Nebuchanezzar
Banned
Thread title refers to the fact that, you know, he's got no place to go and whatever.
aight. serious conversation here. what argument is there to keep this kid, and other people in the same condition, alive at the enormous expense of the taxpayer?
I'm all for keeping him alive - it seems intuitive that he shouldn't be slaughtered for the state. But I'm confused as to why I feel that way.
*He has little chance of recovery
*He has little capability to appreciate his life in his current state (assume this is true for this thread)
*He consumes enormous amounts of resources
When talking ethics in philosophy, we always talk about innocent 'people', where a person is a rational, conscious person ra ra ra. So insofar as it relates to moral philsophy, a carrot is not a person, a rat is not a person, an elderly person with severe dementia is not a person and so on. Is this kid worthy of consideration as a person within the moral sphere? More importantly, is it worth the $$$'s to keep him alive when these $$$'s, presumably, could be better spent elsewhere?
Try not to get all emotional please townie. We talk about euthanasia, abortion and other moral issues without you getting all uppity. REMEMBER I DON'T SUPPORT KILLING THE KID!
Disability services shortage | Rebecca Blinman | Scott Blinman Department of Ageing, Disability and Home Care | Louise Hallsmh said:THE parents of a severely disabled eight-year-old boy have pleaded with the State Government to overturn its policy opposing group homes for children after being forced to leave him in respite care for more than six months.
The Department of Ageing, Disability and Home Care has been unable to find a foster family able to cope with Aaron Blinman, who is unable to speak or walk and is fed through a tube in his stomach. But the director-general of the department, Jim Moore, said disabled children under 12 were not allowed to live in group homes because they need to be in a ''family-like'' environment. ''Aaron's parents want permanent care for him and we have exactly the same concern, but we've moved away from that sort of institutionalisation,'' Mr Moore said.
However, Rebecca and Scott Blinman say Aaron's first foster family was unable to cope despite being paid by the State Government and given fortnightly respite. ''There is no family in existence that could cope with Aaron's need - he doesn't sleep, he bangs on his bed, screams and calls out all night keeping the whole family awake and needs his nappies changed every couple of hours,'' Mrs Blinman said.
''If we couldn't do it, and the two of us were home full-time, how could anyone else?''
The couple have three other young children, including a nine-year-old girl with cerebral palsy and vision impairment.
They relinquished care of Aaron, hoping he would be placed in a permanent group home with round-the-clock care. The department refuses to allow children to live in group homes for fear of vulnerable children being institutionalised for life. Aaron has spent the last six months in respite care that also houses intellectually disabled adults.
Mrs Blinman said a long-term stay in respite care was hardly a family-like environment.
The Opposition spokesman for Disability Services, Andrew Constance, said the family should not have been allowed to become so desperate that they had to relinquish care of their son.
aight. serious conversation here. what argument is there to keep this kid, and other people in the same condition, alive at the enormous expense of the taxpayer?
I'm all for keeping him alive - it seems intuitive that he shouldn't be slaughtered for the state. But I'm confused as to why I feel that way.
*He has little chance of recovery
*He has little capability to appreciate his life in his current state (assume this is true for this thread)
*He consumes enormous amounts of resources
When talking ethics in philosophy, we always talk about innocent 'people', where a person is a rational, conscious person ra ra ra. So insofar as it relates to moral philsophy, a carrot is not a person, a rat is not a person, an elderly person with severe dementia is not a person and so on. Is this kid worthy of consideration as a person within the moral sphere? More importantly, is it worth the $$$'s to keep him alive when these $$$'s, presumably, could be better spent elsewhere?
Try not to get all emotional please townie. We talk about euthanasia, abortion and other moral issues without you getting all uppity. REMEMBER I DON'T SUPPORT KILLING THE KID!