Sunday, January 4, 2026

BIOETHICIST SAYS LET SURGIONS KILL PATIENTS DURING ORGAN HARVESTING

National Review

 

Bioethicist: Let Surgeons Kill Patients During Organ Harvesting

By Wesley J. Smith

December 28, 2025 11:18 AM

 

The “dead donor rule” (DDR) is a legal and ethical mandate that requires vital organ donors to be truly dead before their body parts are procured. A corollary to the rule holds that people cannot be killed for their organs. The DDR promotes trust in the system and protects the vulnerable — but is flexible enough to permit living donations of one kidney and parts of a liver from altruistic donors.

 

Utilitarian bioethicists have long argued against the DDR and its corollary based on the notion that killing those who are dying or want to donate will relieve the suffering of people who want to live and need an organ. And here we go again. The Journal of Medical Ethics — out of Oxford — has published a long and complicated piece by Ohio bioethicist Lawrence J. Masek arguing that patients who want to donate should be able to be killed during — or as a direct result of — the organ-procurement process.

 

First, the author pulls a typical switcheroo often seen in bioethical discourse. Here’s a relevant example: We were assured over many years that brain dead is “dead.” Now, that this is accepted widely, many bioethicists are claiming that actually, it isn’t. If they are right, the DDR would preclude organ procurement from such patients. But these bioethicists claim instead that procuring organs from those diagnosed as brain dead also means that we can harvest comatose patients whose brains are clearly functioning.

 

See how that works? Rather than stick to the rule, expand it and pretend it is not being stretched.

 

This is Masek’s tactic too. He claims that since taking one kidney in an altruistic living donation harms the patient through reduced kidney function without violating the DDR, it is also okay to take the liver of a patient that will lead to death a few hours later.

 

Similarly, he suggests surgery to save a fetus harms the mother through incisions and the like, which she accepts as of less importance than the life of her baby. He also says an emergency C-section that will likely lead to the death of the mother to save the baby is an example of harm caused that should also permit doctors to procure vital organs while the donor is still alive. From the article (citations omitted):

 

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Performing the c-section would cause blood loss, which would be the cause of the woman’s death, so the do-not-kill principle prohibits the c-section in this case, even though the only alternative is allowing both the woman and her child to die. I see the fact that a principle requires allowing two patients to die instead of saving one patient as a problem for the [DDR do not kill] principle.

block quote end

 

He also claims palliation at the end of life as another example:

 

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Another objection to the do-not-kill principle is that it prohibits lethal palliation[misnomer alert!], such as the use of an analgesic that relieves pain but also has the side-effects of slowing respiration and causing death. Lethal palliation is widely accepted even among proponents of the DDR

block quote end

 

And, he even claims that volunteering to have one’s organs taken to save others is akin to other “heroic” life sacrifices:

 

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If people may jump on a grenade to save other soldiers or jump in front of a speeding motorcycle to save a child, then they may sacrifice their lives by donating a heart or other vital organ. I agree that sacrificing one’s life to save another by jumping on a grenade or in front of a motorcycle is analogous to sacrificing one’s life to save another by donating a vital organ.

block quote end

 

But these examples are utterly sophistic. The (stacked deck) medical hypotheticals Masek offers either do not kill the patient, or if death comes in the C-section hypothetical and end-of-life palliation [which is not known as “lethal palliation”] examples, they would be cases of death as undesired and unintended side effects (which can happen in any medical procedure). (This is the principle of double effect, which Masek misapplies in his piece.)

 

Moreover, in the C-section and palliation examples–as well as refusing life support–the patient might not die as a result of the care. You never know.

 

Jumping on a grenade to save other soldiers is not the same as the soldiers throwing that person on the grenade, which would be more akin to a surgeon killing for organs. Because whether death happens immediately, say by taking a heart, or takes hours after taking a liver, harvesting vital organs from a living person is intended to kill that patient to save the life of another. Besides, such extraordinary exigencies as the grenade example cannot be the basis of reasoned public policy.

