tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1556371561007953336.post5950578155264901256..comments2024-03-16T16:44:18.220-07:00Comments on Bad Cripple: Memorieswilliam Peacehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00223601480542461802noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1556371561007953336.post-44878959218821649842013-09-26T16:02:01.456-07:002013-09-26T16:02:01.456-07:00Thank you for your "rambling."
Thank yo...Thank you for your "rambling."<br /><br />Thank you for writing "Can I undermine the utilitarianism of Peter Singer? Can I prevent a man like Jack Kevorkian from amassing a body count of disenfranchised people with a disability?"<br /><br />I wonder if I can help in some way myself. Probably not, or maybe in tiny incremental ways. . .<br /><br />I have always been afraid of Kevorkian. I've been afraid of his "message," and how every single liberal friend of mine (which means basically everyone) has not understood how fundamentally evil this man is. My attitude towards him has always been seen as some odd quirk about me. Why was I always so opposed to "death with dignity?" For me, this concept has always been a threat. It has since I was born. Both a threat and a bad joke, for when I've expressed the feeling I've had that I felt others thought I ought to contemplate suicide, this was mistaken for my being suicidal. My answer would always be "No. It's Kevorkian." <br /><br />I hope that made a little sense. Julie H. Rosehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18370626312151913595noreply@blogger.com