Acton Media Roundup

Thursday, July 27, 2006
Were the actions of a New Orleans doctor and a pair of nurses in the wake of hurricane Katrina heroic or criminal?
To Louisiana’s attorney general, the doctor and two nurses arrested this past week are murderers. But many in the medical community are outraged at the arrests, saying the three caregivers are heroes who faced unimaginable horrors as Hurricane Katrina flooded the city and trapped them and their patients.

Dr. Anna Pou and nurses Cheri Landry and Lori Budo were accused of being principals to second-degree murder in the deaths of four patients at Memorial Medical Center three days after Katrina hit. The charge carries a mandatory life sentence, though the state will turn the case over to the New Orleans prosecutor, who will decide whether to ask a grand jury to bring charges.

Pou, Landry and Budo are accused of killing four patients, ages 61 to 90, with morphine and a powerful sedative called Versed.

Dr. Samuel Gregg, Director of Acton’s Center for Academic Research, joined host Sean Herriott on Relevant Radio’s Morning Air show this morning to discuss this case and the larger issue of euthanasia. You can listen to the interview by clicking here (5.9 mb mp3 file).

To hear more from Dr. Gregg, you can download the latest audio release from this year’s Acton University: Christian Anthropology: Freedom and Virtue (7 mb mp3 file).
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The Right to Die, The Duty to Live

Friday, March 10, 2006
I take on the current upswing in public support for euthanasia laws, especially among certain sectors of Christianity in a BreakPoint commentary today, “Give Me Liberty and Give Me Death.” I note especially the stance taken by a Baylor university professor of ethics and the student newspaper in favor of legalizing euthanasia.

In a recent On the Square item, Joseph Bottum notes a similar trend, as he writes, “Euthanasia has been making a comeback in recent months, bubbling up again and again in little snippets in the news.”

As this happens, I argue that both scholars and laypersons need to realize that advocacy for a “right to die” represents a significant diametrically opposed challenge to a biblically Christian view of the human person—both in life and death.
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