 

Transforming doctors into killers would open the door to all sorts of gruesome policies, such as euthanasia by organ harvesting. Yes, Masek goes there:

 

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Another reason to accept the DDR is the belief that anyone who denies the DDR must defend euthanasia. Permitting lethal organ procurement would enable patients to commit suicide by donating their vital organs, but the same is true of permitting lethal palliation and the refusal of life support. That a person could do X (eg, donate vital organs, take a lethal painkiller or refuse life-support) as a means of killing oneself does not mean that anyone who does X intends to kill. (I do not defend organ donation euthanasia, which is donating a vital organ in order to end one’s life in order to end suffering, which would be an example of intending death as a means of relieving suffering, because I have argued that lethal organ procurement is not necessarily an example of intending death.)

block quote end

 

Please. Take a liver and there can be only one outcome. The patient would know it. The doctors would know it.

 

Besides, euthanasia conjoined with organ harvesting is already allowed in Belgium, New Zealand, Australia, Netherlands, and Canada–and in some cases that has been an inducement for choosing to be killed or affected the timing of when the death facilitation would take place–to widespread media applause.

 

Why do I bother to discuss this and other such articles here? Isn’t professional discourse akin to arguing about how many angels can dance on the head of a pin?

 

No! Public policy is often formulated through this very kind of back and forth in professional journals. This kind of top-down policy making is why feeding tubes can be legally withdrawn from unconscious patients and gender-confused children can be administered puberty blockers in many jurisdictions.

 

Which is why I try to bring these ivory-tower discussions into the public square. People need know what is being planned for them. Because as I always say, if you want to see what is going to go very wrong in society next, read bioethics, medical, and science journals. Some of the articles published there will curl your toes.

WHATEVER HAPPENED TO ANNIE'S AMANDA PETERSON?

PEOPLE

 

This Child Actress Going Viral for Her Amazing Solo in Annie Later Faced a Heartbreaking Future

By Gillian Telling  Published on December 26, 2025 09:15PM EST

 

Amanda Peterson is going viral for her hard-hitting solo in the 1982 film Annie, in which she played an orphan who belted out a line about Rover in the song "Sandy."

 

Instagram user Ian McConnell posted a clip of the actress' solo, noting, "It takes real nerve shushing a girl when she’s absolutely EATING during her solo." The clip has been viewed 2.2 million times.

 

Who is the adorable on-screen orphan with the big voice?

 

She is no other than actress Amanda Peterson, who later became best known for her role opposite Patrick Dempsey in the 1989 teen comedy Can't Buy Me Love, in which she played popular girl Cindy Mancini. In the film, Dempsey's nerdy Ronald Miller pays Peterson to hang out with him to make himself more popular.

 

After starring in the hit film, Peterson fell out of the spotlight and struggled with drug addiction.

 

Peterson was arrested several times, including in March 2010, following a fight with another woman in Fort Collins, Colo. According to a police report, Peterson "appeared intoxicated" and "was slurring" and had been drinking earlier at a bar. Her then-boyfriend told police that Peterson was taking medication for bipolar disorder and ADD and was not supposed to drink.

 

Two years later, she was arrested for a DUI and for possessing narcotic equipment.

 

On July 5, 2015, Peterson was found dead at the age of 43 in her Greeley, Colo., home. The Weld County Coroner's report revealed Peterson died of an accidental morphine overdose.

 

According to a coroner’s report obtained by TMZ, Peterson reportedly had a deadly cocktail of prescription drugs in her system at the time of her death, including benzodiazepines, opiates and phenothiazines (an anti-psychotic medication).

 

The report also stated the actress told someone a week before her death that she was self-medicating to manage pain. She was found to have six times the normal level of Gabapentin in her system. The report noted she died of a “morphine effect,” which triggers respiratory failure.

 

After Amanda's death, her mother, Sylvia Peterson, told Entertainment Tonight that her daughter struggled with drugs when she was younger. However, Sylvia said her daughter had been clean for a long time and that "this was not, in any way, a drug thing."

 

In September 2015, Amanda's parents and sister gave an interview on The Doctors, where they revealed their daughter had been raped when she was 15.

 

“She just felt so ashamed. She didn’t want people to know,” Sylvia said during the episode, later adding, “I think it affected her forever.”

 

Amanda's father, Dr. James Peterson, said he noticed a marked difference in her personality after the alleged rape.

