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Published: February 3, 2021

RS and Alfie Evans cases show Britons must curb state’s power over life and death

By The Editor

GLASGOW, Scotland, February 3, 2021 (LifeSiteNews) — Once again, Britain is being denounced both at home and overseas as being in thrall to a “culture of death,” after “RS,” a middle-aged man of Polish nationality, died this week as a consequence of nutrition and hydration being withdrawn from him, at the end of a prolonged legal battle, by doctors at the University Hospitals Plymouth NHS Trust.

Following upon the case of Alfie Evans in 2018, this latest death has further highlighted the way in which British clinicians and judges now operate under a mindset in which the preservation of life has become a secondary, even a deprecated, consideration compared with “quality of life.” In both cases, foreign governments went to heroic lengths to facilitate the transportation of the patient out of Britain, under scrupulous clinical conditions, to receive specialist care overseas, only to be frustrated.

In the Evans case, the Pope and the Italian government offered to move the child by air ambulance to the famed Bambino Gesù hospital in Rome; in the case of RS, the Polish government volunteered similar support, even going so far as to confer diplomatic status on their compatriot in an effort to prise him

The remainder of this article is available in its entirety at LifeSite News

The views expressed in this news alert by the author do not directly represent that of The Official Street Preachers or its editors


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