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[personal profile] fpb
First, remember what I said about parents and children:

http://fpb.livejournal.com/173966.html

Then, but only if you have a very strong stomach, read this:

LONDON, August 15, 2006 (LifeSiteNews.com) – This week, a popular BBC radio announcer told the public that she had entered into a “suicide pact” with friends should she be incapacitated by illness.

Jenni Murray, the presenter of BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour, a feminist and euthanasia advocate, said that she does not want to be “trapped” into caring for her mother who is ill with Parkinson’s disease.

Murray, a member of the Order of the British Empire and a patron of the Family Planning Association, is airing her views tonight on a BBC television program called “Don’t Get Me Started.” Publicity material for the show says that Murray “plans to end her own life when she becomes a burden to those around her.” She discusses methods, including smothering with a pillow or injecting with drugs, with two friends,

The network said: "Jenni is angry that, having fought so hard to become liberated and independent, women are now being trapped into caring for dependent parents."

Murray complains that the law against assisted suicide is supported by a “religious minority” who hold to an outdated moral view that human life is inherently valuable and that children have a legitimate obligation to care for elderly parents.

The program highlights the growth, especially in Britain, of the idea of an “obligation to die.” Most leading thinkers in the bioethics field endorse euthanasia and assisted suicide and often argue that elderly and ill patients have the obligation to end their lives to relieve pressure on families and the health care system.

In 2004, Baroness Mary Warnock, Britain’s leader in bioethics, said unequivocally that the ill and elderly had an obligation to die as soon as possible so as not to burden relatives and the medical system. Baroness Warnock, called Britain's “Philosopher Queen”, said in an interview, “In other contexts sacrificing oneself for one's family would be considered good. I don't see what is so horrible about the motive of not wanting to be an increasing nuisance.”

She said, “I am not ashamed to say some lives are more worth living than others.”

[personal profile] fpb reprises: It is tempting to speculate what an appallingly loveless upbringing these creatures... the world woman seems very distant from anything they are... must have had, to even contemplate the option of murdering their parents for their own convenience. Parricide is, perhaps, a suitable punishment for having brought a Jenni Murray or a Mary Warnock into the world. (Warnock's supposed philosophical eminence, by the way, could never be confirmed to me by genuine philosophers; in the work of the late Karl Popper, for instance, she only appears, and in no complimentary guise, in a single footnote.) Nonetheless, Murray's claim that she'll be ready to go when her time comes is indubitably a lie. The same selfishness that makes it possible for her to contemplate - and contemplate with self-congratulation - murdering her mother, also makes sure that she will never see a time when the world could possibly be deprived of the rich contribution and irreplaceable values granted by her wonderful presence. Jack Kervorkian, according to a recent news story, is dying of cancer in prison right now, and yet he stubbornly refuses the same remedy that, in similar circumstances, he was so doctrinaire about inflicting on others.

Date: 2006-08-16 04:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] frelling-tralk.livejournal.com
That's really horrible. Are they advocating that all helpless and unproductive members of society be put to death, to avoid being a nuisance??? It's like something out of Nazi Germany

Her poor mother must just feel awful at her daughter publically threatening suicide to avoid caring for her.

Date: 2006-08-16 12:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fpb.livejournal.com
The phrasing is not clear, but I suspect that what Murray is advocating is, first kill her mother because she does not want to have to feed her, and second, be killed herself if she ever becomes "a burden". You and I, knowing England, will both laugh hollow laughs at the thought that a BBC apparatchik like Murray, who has battened for decades on the canon, should regard herself as a monument of rugged, self-made individualism. But as for her mother, bear in mind that she did bear Jenni Murray. The vicious selfishness that shines from every one of the vile broadcasts that she has been allowed to make for decades is something she learned early in life. Her parents probably have something to do with it.

Finally, think of the logical disconnnect. In order for women to be free to achieve in society, women must be murdered when they are no longer able to achieve in society. So, once you have achieved - you get killed. We have a great thinker on our hands, ladies (and gentlemen).

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