 

“After that she became so defensive, less trusting. Some of the sparkle was gone,” James said, adding that “she did have significant bipolar problems.”

 

Sylvia noted that her daughter never wanted to press charges against her attacker, who was described as a man who was “27 years older – double her age." Her voice began to break when she recounted the time Amanda asked to see a counselor, and she didn’t take the request seriously.

 

“She had said to me one time, ‘Mother, I think I need a therapist.’ And I thought, ‘This is just Hollywood,’ ” she said. “I didn’t say, ‘Why? What’s going on? Let’s find someone.’ I said [dismissively], ‘Oh, that’s a good idea.’ ”

 

Amanda’s sister, Ann-Marie Peterson, also said on the show that her sister kept the burden of her trauma inside.

 

“She did not tell me about it. She did not talk about it with anyone,” she said. “I think for her to carry this secret, this burden of his assault must have been overwhelming.”

 

After Amanda's death, Sylvia spoke with PEOPLE and shared some of her daughter's final moments.

 

"She was in bed, and she'd had a wonderful day, and we were planning on a dinner the next day," Sylvia said of her chatting with her daughter. "So it was just a very, very big surprise."

 

Photographer Ryan Hartsock later recalled working with Peterson on what would be her last ever photoshoot in 2012.

 

“She had the greatest smile. I know it brightened her day when she got all the emails and fan mail from everybody,” he told PEOPLE in 2015. “Really, any time that we were together, she was a kindhearted, great person.”

 

The photographer says the star’s death was a shock, and that Peterson seemed in good health whenever he spent time with her.

 

“I always thought she was healthy. I’ve never thought otherwise. She was a great gal,” he said.

 

If you or someone you know is struggling with substance abuse, please contact the SAMHSA helpline at 1-800-662-HELP.

 

If you or someone you know has been sexually assaulted, please contact the National Sexual Assault Hotline at 1-800-656-HOPE (4673) or go to rainn.org.

BRIDE UPSET GROOM DOESN'T AGREE WITH HER WEARING LATE HUSBAND'S WEDDING RING DURING CEREMONY

PEOPLE

 

Bride Upset That Groom Doesn't Agree with Her Wearing Late Husband's Wedding Ring During Ceremony

By Brenton Blanchet  Published on April 10, 2025 01:17PM EDT

 

A man is asking the internet for advice ahead of his wedding day after learning his wife wants to wear the wedding ring of her late husband during the ceremony.

 

The 30-year-old soon-to-be newlywed shared a post to Reddit's popular "Am I the A------" forum, revealing that he's getting married in the fall to his 30-year-old fiancée — noting that there's been "one thing that’s been eating at me."

 

His fiancée, Emily, was once married to a man, Tyler, who died in a car accident five years ago. The pair wed in their early 20s, the Reddit user wrote, and were "truly in love" ahead of the tragic death.

 

"At first, she was very open about it, and I respected that. I knew coming into this relationship that I wasn’t her 'first great love,' and I was okay with that. I still am, mostly," the Reddit user wrote. "Over the years, I’ve supported her through moments of grief, anniversaries, random waves of sadness. She still visits his grave on his birthday, and she keeps a box of his things in our closet. I’ve never touched it."

 

As the Reddit user explained, Emily told him "a few weeks ago" that she plans to wear Tyler's wedding ring on a chain around her neck during their wedding day, calling it "a quiet tribute."

 

"She said she wouldn’t be where she is now without having gone through that loss, and she feels like carrying that part of her story into this new chapter is meaningful," he wrote. "I didn’t say much at the time because I didn’t know how to respond. But the more I sat with it, the more it bothered me. So I finally told her how I felt."

 

The fiancé then told Emily that their wedding day should be "a celebration of us," adding that "it's hard for me to wrap my head around the idea of her wearing another man’s wedding ring — even if he’s gone."

 

"I told her it makes me feel like I’m sharing the most important day of my life with someone who’s not here. I said it makes me feel like second place," the Reddit user wrote. "She got very quiet, then told me that she wasn’t 'choosing' him over me, and that she’s allowed to honor her past while still moving forward. She said grief isn’t a door you close — it just becomes part of who you are. I get that. I really do."

