![]() The event ran in conjunction with C.O.P Firearms and Training. Francis Mitchell, a longtime member and trustee of the club, said he was told the boy's father was supporting his son from behind when the shooting happened. The boy's father and older brother were also there at the time, a gun club member and school official said. Lawrence Vallierpratte said.Īs the boy fired the Uzi, "the front end of the weapon went up with the backfire and he ended up receiving a round in his head," police Lt. The boy lost control of the weapon while firing it Sunday at the Machine Gun Shoot and Firearms Expo at the Westfield Sportsman's Club, police Lt. An 8-year-old boy died after accidentally shooting himself in the head while firing an Uzi submachine gun under adult supervision at a gun fair. My fellow medical students and doctors should do so as well. If not, I should refuse to acknowledge unethical laws, laws that interject community power into a decision that should be left to our own conscience. I deeply and sincerely hope that the voters will recognize the right of each of us to steer the course of our own lives, and make our own decisions. As a doctor, one of my central duties is to protect the right of my patients to make decisions for themselves, to stand up for their autonomy when they are too weak to do so. It's quite another to the be individual who actually must execute these cruel acts. Why should American physicians be expected to tell a sobbing husband he cannot see his husband in the hospital? To tell a mother in agony she must suffer for a few hours more, in service of those who cling to a medieval notion of the morality of human mortality? It's all too easy to ask for bigotry and coercive enforcement of your faith in a voting booth. Why should I allow the intolerant, even if it is a intolerant majority of the electorate, to dictate their false moral posturing through my actions. ![]() What if I refuse to listen to this letter, if it should come? David's marriage is as real and as valid as any in my experience. If California's Proposition 8 passes, David could very well get a letter informing him that his marriage is annulled. What if I refuse to ignore the pleas of a patient facing unbearable suffering? What if I refuse to follow their intolerant and meddling desires? They wish to impose their narrow moral sense on everyone, using my hands as a doctor to do so. The opponents of Washington's I-1000 and proponents California's Proposition 8 both wish to interject, to restrict choices for others with their notions of what is right and wrong, comfortable and uncomfortable. The churches, the ignorant and intolerant, the meddling sanctimonious crowd should stay silent. As a physician, it is my role to honestly present the choices and implement whatever course the patient or the person he or she loves decides. In these difficult and wrenching decisions, I believe the state, the community and even the doctor should be quiet. I believe that everyone competent deserves to choose what happens to themselves in a hospital-when they choose to end their suffering, and to whom they wish to delegate this supreme authority. Stronger than most who find themselves in medical school, I believe in the autonomy of patients. I'll soon be the person asking husbands and wives for these difficult decisions. Shortly, I'll be returning to the wards, treating patients as a medical student. We agree to take on the horrible responsibility of being the one charged with making those difficult decisions for the person we love, thinking of and for them when they cannot. ![]() It's one of those promises we make to one another, when committing ourselves to a partner. Intubation or death by asphyxiation? Call in the organ donation team, or the morgue? One of the toughest things to imagine, if I get married, is making a difficult medical decision for my partner when she cannot do so herself. ![]()
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