May 13, 2008 at 8:55 am · Filed under Ethics, Humanity and tagged: Medical Ethics
State health regulators in California have uncovered what appears to be a hotbed of snooping at one of the premier medical institutes in the state — UCLA Medical Center. What started as one employee illegally viewing the personal medical records of patients including Farah Fawcett and Britney Spears has turned into a pool of 68 different employees all accused of the same sort of snooping. Snoopers include nurses, physicians, volunteers and administrators at the facility. If this type of thing is going on at one facility, just think of what is going on everywhere else.
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May 9, 2008 at 8:52 am · Filed under Humanity, Politics and Policy, Social Justice and tagged: Social Justice
If the cyclone wasn’t bad enough, now the Burmese people have to suffer the double tragedy of lack of aid. It isn’t that the aid isn’t out there, it’s that their own government won’t give it to them.
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May 7, 2008 at 10:16 am · Filed under Humanity, Social Justice and tagged: Human Rights
Who was Mildred Loving, you ask? Mildred Loving was one of the most important civil rights activists during the 1960s though she had no wish to become an activist at all. In 1958, Mildred Loving and her husband Richard were arrested for getting married. Yes, married. Mildred was black and Richard was white, and their marriage violated the law in the state of Virginia.
Loving v. Commonwealth of Virginia was a watershed in civil rights law. In 1967 the U.S. Supreme Court decided Loving. In a 9 to 0 ruling, the Court declared Virginia law unconstitutional — no state had the right to deny marriage on the basis of race. Only 41 years ago were people given the right to marry whomever they wanted in the United States.
Mrs. Loving died of pneumonia this past Friday, survived by children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and a historic decision granting freedom to many.