 

"But at the same time, I don’t think I’m asking something outrageous by wanting this one day — our day — to be about the life we’re building together, not the one she lost," the user added.

 

There's since been "a weird tension" between the couple, the anonymous internet user noted, sharing that she hasn't discussed it with him since and that he's "struggling with the idea of standing at the altar and knowing she’s literally carrying a symbol of her first marriage as she says vows to start a new one with me."

 

"I’ve told no one in my life about this — not my friends, not my family — because I know how it might sound. But internally, it’s tearing me up," he wrote. "I don’t want to hurt her, and I definitely don’t want to start a marriage with resentment or guilt. But am I wrong for what I said? I haven’t asked her not to wear it explicitly (yet), but made it clear I’m not comfortable with it."

 

The most-upvoted response in the Reddit thread — from someone who lost their spouse at 29 and remarried six years later — noted that while they can relate to the "fiancée's rationale," they believe she's "wrong."

 

"Your wedding is inherently, implicitly and factually about your relationship together and her late husband shouldn't be a part of it," the commenter wrote. "There are lots of ways she can continue to honor and remember him the rest of her life, this is one day. My worry for you is that she's doing it as a sort of apology to him for moving on with you. I wouldn't want to be on the receiving end of that either."

 

Another commenter wrote that they "understand her sentiment," while they "also understand and feel for" the Reddit user.

 

"I would strongly suggest couples counseling and having that unbiased third party help you both with this issue," the commenter wrote. "If she wears the ring, you will be hurt. If she doesn't wear the ring, she will be hurt. This could cause resentment from the start. A therapist can help you figure out what is best for both of you to start and have a happy and fruitful marriage."

 

While some commenters recommended postponing the reception, another floated the idea of her doing "something different to honor Tyler that day."

 

"Maybe light a candle for him or something else so that she literally isn't wearing two wedding rings while walking back up the aisle," they wrote. "You're not wrong for your feelings and she isn't either, you just need to find a different compromise."

TEACHER SHOCKED BY STUDENTS LACK OF CLASSROOM SKILLS

New York Post

 

Teacher shocked by students’ lack of basic classroom skills: ‘It’s scaring me’

By Fabiana Buontempo

Published Dec. 30, 2025, 6:00 a.m. ET

 

Are kids these days doomed?

 

A concerned middle school teacher recently took to social media to explain the lack of reading and problem-solving skills in her teen students.

 

“I don’t understand how these kids ended up at this point,” a Dallas, Texas, teacher named Ms. L said about her 8th-grade students in a now-viral TikTok video.

 

“I teach 8th-grade history and I have 110-ish students — two of them are reading at grade level right now. 18 of them are at a kindergarten level, 55 of those students are between a second and fourth grade level,” she continued. “It’s typical of what I’ve seen lately from students.”

 

This baffled educator couldn’t believe that her 13 and 14-year-old students lacked such basic skills.

 

“They cannot apply inference; they cannot process questions that are longer than a sentence. They cannot connect cause and effect. They can’t track multi-step ideas…” Ms. L explained. “It’s scaring me a little.”

 

The sad reality is that this isn’t just a one-off case — it seems to be a nationwide issue in schools.

 

The 2022 National Assessment of Education Progress, aka the “Nation’s Report Card,” showed that 70 percent of young teens scored less than “proficient” in reading, while 40 percent scored “below basic.”

 

Let that sink in.

 

And a lack of cognitive skills isn’t just in teens, as one commenter under Ms. L’s video pointed out: “I’m a senior in high school, and everyone around me who’s my age is at this level of cognitive decline as well, so I hate to say it but it isn’t just the little kids. it’s multi-generational now…”

 

Thousands of others share their two cents on the matter under Ms. L’s viral video.

 

“I was writing Twilight novel length fanfiction at 14. This blows my mind.”

 

“I hate to sound like the elderly but we were writing book reports and turning in annotated bibliographies in elementary school in my day.”

 

“ipad kids + no consequences = this.”

 

One person even referenced Australia’s recent social media ban for users under 16: “I’m looking forward to the data from the Australian social media ban.”

 

And that commenter might have a point, considering today’s teens are being raised in a technology-obsessed society, which could, in fact, be hindering their intellectual development.

