioners, Ontario, Ontario Disability Support Program, PTSD, quadriplegia, Rose Finlay, social injustice, veterans
I am hearing about this kind of abandonment much more often since Canada loosened its euthanasia eligibility requirements. Source
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Reflecting God’s Character in Apologetics

Apologetics, ApologeticsGuy, apologist, Christian Apologetics, compassion, Evangelism, God's Character, Gospel, Listening, Loving, Mikel del Rosario, Reflecting God's Character, theology, Uncategorized
By Mikel Del Rosario Character Counts Our spiritual conversations should reflect God’s character Explaining reasons to believe doesn’t have to strictly be an intellectual thing. In fact, it shouldn’t be—especially when we’re talking to our skeptical friends, neighbors, and others who see Christianity differently. No, apologetics is way more profound in terms of its role in cultural engagement. Character plays a key role in this. And it isn’t just about adding memorized apologetic answers to your life. Developing a Christian character needs to be part of our discipleship to Jesus. I can’t tell you how many times the importance of character has come up in my work with other apologists, in my ministry, and in my teaching at William Jessup University. Let me give you just four examples from my…
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Doctor’s Diary: Fear Is a Gift from Our Designer

compassion, coronavirus, courage, emotions, fear, Gavin de Becker, Intelligent Design, joy, Love, murder hornets, pain, pandemic, parking structure, patients, physicians, sweat, The Gift of Fear, yellow jackets
Editor’s note: Dr. Simmons is the author most recently of Are We Here to Re-Create Ourselves? He is a Fellow with Discovery Institute’s Center for Science & Culture. As a physician, I have cared for many patients who were fearful. Often with good reason, but not always. Might fear actually be a purposeful design? Might it be present to protect a person? One might liken fear to pain, which is a similar gift. How would we have survived as a species if running bare-footed across sharp rocks or being stung by an irritated hive of yellow jackets (or murder hornets!) didn’t hurt? Without pain how would a child learn not to touch a hot stove? Or, pull away immediately to lessen the damage? In 1997, Gavin de Becker authored The Gift of…
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Forcing a Hospice to Euthanize in Canada

Adrian Dix, authoritarianism, British Columbia, Canada, caring, compassion, Delta Hospice Society, doctor, euthanasia, Fraser Health, Globe and Mail, Health Minister, hospice, Irene Thomas Hospice, Medicine, Ontario, patient, Soylent Green
Euthanasia is more than just legal in Canada. It has become a government-guaranteed right. But how to guarantee that the legally qualified who want to die are made dead? Unless the government establishes killing centers out of Soylent Green, it will have to coerce doctors into doing the killing — as has been done in Ontario. And, it will have to force medical facilities into allowing euthanasia on premises, whether their administators like it or not. Standing Tall Such an imposition is now taking place in British Columbia, where the Dignity Hospice board of directors are standing tall for the hospice philosophy of caring — but never killing — by refusing to permit euthanasia in the facililty. In response, the B.C. Health Minister is threatening to restrict funding in the…
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