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The assisted suicide report they don’t want you to see…

January 20, 2016 by Andrea Mrozek 2 Comments

…can be found here. Thanks to a friend for sending, he says it took digging. It’s long, so I confess to not having read it yet.

Photo courtesy of http://alexschadenberg.blogspot.ca/

Filed Under: All Posts, Assisted Suicide/Euthanasia, Featured Posts

Assisted suicide: Anesthesiologists sound alarm

January 20, 2016 by Faye Sonier 3 Comments

In a medical journal article published this month, Canadian anesthesiologists raise concerns about physician assisted suicide:

Euthanasia usually involves a three-step process: a drug to relax the patient, a general anesthetic such as propofol to induce an artificial coma, and, finally, a neuromuscular block that causes respiratory arrest, cardiac arrest and death.

During surgery, “We take a lot of care with our monitoring and our assessment of the patient to judge depths of anesthesia,” Mack said. But if an error is made during euthanasia — and the muscle relaxant injected before the person is in a coma deep enough to prevent feeling the effects — he or she could die by suffocation while paralyzed, but conscious.

heartbeat

It seems like the lawyers at the Supreme Court of Canada were making decisions best left to …well …actual doctors:

In an interview, Mack said doctors are feeling pressured. “A timeline set by the Supreme Court for legislation is one thing, but for us to actually get to the point we can safely provide it is another…”

Shocking. Well, not really.

Filed Under: All Posts, Assisted Suicide/Euthanasia, Featured Posts

An event to discuss “paper abortions” for men

January 19, 2016 by Andrea Mrozek 3 Comments

Yesterday, we learned of a man suing a random woman, with whom he had sex of his own free will, because she got pregnant and kept the child. He didn’t want a child just yet, rather instead, wanted to get married, with a non-random woman, and have children at the time of his choosing, all traditional-like.

When men use women for sex who subsequently don’t get pregnant, we never hear about it again.

Women who use men for sex are also out there. And we do hear about it more, because they do so using what is at their disposal, which can sometimes include pregnancy.

A sidenote: Sex, by design, was never intended to be used to use people. It was intended to bring people closer together. The risks of using someone when you have sex outside marriage go up exponentially. If you are married, in theory, you are connected in every possible other way: financial, spiritual and emotional. Sexual connections are one of many connections, and because you are being intimate on so many levels, sexual intimacy is at lesser risk of being used for malicious purposes. Though it is not totally impossible and this is why it’s wise to be wise about who you marry. This is also why it is wise to put safeguards, or fences, around sexual activity of any kind–because it is an area rife with abuse, and when people are abused sexually, it is the most damaging, painful, difficult to overcome type of abuse.

Generally, today, any concept of putting safeguards around sexual relationships is scoffed at as being totally and utterly ridiculous.

Today’s understanding of sex–which is apparently not ridiculous–is that Cosmo has the right idea. Sex is for the titillating excitement of trying new positions, or “making your man crazy!” or some other such completely ridiculous nonsense.

The sexual revolution has told us that sex is not for intimacy, but rather for fun.

And so, men use women and women use men, sometimes by having children when they said or perhaps thought they wouldn’t.

When children are born under these circumstances, it gets ugly. Because there is a child in the picture and that child needs a mom and a dad, but due to acrimony between those supposed adults, that child will now spend most of their formative years in a court system, where a judge will force one or the other, or both of said child’s parents to act like an adult.

Generally, these days, in that court system, the men are treated poorly, though I’ve known cases where the mother suffered at the hands of an effective liar of an ex-husband.

Yesterday I wrote that the man who sued that random woman he had sex with for actually having the audacity to bear a child instead of killing it in utero could, and perhaps logically should, win.

Today I learn of a formal lecture discussing “paper abortions”–the idea that men should be able to walk away from women and children as their choice.

Given that women can at any point do away with their pregnancies for any reason or no reason at all, should men be allowed to do the same?

Logically, they should.

Morally, they shouldn’t, and neither should the women, which is kind of why I blog here semi-regularly.

Legally, we have a conundrum, because the state will use all its power to make sure the child doesn’t end up as a ward of the state, which, we can all agree is less than ideal for so many reasons.

If you want to discuss this more, you can attend an event tomorrow night, hosted by the Canadian Association for Equality. They are asking “Is legal paternal surrender a viable option for men? …Recently, the concept of legal paternal surrender, or “paper abortion,” is being put forth as an option for men.”

This event will be held at the University of Ottawa, January 20, Room 509, Arts Hamelin Building, 70 Laurier Ave, 7 pm.

Five dollars cash at the door.

Men are starting to say "Keep your opinions out of my pocketbook." Should they be allowed?

Men are starting to say “Keep your opinions out of my pocketbook.” Should they be allowed?

 

Filed Under: All Posts, Featured Posts

Hurray for the Toronto Star!

January 18, 2016 by Andrea Mrozek 2 Comments

They start this article with pro-life talking points:

When a man and a woman of a certain age have unprotected sex, there is always the possibility a baby will be made. Such are the facts of life with which, one would assume, a doctor is familiar.

