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Writing to an Audience of One

My name is Stu, and this weblog is my online journal. You'll find my opinions on a variety of topics as well as links to other things on the web that I find interesting. When the spirit moves me, I may also include longer essays, or add a short story.

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Sunday, June 3, 2007

TB & Moral Absolutes
 
Andrew Speaker has become the new poster child for all that is wrong with our society.  Infected with TB, he left the country, traveled to Greece, got married, spent his honeymoon outside the country, and came back, clandestinely, then turned himself in, all the while knowing the severity of his disease.
 
What I find troubling is not so much his selfish behavior, but the lack of proper safeguards, or protocols to protect him, as well as the rest  of us.  The CDC essentially dropped the ball, because it is an agency gutted and forced to work on shoe string budgets (much like all agencies in our government), where deregulation has now made it possible for this to happen.
 
So we have become a people bent on tearing apart the person, but not the system.  Oh, there will be oversight committees, and other talking heads, spending more tax dollars trying to find a scapegoat, but in the end we still haven't solved the problem.
 
The bottom line, since the first time medicine has saved a person's life, medical ethics has been in play, questioning who gets to live, and who dies.  It's great that God has given us a means to help our fellow breathren, but how far do we go?  We have given people a quantity of life, with no quality.  Take my Grandma for example.  She died at Ninety Six, but spent the last Sixteen of those years in a state of senile dementia.  Sixteen years.  Who really benefited from that?  You guessed right.
 
But back to the issue.  We forget that moral absolutes are necessary, and the ethical treatment of people in the care of medical professionals needs to include what is really humane.  The more we dabble into ways to save lives, the greater the chasm we create between honoring God, and playing one.
 
The anger over what Andrew Speaker did is ludicrous compared to society's bent on abortion RIGHTS, or those living a promiscuous lifestyle, spreading all sorts of diseases, especially AIDS, with no repercussions for their actions.
 
And we want to 'tar & feather' this guy! 
 
I don't argee with what he did, but we all suffer consequences from other peoples actions.
 
I can no longer donate blood because of sexual abuse.  I'm not a carrier of any disease, but the rules regarding blood donation disallow me.  I accept that, but I don't like it.
 
And the most important consequence someone suffered that didn't deserve it, is what Christ did for all of us on the Cross.
 
When we can finally quit screaming blood murder over someone elses selfishness, and look to what we each do to contribute to the problem, (like not completing the antibiotic therapy required to eradicate the disease from our system), then we will be on the right road to understanding the moral absolutes given to us are not burdens, but safety nets and loving protection.
 
Think about it!
12:56 pm


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There has never been the slightest doubt in my mind that the God who started this great work in you would keep at it and bring it to a flourishing finish on the very day Christ Jesus appears.  Phil. 1:6 (The Message)