Wesley J. Smith is a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute’s Center on Human Exceptionalism, and consults for the Patients Rights Council.
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Wesley J. Smith
NHS Meltdown: Kidney Cancer Patient Have to Wait Months to Decide Whether They Can Receive New Chemotherapy
From First ThoughtsThis is the way things go with socialized medicine. The health care rationers are going to take months to decide whether to cover a new chemotherapy. From the story:Kidney cancer patients will have to wait months for the NHS drugs rationing body to decide if they can have new drugs after guidance . . . . Continue Reading »
I try to be a realist and an idealist. I promote human exceptionalism, knowing that as an imperfect species, we are unlikely to ever fully achieve the dream of universal human equality. But the only way to get very close, it seems to me, is for our reach to exceed our grasp. That’s my . . . . Continue Reading »
In these darkening days, a little humor is always useful. With Halloween (my least favorite holiday) fast approacing, this primer in surviving zombie attacks is timely. My favorite part is the advice to kill infected friends “with dignity.” . . . . Continue Reading »
Jane Goodall the primatologist (and novelist since so much of her work is anthropomorphic, a charge she readily admits), along with fellow primatologist Toshisada Nishida, have won the coveted Leakey Prize, named after Louis Leakey, the famed anthropologist who sought to prove that humans first . . . . Continue Reading »
Why do media so often describe non-dying people who want assisted suicide as terminally ill? Is it on purpose? Mostly, I don’t think so. I think they have accepted a false premise; that assisted suicide is about terminal illness. So when someone who is not dying wants assisted suicide, . . . . Continue Reading »
I am a special consultant to the CBC and proud of it. This new promo video only tells the half of the energetic engagement with bioethical issues in which the CBC engages. A certain gray haired/bearded rapidly aging fellow even makes a brief appearance. Check it out. . . . . Continue Reading »
Debby Purdy, the UK woman struggling with progressive MS, went to court seeking an order assuring her that should she want to die, that her husband could assist her and face no legal consequences. (This case was similar to that of Diane Pretty a few years ago.) The trial court refused. From the . . . . Continue Reading »
Barbara Wagner was refused life-extending chemotherapy by Oregon Medicaid but explicitly told that the State would pay for her assisted suicide.That is the future if we accept the death agenda. In this No on I-1000 Ad, Barbara Wagner—who has since died—urges Washingtonians to vote no. . . . . Continue Reading »
For years we have been warned that there would be a “brain drain” if we did not pour billions into ESCR and human cloning research. I have called this the “blank check” demand.Meanwhile, in Brave New Britain—the country that never says no—scientists wanting . . . . Continue Reading »
I tried to link my interview with Shelton Walden on Pacifica’s WBAI in NYC over the weekend, and the archive was, shall we say, dysfunctional. I now have the right link. If you would like to hear the interview, in which Walden and I talk at length about human exceptionalism, animal rights, . . . . Continue Reading »
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