"Harry Krause" wrote in message
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NOYB wrote:
"Calif Bill" wrote in message
ink.net...
"NOYB" wrote in message
ink.net...
"Calif Bill" wrote in message
rthlink.net...
"NOYB" wrote in message
...
"Gould 0738" wrote in message
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Beware the slippery slope.
How large a step is it from terminating the life of people who are
"unable
to
make the decision to end their own life", to terminating people "who
are
not
capable of making the *right* decision, and want to go on living"?
Wow! Chuck and I agree.
Was done lots years ago. Baby born without a brain, the doctors put
the
baby to the side and let them die.
Better check your story there Bill. Babies born without a brain aren't
alive.
They are born with very little of the brain, and it is open to the world.
Now it's "born with very little brain"? Before it was "born *without* a
brain". The term for the condition you are now referring to is
anencephaly. Yes, an anencephalic baby can be alive for a short while.
No, a baby "born without a brain" cannot live.
As for my being a dentist...
We had two semesters studying cranial-facial development. I can tell you
all you need to know about neural tube defects and cranial-facial
abnormalities. Riley's Childrens' Hospital in Indianapolis (which is
adjacent to the dental school), has one of the premier cranio-facial
reconstructive teams in the World. One of the members of the team, Dr.
RR Hathaway, was my instructor for those two semesters. He's been
published plenty of times in the Journal of Craniofacial Surgery.
Okay...you're the expert in how faces should look. So...explain your
looks...
Speaking of explaining looks...
I had a lady come in today after 5 months of wearing a denture that I made
her. She complained that people have recently noticed that the teeth aren't
straight (even though for 5 months she had been perfectly happy with them).
She has a drooping right upper lip, so when she's not smiling, more of the
teeth are showing on the left than on the right. When she smiles, her lip
is straight, and consequently the teeth look straight. She told me that
all of her family members were commenting over Thanksgiving that her new
denture wasn't straight. That, of course, told me that she must not smile
a lot when her family is around. But how do you explain that to a patient?
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