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Death with dignity, police station delays and anger over pardons: Letters
Death with dignity, police station delays and anger over pardons: Letters

USA Today

time29-01-2025

  • Health
  • USA Today

Death with dignity, police station delays and anger over pardons: Letters

Death with dignity, police station delays and anger over pardons: Letters Relieve the suffering of the dying in New Hampshire Jan. 25 − To the Editor: I am a retired clergywoman, with many years of experience working with the terminally ill. I am also the widowed spouse of a dear man who, despite having excellent hospice care at the end of his life, had much unrelieved suffering and a traumatic death. HB 254, the NH End of Life Freedom Act, gives qualified terminally ill, mentally competent adults who are able to self-ingest medication the compassionate, ethical health care option of obtaining a medication to experience a peaceful, painless death at a time of their choosing with their loved ones by their side. It breaks my heart that my husband did not have access to this option, one he wanted when his time was short and his suffering was great. With over three decades of the safe practice of Medical Aid in Dying in other states in our country as precedent, we know such laws to have been administered responsibly, because of the many guardrails in place. One must go through a rigorous qualifying process, full of checkpoints. No one can make this decision for anyone else, and one must be able to self-administer the medication, which is mixed into liquid and ingested. This compassionate option is a blessing, a comfort, and a personal decision, allowing the time of death to be a peaceful passage, should a qualifying person choose to exercise it. I find it entirely compatible with my religious belief. My religious freedom is impeded by those who would oppose this legislation. I urge our NH House members to support HB254. The Reverend Mary James Durham More: 'We treat our pets with more respect': Dying NH doctor's wish for death with dignity They put their lives on the line and Trump pardoned their attackers Jan. 23 − To the Editor: I am writing to express my deep concern for all those who were directly affected by the attacks on Jan 6, 2021. I believe that the pardons of the perpetrators re-violates and re-traumatizes all of the victims and all of us who care about them. As a psychologist I know that life can hand out betrayal and heartbreak. Usually, with enough time and support most people are resilient enough to heal from these painful hurts. However, when the source of betrayal and heartbreak is our own country, I worry that the hurt will seem unbearable to those who put their lives on the line for their country. I want them to know that their lives matter, their loyalty and bravery matter and that people of conscience care about, support and honor them. Donna Melillo Portsmouth Trump freed insurrectionists. Are you still proud of voting for him? Jan. 23 − To the Editor: Shame. That's what anyone who voted for our current president should feel today − shame. This bully, this so-called man, who has slithered back into the oval office has unleashed more than 1500 criminals so they can proudly tour the very Capitol building which they attacked and boast that they can now buy ****ing guns and seek retribution for their prison time. This bully has even suggested he will invite these lowlifes whom he refers to as victims and patriots to the White House to thank them for their actions. This is the bully who claims that other countries have emptied their jails and their mental institutions of criminals so that they can be free to invade the United States when it is the bully himself who is emptying our jails of traitors and criminals. And when Bishop Mariann Edgar Budde, the Episcopal Bishop of Washington, dressed down this bully from the pulpit of the National Cathedral at a prayer service for the new president in front of God and the nation asking him to have mercy on the vulnerable population that he is now targeting, he lashed out at her, demanded an apology, and called her a radical left hard line Trump hater which resulted in numerous wishes for her death. It is hard to believe that the small majority of Americans (no not by any means a mandate) that turned their backs on January 6th and voted for this bully are citizens of a country that I grew up loving and being thankful for. I have heard some of his supporters say they realize the bully is not a man of great character, but they like his policies. Well look at his policies now. Are you proud of having voted him back into office? You must realize that you have made a horrible mistake and that the bully now in power could care less about you and your misguided support. And yes, you should be ashamed. Carl Vancelette Barrington Portsmouth can't afford more police station delays Jan. 26 −To the Editor: Costs for Portsmouth's Community Policing Facility increased by at least $2.5 million, without any changes to the plan. Why? The $43M estimate was based on breaking ground in 2024. It is now 2025 and with the new Blue Ribbon Municipal Building Committee, ground breaking won't occur until 2026. Two years of inflation increases this estimate to $45.5 million+. We'll also have two more years of abatement, sick time, worker's compensation and FMLA claims, low morale, hiring and retention challenges and other issues. The Blue Ribbon Committee will consider better space utilization, a significant challenge. Based on the Space Needs Assessment, the latest version of the Community Policing Facility proposes a 31000 SF addition. Let's assume the municipal building footprint remains the same to eliminate any Connors Cottage view impact. One option has the entire first floor becoming the police station. Another takes all floors of the newer section that faces the mill pond. Even with hybrid proposals, multiple city departments would still move off campus. But the City Council wants a common campus. So it appears the Committee is doomed to fail. The LA wildfire disaster spotlights how slowing investment in public safety needs has major consequences. Bad policies, cutting budgets and special interest pandering all contributed to significant property damage and loss of life. Rebuilding from these recent disasters also increases construction costs across the country, which impacts our Policing Facility. We can't afford any more delays. Stop kicking the can down the road. Pick it up and recycle! Jim Fernald Portsmouth Shame on congressional delegation voting for Laiken Riley Act Jan. 23 − To the Editor: Shame on our Federal Representatives Senators Hassan and Shaheen, Representatives Pappas and Goodlander, for voting for the Laiken Riley Act. In this bill, proposed as some sort of "fix" to curb crimes committed by undocumented immigrants, is the erosion of due process for suspected criminals. The bill provides that anyone may suspect someone of a crime, round them up, and send them off for deportation. All of this without seeing the inside of a courtroom or any provisions of due process our country provides. Are we to allow vigilantes to administer this street justice or accusations to people they think are undocumented? Are we to allow the xenophobes of the Trump Administration to smudge our Constitutional rights? I urge our representatives to get out of their bubbles more and talk with folks in the immigrant communities. You'll find hard working, dedicated people who came here for a better life and means to support their families. You'll find children wanting a free and fair education in our schools. To be sure, there are criminals in our country but not disproportionately in the immigrant communities. I want to be inspired by leaders in these times, not angry for their capitulation of eroding our freedoms. Scott Nichols New London Send your letters to opinion@ Please keep letters to 250 words or less. Submissions must include the writer's first and last names, city or town and a daytime telephone number (which is for verification purposes only and will not be published). Send letters or commentaries to opinion@ Letters from Seacoast-area writers addressing local topics will be given priority for publication.

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