Monday, November 17, 2014

Extending Life Expectancy?


I don’t think it’s been shown that the medical profession has had anything positive to do with extended life expectancies in the United States. It’s a definitional matter. It’s an epistemological matter -- how do you know what you know. You start with presuppositions about your view of a human being: a human being is a person conceived. The medical profession, alone, is accountable for a decrease in average life expectancy. From around fifty years around the turn of the century in this country, to around forty-five years today -- probably having passed through a time of greater life expectancy in the mid-forties to early sixties, after which abortion became commonplace. Definitional issues aside, for those people who were allowed to make it to birth, there has been a very substantial increase in life expectancy, which might in part be due to some of the things we do in medicine. It was just done at too high a cost, as we took the resources of those who were not allowed to live and diverted them into many things, one of which was vast medical establishment that now exists.


Excerpt from an interview with Dr. Terrell

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