Life and Death: Who Decides?Catholic Answers Live interview with Mary Jane Owen, executive director of National Catholic Office for Persons with Disabilities, herself blind, almost deaf and unable to walk (requires RealPlayer)
Playing God with Human LifeCatholic Answers Live interview with Dr William Toffler, founder of Physicians for Compassionate Care (requires RealPlayer)
Articles
'Right-to-Die' Advocates Pushing Hard In CanadaCanadian doctors who refuse to kill their handicapped or debilitated patients could face discrimination charges if euthanasia death peddlers get their way.
Problems of Artificial FeedingFr William Most summarizes the question of the morality of refusing artificial feeding to a terminally ill patient.
Questions and Answers about "Artificial Feeding"A discussion of the ethical considerations surrounding the topic of "artificial feeding" which is the most common ethical dilemma facing patients and their families today.
Right to Be Killed?by Ian Hunter. As abortion was the great moral issue of the past three decades of the 20th Century, it seems clear euthanasia will dominate the opening decades of the 21st Century.
Whose Right to Die?by Emanuel Ezekiel. The persistence of abuse and the violation of safeguards in the Netherlands, in spite of attendant publicity and condemnation, suggest that the feared consequences of the legalization of euthanasia are exactly its inherent consequences. America should think again before pressing ahead with the legalization of physician-assisted suicide and voluntary euthanasia writes Emanuel Ezekiel in this Atlantic Monthly article.