Quote from: Hemodoc on December 26, 2012, 01:54:38 PMSorry, that is once again a skewed view of the traditional America. You are wrong. America is instead the common market place where if you wished to work you could and America is still one of the only nations where you can rise from poverty to great wealth in only one generation. Once again, that is a leftist view of the world. America is the one place where workers have thrived. Sorry, can't agree at all with that type of leftist propaganda.Your view of conservatism compromising is also silly since conservatives more often than not had a clear Christian base for their morals. There are some things that there is no compromise such as abortion for instance. If you believe life began at conception, where is the point of compromise? No, that is once again a leftist view of conservatives that is just frankly silly.OK, Hemodoc. I think everything that anyone has had to say has been said. I guess there is nothing more to discuss. Except for one thing...As I have pointed out before, I have read many of your posts for a long, long time. It occurs to me, and forgive me if my memory is faulty, that not once have you ever expressed any curiosity about anyone else's views or opinions. You do not ask questions, and I must assume it is because you have no interest in what anyone else has to say, what they believe and/or why they believe as they do.It seems that if someone does not share your opinion, then that person is silly or is labouring under leftist propaganda or is part of some conspiracy to turn America into a God-hating culture that makes Sodom and Gomorrah look like the Queen's tea party. Your world view seems to be shrouded in fear and loathing that must be either defended by the institutionalization of hatred of "the other" or abandoned with the slogan, "Your side won, so go live in the putrid world that you are creating."Perhaps I do have a skewed view of the "traditional America", but maybe, just maybe, you do, too. And that's why I asked this question in the first place. I was curious to know how other people defined it. Our definition of what is "traditional" is a reflection of our own life experiences, but apparently that has not occurred to you. Your definition of "traditional America" will surely not be the same as someone's who was unable to eat at a certain restaurant in 1960 because of their skin color. Hemodoc, surely you have some modicum of imagination.Conservatives and their left leaning counterparts have been compromising since this nation began. Our Constitution, which I know you hold dear, demands it. The nation today demands it of our Congress.Actually, today there are many more nations where one can rise to great wealth very quickly. Those happen to be the same nations that are starting to see ever widening gaps between the wealthy and the poor. Brazil is a prime example (they are quickly buying up expensive and desireable American real estate and are paying in cash!), and Russia is right there, too. Sadly, the fact that personal wealth in Russia is rising is due often to crime and corruption engendered in the new freer market economy. China is seeing the same phenomenon with the loosening of Communist strings, but even there you can see yet another country experiencing the same economic gap between the haves and the have nots. In this country, the rich are getting richer and the poor are working harder to keep what they have. While there is certainly nothing wrong with being very wealthy, that ever widening gap just feels immoral.I can certainly understand why someone would refuse to compromise on abortion. But surely there are other issues that this nation cares about on which our policymakers (ie, Congress) can compromise. This is how Congress traditionally has functioned. What's different now? Oh, never mind. I keep asking the same questions over and over yet get no replies that don't have disparaging remarks in them. I truly do not care if anyone thinks I am wrong or silly or a doormat for commies. In fact, I am quickly becoming majorly uninterested in what anyone believes. It's just too much like hard work to expect thoughtful opinions thoughtfully expressed. I don't give up easily, but I am now.(PS...I do want to make it clear, Hemodoc, that I have a great deal of affection for you although I have no idea why. You can be utterly frustrating, but I admire your passion. I will refrain, however, from asking more questions of you as I am probably being intrusive although I do not mean to be. I can see where some might construe my curiosity as nosiness.)
Sorry, that is once again a skewed view of the traditional America. You are wrong. America is instead the common market place where if you wished to work you could and America is still one of the only nations where you can rise from poverty to great wealth in only one generation. Once again, that is a leftist view of the world. America is the one place where workers have thrived. Sorry, can't agree at all with that type of leftist propaganda.Your view of conservatism compromising is also silly since conservatives more often than not had a clear Christian base for their morals. There are some things that there is no compromise such as abortion for instance. If you believe life began at conception, where is the point of compromise? No, that is once again a leftist view of conservatives that is just frankly silly.
"Your argument on the internet has completely changed both my mind and my vote."Said no one.Ever.
