Dutch doctors have been murdering children and babies for years, based on their eugenic dislike of certain curable and manageable conditions.
Also, this was the previous government (though I wouldn't expect the Wilders government to be any different on euthanasia). Also, 'ethicists' have been agitating for legalizing the murder of children for years because, they say, it is no different from abortion as children are non-sentient in their first few years.
See, what I find odd is that the supposed "majority" of voters in the Low Countries support laws like this, hence it tends to attract broad political support.
I don't really understand that, in countries with 10 Million+ each (you wouldn't see that in Au/NZ, but I suppose you do in Canada), but it's almost like... They don't seem to view human life as having the same "value", I suppose.
Obviously the ultimate result of such views is genocide, but we're not quite there yet.
But yeah, discussing issues like this with Germanics (Dutch, Flemish, Swiss, less so actual Germans, for obvious reasons) is... Interesting. There's a big "gap" there, and I'm not quite sure why...
There are many countries and cultures that value lives very little, for various reasons. Russians and chinese are classic examples, though it manifests in different ways.
Dutch doctors have been murdering children and babies for years, based on their eugenic dislike of certain curable and manageable conditions.
Also, this was the previous government (though I wouldn't expect the Wilders government to be any different on euthanasia). Also, 'ethicists' have been agitating for legalizing the murder of children for years because, they say, it is no different from abortion as children are non-sentient in their first few years.
See, what I find odd is that the supposed "majority" of voters in the Low Countries support laws like this, hence it tends to attract broad political support.
I don't really understand that, in countries with 10 Million+ each (you wouldn't see that in Au/NZ, but I suppose you do in Canada), but it's almost like... They don't seem to view human life as having the same "value", I suppose.
Obviously the ultimate result of such views is genocide, but we're not quite there yet.
But yeah, discussing issues like this with Germanics (Dutch, Flemish, Swiss, less so actual Germans, for obvious reasons) is... Interesting. There's a big "gap" there, and I'm not quite sure why...
There are many countries and cultures that value lives very little, for various reasons. Russians and chinese are classic examples, though it manifests in different ways.