Word: kevorkians
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...enjoyed for many years. His artistic tastes run to the surreal; one painting is called Nausea. Another, Coma. A third, an allegorical study of genocide, is set in a frame that, by various accounts, was either painted red to look like blood or painted in actual human blood that Kevorkian salvaged from outdated samples at the local blood bank, and from...
...Kevorkian has become the kind of fanatic who could prompt people who share his views to change their minds. Two out of three Americans say they think doctors should be allowed to help desperately sick patients commit suicide, a cause for which Kevorkian has become the most celebrated champion. But as he appears on television after each new death, invoking a higher moral authority and ignoring court orders and judges' instructions, Kevorkian begins to embody all the warnings about how euthanasia, once unleashed, could get out of hand. "It's almost become obligatory for people who write or speak about...
...thing, Kevorkian has made clear his intention to work outside the law. When a Michigan judge dismissed murder charges against him but advised him against continuing his crusade, Kevorkian replied that he would never shirk his "medical duty. If my colleagues won't work with me, I will work alone." In 1988 Kevorkian suggested to founder Derek Humphry that the Hemlock Society, which supports euthanasia for the terminally ill, join forces with him and set up a suicide center. Humphry's response was "We're not lawbreakers, we're law reformers." But he recalls that Kevorkian insisted that such...
Even passionate supporters of euthanasia argue that there must always be safeguards -- second opinions from disinterested doctors, psychological evaluations, family consultations -- before any decision is made. Though Kevorkian is adamant about the precautions he takes, his enthusiasm for testing new techniques and promoting his cause has naturally raised concerns about his neutrality in counseling potential clients. A pathologist by training, he is not in the best position to make a judgment about patients when they are still alive...
...rushed to Governor John Engler's desk last week, which would temporarily ban physician-assisted suicide until a commission can make a recommendation, is aimed directly at Kevorkian. But the doctor says it makes no difference to him if Michigan's elected representatives turn him into an outlaw. "He has told me that even if this does become a law, he would violate it," says Fieger. The problem is that once zealots claim the right to choose which laws they'll obey, all the underlying trust that permits professionals, and especially doctors, to function disappears...