 

The ban, which was implemented by Australia’s government earlier this month, intends to mitigate social media’s “design features that encourage [young people] to spend more time on screens, while also serving up content that can harm their health and wellbeing.”

 

Those under 16 years old can no longer use social media platforms such as TikTok, X, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Snapchat and Threads as existing profiles will be deactivated, nor can they set up new accounts.

 

While many parents are keeping their fingers crossed that this social media ban makes its way to the U.S., some states, like Virginia, are soon enacting their own screen rules.

 

Beginning on Jan. 1, 2026, those under 16 will be allowed to spend only an hour per day on social media, according to 7News.

 

“We are gonna see kids on these Apps less and we’re going to see them engaged more with their academics and their friends or whatever they’re doing,” Virginia State Senator Schuyler VanValkenburg told 7News.

INVENTOR OF FUEL FILLER ARROW DEAD AT 80

Daily Mail

 

Inventor of subtle car feature that has helped millions of drivers around the world dies aged 80

By ELIOT FORCE, US NEWS REPORTER

Published: 16:51 EST, 28 December 2025 | Updated: 16:53 EST, 28 December 2025

 

The inventor of the arrow on a car's dashboard which indicates which side of the vehicle the fuel filler is located on has died at the age of 80.

 

James Moylan came up with the inventive solution in the late 1980s and has made life easier for millions of drivers ever since.

 

Moylan died on December 11 at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit. The exact circumstances of his death were not made public.

 

According to Moylan's obituary he, 'would have said his greatest career accomplishment was the friendships he built with many colleagues along the way,' rather than the little arrow he came up with.

 

'Dad always chuckled about all the attention the arrow received in later years,' his son, Andrew Moylan, said in an interview with Automotive News.

 

It is hard to imagine a world without the eponymous Moylan arrow, yet prior to 1989, drivers had to memorize or guess the location of the gas caps in their cars.

 

Moylan came up with his simple but revolutionary idea on a rainy April day in 1986. He had taken a Ford employee fleet car to drive to a meeting, and when he stopped for gas, he parked with the wrong side of the car facing the pump.

 

He only realized his mistake after leaving the car and getting soaked, which led him to think of an indicator that would have prevented him from making the mistake in the first place.

 

As a Ford employee, he was in a position to recommend the feature to his superiors, so he drafted a 'product convenience suggestion' proposal the same day.

 

Moylan included a sketch of what the indicator could look like, drawing an open fuel door rather than an arrow and sent it to his boss.

 

In the proposal, he wrote: 'Even if all Ford product lines eventually locate on the same side, for the minor investment involved on the company's part, I think it would be a worthwhile convenience not only for two car families, but also pool car users and especially car rental customers.'

 

Seven months later, Moylan received a response from then-Director of Interior Design, R F Zokas, that said an arrow would be added to the dashboards of the company's 1989 model year cars that were being developed.

 

As promised, the 1989 Ford Escort and Mercury Tracer featured the fuel filler indicator. The Ford Thunderbird and Mercury Cougar closely followed.

 

The arrow was a hit, and over the next few decades it would become a fixture of nearly every car that has come off production lines across companies and countries around the world.

 

Moylan was born in Detroit on December 19, 1944, as the youngest of six children. He was hired by Ford as a draftsman in body engineering in March 1968.

 

He was laid off in the 70s but was soon rehired to work in plastics engineering, which was a growing sector in the automotive industry at the time.

 

After submitting his idea for the arrow, Moylan was stationed in Japan in the late 80s when Ford was partnered with Mazda.

 

The inventor later went to night school at the University of Detroit Mercy in order to earn a Bachelor of Science degree in plastics manufacturing, which he received in 1999.

 

Moylan retired in July 2003 after a more than 30-year career at Ford. He is survived by his wife, Kathleen Moylan, and his children, Andrew Moylan, Elizabeth Wilson and Kara Moylan.

 

Although it took about a decade for the Moylan arrow to become ubiquitous, it is now an expected and beloved feature in cars of all kinds, from gas guzzlers to electric vehicles.

 

Hybrid cars that have a charging port and fuel filler on either side have indicators for each one.

 

Electric vehicles that have separate ports for slow and fast charging also indicate the location of each.