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Doctor Death to run for U.S. Congress

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  • Doctor Death to run for U.S. Congress

    PanARMENIAN.Net

    Doctor Death to run for U.S. Congress
    29.03.2008 14:18 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Infamous euthanasia activist Dr.
    Jack Kevorkian has announced that he plans to run for
    U.S. Congress as an independent in Michigan's 9th
    congressional district.

    "We need some honesty and sincerity instead of corrupt
    government in Washington," Kevorkian told the Oakland
    Press, his local Michigan newspaper.

    In order to be placed on the ballot, Kevorkian will
    need to obtain 3,000 signatures.

    Nicknamed Doctor Death for his boast of helping at
    least 130 people - many of whom had no diagnosed
    physical illness, - to kill themselves, Kevorkian was
    released from jail last year after serving eight years
    of his 10-25 year sentence for the murder of
    52-year-old Thomas Youk.

    Kevorkian is on record as being totally unrepentant
    for assisting in the deaths of so many sick and
    disabled persons. In an interview from his prison cell
    in 2005 he said that although he would not commit
    euthanasia again, he would continue his campaign to
    legalize doctor assisted suicide.

    "But as far as the activity goes, I have said publicly
    and officially that I will not perform that act again
    when I get out. What I'll do is what I should have
    done earlier, is pursue this from a legal standpoint
    by campaigning to get the laws changed."

    When asked in the same interview about his views on
    the death of Terri Schiavo by starvation and
    dehydration, he responded by saying that he would have
    killed Terri had his husband asked him earlier. "After
    all that long period of time in a coma, I think she
    would qualify."

    In a 2006 article in the Daily Standard newspaper,
    attorney and bioethics critic Wesley J. Smith pointed
    out that Kevorkian exhibited an avid interest in death
    and dying and had long pursued the goal of performing
    experiments on living people he was euthanizing.

    "Toward this end, he had spent years attempting to
    convince condemned prisoners and the authorities to
    permit him to cut open those being executed," Smith
    wrote. "Only after that effort failed did he turn his
    focus to the sick, disabled, and depressed, in the
    hope that through assisting their deaths he would
    eventually be permitted to conduct this macabre and
    useless research."

    Smith also mentions an earlier article in the Journal
    of Forensic Psychiatry, where Kevorkian proposed
    establishing a series of euthanasia clinics, which he
    called "obitoria." These clinics were to be staffed by
    physician-killers who would be legally permitted to
    terminate people who requested death. Kevorkian
    foresaw that the first "patients" would be the
    terminally and chronically ill. However, he looked
    forward in the article to the clinics eventually being
    of service to the existentially anguished, people he
    labeled "patients tortured by other than organic
    diseases."

    During an interview Kevorkian invoked the
    Constitution's ninth amendment as justifying his
    actions, and denounced an unnamed tyrannical `they,'
    apparently identified with "the tyrant". "My anger is
    aimed at my rights being blocked!" said Kevorkian.

    As for Kevorkian's run for Congress, Oakland County
    prosecutor Dave Gorcyca, whose office prosecuted
    Kevorkian, had this to say: "It's probably more of a
    publicity stunt," Gorcyca told the Press. "To call
    attention to himself is standard protocol for Jack
    when he doesn't have the limelight focused on him," he
    said, LifeSiteNews.com reports.
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