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Arguments in Favor of Euthanasia: 1. Personhood – The argument is simple: someone in an irreversible coma is no longer a person but only a biological organism. The distinction is often made between a person’s biological life, or physical existence, and one’s biographical life, or the aspects of one’s life that make it meaningful. One’s biographical life is the sum total of one's goals, desires, dreams, plans, accomplishments and relationships. Medical science has made it possible to retain one’s biological life after having lost one’s biographical life. Thus the individual exists only as a body, having lost the essence of what it is that makes him/her a person. Hence it is not murder to terminate what remains of one’s mere biological existence. 2. Quality of Life – In cases of unrelenting and unrelievable suffering where there is no reasonable hope of improvement, life ceases to be worth living. In such cases, an individual or his/her family ought to be free to say “enough is enough” and put an end to such incessant misery. No one should be compelled to live a life that they no longer regard as life worth living. 3. Mercy – We extend mercy to animals when we put them out of their misery. Why should we be less merciful to humans? 4. Utilitarian concerns – Most people cannot afford to underwrite the expense of keeping a terminally ill or comatose person alive. To do so places an unfair burden on other members of the family. Why should tax dollars and precious hospital space and technology be expended to perpetuate the life of someone who will never function in society again when there are other, potentially productive people, who cannot receive proper care?
Sam Storms

Chopped Chicken Liver Appetizer

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Meats, Eggs Jewish Poultry, Appetizers, Jewish 3 Servings

INGREDIENTS

1 lb Chicken livers
3/4 c Chicken fat (available from your butcher)
1 c Coarsely chopped onions
4 Hard-cooked eggs, peeled
1 ts Salt
1 ds Pepper

INSTRUCTIONS

Wash chicken livers and pat dry with towel.  Set aside.
Cut up chicken fat and put in a skillet with onions. Saute, stirring
occasionally, to prevent burning the onions. Cook until the onions are
lightly browned and fat is melted. Remove onions and set aside. Pour liquid
chicken fat into a cup and set aside.
Place livers in the same skillet with 3 tablespoons of the liquid chicken
fat and saute until well done.  Add additional chicken fat, if necessary.
Cool slightly.
Using a food grinder with a fine blade, a food blender at high speed, a
food processor with a metal blade, or a chopping bowl, finely grind or chop
livers, hard-cooked eggs, and onions. Place mixture in a bowl, add salt,
pepper and about 1/4 cup liquid fat. If additional fat is necessary, add
salad oil, one tablespoon at a time, to the mixture. Mix until all
ingredients are well blended.
Fill a well-oiled 3-cup mold or shape into a simple ball and refrigerate.
Serve with cocktail-size rye bread slices.
Makes 3 cups.
From:  CLASSIC COLD CUISINE by Karen Green, Jeremy P. Tarcher, Inc., Los
Angeles.  1984.  ISBN 0-87477-322-9 Posted by: Karin Brewer, Cooking Echo,
8/92
From Gemini's MASSIVE MealMaster collection at www.synapse.com/~gemini

A Message from our Provider:

“God: so personal that in comparison we are cold unfeeling machines”

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