Yes indeed.

But read the article. I was bemused reading it, that a grown adult, a physician, would launch a lawsuit for this:

And yet a 42-year-old Toronto physician recently tried to sue a woman with whom he’d had a casual sexual relationship for more than $4 million in damages, claiming “non-pathological emotional harm of an unplanned parenthood.”

Here’s what the physician was unhappy about, at age 42:

To use the language of the statement of claim, PP was emotionally harmed because he was deprived of the choice of falling in love, marrying, enjoying married life and, when he and his wife thought ‘the time was right,’ having a baby,” the judge wrote in his 18-page ruling.

The man is a cad and an idiot, who passed med school. Scary.

However, he is only buying into what he’s been told his whole life… that sex need not result in babies, that sex is an itch to be scratched, something nice that comes no strings attached and that ultimately, we can all plan parenthood. (Where have I heard that phrase before?)

It is only in a world where women get the ultimate and arbitrary right to do away with or keep babies based on how they feel that a lawsuit such as this can get off the ground. They obviously felt they had a chance, and quite frankly, I would have thought they did too.

I’m sad for the child, though. A friend’s son, who is growing up without his dad, has taken to asking whether his dad was a good guy. And the obvious answer here will be, sadly, no.

Filed Under: All Posts, Featured Posts, Feminism

Pro-choice feminists, redistributing oppression

January 14, 2016 by Andrea Mrozek 2 Comments

liberation

Filed Under: All Posts, Featured Media

Strength to Fight Ottawa Canal Skate, January 23

January 13, 2016 by Andrea Mrozek 1 Comment

Strength to Fight is raising money and awareness in fighting pornography by skating the entire length of the canal. Yes, that’s right, all 15 km, on January 23, meeting at Dow’s Lake at 1 pm.

You can join by skating, join by giving money, or join by sharing this post and spreading the word. I’m hoping to find Strength to Skate–would be great to be able to say I skated the ENTIRE canal all in one go, once in my life. I can already truthfully say I’ve skated to work! Which is a story I enjoy telling. skate

 

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George Jonas, rest in peace

January 11, 2016 by Andrea Mrozek 1 Comment

I have a George Jonas column up on my billboard with a collection of columns I really enjoyed. It’s this one, which kind of bluntly gets at the stasis on abortion over the past some decades. I appreciate bluntness (mostly) and honesty (always) and therefore, I appreciate George Jonas. Now he’s gone on “to the other side,” and I’m sad.

May he rest in peace, and write honest and blunt columns there without ever receiving a single vitriolic letter to the editor.

 

 

Filed Under: All Posts, Featured Posts

“Was it planned?”

January 8, 2016 by Andrea Mrozek 5 Comments

This just in from a pregnant friend. I think this kind of question is very rude in part because it’s so personal. It also annoys me because it reflects the theme of our age, that apparently we can plan EVERYTHING. I’m not sure what to tell her. My best first reply would be “Why do you ask that?” followed up by “Why do you think that is appropriate to ask?”

Have you ever written about people asking pregnant ladies “Was it planned?” Probably half of the people we’ve told have asked me that, and it’s getting infuriating. Not because of how personal that question is but because I’ve thought about it a lot, and the underlying question is really about whether the baby was wanted and is wanted. Either that or asking if we are sexually irresponsible, which I would actually be more okay with than people questioning whether we want our baby.

Any suggestions on how I can respond in a constructive way as this question continues to come up, so that the asker gets it and never asks someone that question again? When I shared the news with a manager in my department today, she actually just asked “Planned?” with an authoritative and loud voice and kind of an intimidating look, which I think has tipped me over the edge.

Filed Under: All Posts, Featured Posts

Not what he ordered

January 8, 2016 by Andrea Mrozek Leave a Comment

A surrogate mother is refusing to abort one of the triplets she is carrying on the buyer’s demand. Good for her. The customer is not always right.

I have a deep empathy for men who want children,” Cook says in a statement released to People Magazine. “However, I now think that the basic concept of surrogacy arrangements must be re-examined, scrutinized and reconsidered.”

Filed Under: All Posts, Featured Posts

It’s Christmas time

December 28, 2015 by Andrea Mrozek Leave a Comment

It still is, if you are counting out the Twelve Days of Christmas, anyway.

A pretty great New York Times article about the reason for the season. If you are Christian, a great reminder. If you are not, it’s a moment to reflect on what Christianity brought the world, whether or not Christians practice this well or poorly.

Christians have often fallen short of what followers of Jesus are called to be. We have seen this in the Crusades, religious wars and bigotry; in opposition to science, in the way critical thought is discouraged and in harsh judgmentalism. To this day, many professing Christians embody the antithesis of grace.

We Christians would do well to remind ourselves of the true meaning of the incarnation. We are part of a great drama that God has chosen to be a participant in, not in the role of a conquering king but as a suffering servant, not with the intention to condemn the world but to redeem it. He saw the inestimable worth of human life, regardless of social status, wealth and worldly achievements, intelligence or national origin. So should we.

Filed Under: All Posts, Featured Posts

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