First of all, I was drunk when I posted that **** last night. I threw out "slippery slope" and y'all jumped on it and ignored the question. It's a buzzword, get over it.
The real question is, is there a legal right for government to step in? If so, and they do choose to (as they have) then how far does that right extend? How far should it?
That's always the risk, a foot in the door of parental authority.
I think these parents are being incredibly stupid, I think they are, most likely killing their child and it is disgusting. But what is even more terrifying is the possibility of government stepping into the role of parent.
In some ways it reminds me of court cases here regarding people's right to end their own life in a dignified way, rather than wasting away, only in this case there is the massive added complication that something could be done.
It a very difficult thing to stand by and watch parents more or less condemn their child to death, but it is equally difficult seeing the authorities telling parents how to raise their children, also the report doesn't strongly allude to what the child himself wanted. I'm assuming he went to chemo and hated it so much he would rather take his chances, of course, even there, a child of 13 has very little concept of death.
It's one of those Micro/Macro considerations if you ask me, on a Micro-scale, it seems like the right thing to do to protect the child, but on a Macro-scale it sets a precedent that is just a bit scary.
This is what is really being discussed. The parents are obviously dumb, and the kid is apparently retarded (learning disability, can't read, thinks he's a medicine man but doesn't know what that means) yet they both agree that they don't want chemo. Chemo doesn't always save a patient (90% is great. it's also not 100%) and its extremely "unpleasant." If you don't want it, and your parents as your legal guardians don't want you to have it, why does a state judge get to decide you have to have it?
To save your life. Obviously. And this has been done with tons of other things: first thing that comes to my mind are seat belts.
Again, I'm not really arguing my personal opinion here (I think he should get treatment, he's a member of a sham-health group, retarded, and he'll probably die otherwise) and I'm certainly not using "libertarian scare tactics." I most definitely realize that these kinds of rulings go by case-by-case scenarios (so far.) I simply think its an interesting constitutional question. Conversely, I'm also a big fan of Gov. not telling me what to do in my personal life, even if its good for me. Because the key word is
me, and part of everyone's fundamental natural-born, God-given right should be to have the power to decide their own fate, particularly if it only affects them.
It was probably as difficult a decision for the judge as it was for the parents to decide not to continue with chemo (if they're decent parents; beliefs aside.)