HomebytheSeaan hour ago
I find this to be extremely disturbing. Anyone who can be happy with this description is devoid of human emotion & deeply indoctrinated in cult mentality! I'm an RN, & can seriously remember all of the patients I've seen die in the past 20 years. It's very upsetting, although I may not have known them personally. Also, when someone dies, we have to wrap the body to send to the morgue. This involved moments of silence, prayers by some staff, and ultimately nothing but respect for the life that was lost, regardless of the individual's religious beliefs. Who really shows love of neighbor? Not this cult!
Hi sister sister!I am a nurse too, and I can tell you every single person who has died in my care (and there are a lot, I've worked in ICU and heamatology, leukeamia mostly)is absolutely seared into my memory - whether I knew them for hours or months. Quite a few teenagers and a couple of children, I still think of them, often. Sometimes I cried so hard I could hardly see to lay them out, especially if they died in an unpleasant way, were young or young parents. Tragic. Death is always sad no matter.No sane God would do that wholesale and save folk because they were born in the 20th century, from a culture that was bible based, western etc or were just IN ON A BLOODY SATURDAY.And anyone who rejoiced at such death would definately be off the saved list in my opinion.Primo Levi , recalling Auscwitz, said after one particularly awful 'selection'(euphamism for the gas) a rabbi was praying his thanks to God for saving him. Next to him lay a 20 yr old greek boy who was on the gas list, and knew it.Primo said he could spit at the god who would accept such a prayer.