My thought on the abortion issue:This is a support forum for people of both genders, of many ages, who all suffer from renal failure. This is, as we all know, a life-threatening disease that requires essentially life support and other beyond-the-norm treatment to keep said individual alive. This technology was not available just a mere 50 years ago.Out of respect, there are women of child-bearing age who are on this forum, some of them who may have had abortions - not because they chose to, mind you - but because they *HAD* to. These are women who, if they had the gift of being healthy enough, would never have chosen that path for their pregnancies. They would have chosen to *have* the baby. There are also other women on here who have had painful pregnancy experiences that have ended tragically. As well, there are also women who have been able to carry their pregnancies either to term, or far along enough to give birth to a healthy or healthy-enough child. There is no way to predict how these high-risk pregnancies will turn out, there are only statitistics that their doctors, and these women, can go by. To keep bringing up the abortion issue like it keeps being brought up by certain individuals - and *ESPECIALLY* comparing it the outright EVIL that was done in Newtown, CT just a short time ago, is a show of disrespect to these women. Until you have been in *their* shoes - who is ANYONE on this page or ANYWHERE to judge? I am 39 years old, a woman who has known about her CKD since the young age of 23. Having children was not an option for me. Thankfully (more or less) that hasn't been an issue for me, since men do not like me. Given that, it has never been an issue in my life. But, if I had become pregnant at anytime in my CKD/ESRD journey, I would have been faced with making a HUGE decision that is not an easy one to make. That does NOT make me a "baby killer". What that makes me is this - a woman with a serious disease that does not allow my body to fully support a pregnancey in the way it should be able to. Hell, my body couldn't even keep my own self alive w/o a machine, then a major surgery where I now have someone else's kidney. And guess what?? I am not the only one on this page who has this problem!!!!!!!So please, going forward, RESPECT the women on this page/forum who have had to go through the painful decision of terminating a pregnancy due to the fact that she has one of the many kidney-killing diseases we all know and hate. To do otherwise is absolutely tasteless.KarenInWA
Quote from: KarenInWA on December 26, 2012, 07:07:49 PMMy thought on the abortion issue:This is a support forum for people of both genders, of many ages, who all suffer from renal failure. This is, as we all know, a life-threatening disease that requires essentially life support and other beyond-the-norm treatment to keep said individual alive. This technology was not available just a mere 50 years ago.Out of respect, there are women of child-bearing age who are on this forum, some of them who may have had abortions - not because they chose to, mind you - but because they *HAD* to. These are women who, if they had the gift of being healthy enough, would never have chosen that path for their pregnancies. They would have chosen to *have* the baby. There are also other women on here who have had painful pregnancy experiences that have ended tragically. As well, there are also women who have been able to carry their pregnancies either to term, or far along enough to give birth to a healthy or healthy-enough child. There is no way to predict how these high-risk pregnancies will turn out, there are only statitistics that their doctors, and these women, can go by. To keep bringing up the abortion issue like it keeps being brought up by certain individuals - and *ESPECIALLY* comparing it the outright EVIL that was done in Newtown, CT just a short time ago, is a show of disrespect to these women. Until you have been in *their* shoes - who is ANYONE on this page or ANYWHERE to judge? I am 39 years old, a woman who has known about her CKD since the young age of 23. Having children was not an option for me. Thankfully (more or less) that hasn't been an issue for me, since men do not like me. Given that, it has never been an issue in my life. But, if I had become pregnant at anytime in my CKD/ESRD journey, I would have been faced with making a HUGE decision that is not an easy one to make. That does NOT make me a "baby killer". What that makes me is this - a woman with a serious disease that does not allow my body to fully support a pregnancey in the way it should be able to. Hell, my body couldn't even keep my own self alive w/o a machine, then a major surgery where I now have someone else's kidney. And guess what?? I am not the only one on this page who has this problem!!!!!!!So please, going forward, RESPECT the women on this page/forum who have had to go through the painful decision of terminating a pregnancy due to the fact that she has one of the many kidney-killing diseases we all know and hate. To do otherwise is absolutely tasteless.KarenInWADear Karen, you have lost me on this. This is what I stated to Moosemom with respect to conservatives and the issue of compromise as what is at the heart of congress. I disagreed and used abortion as an example of that. Please note the even though IHD is a support center for CKD folks, it is also mainly a discussion board. In this arena, it is a political discussion thread. I stated absolutely nothing disrespectful of anyone. If folks don't agree with my views, that is not justification of stating my views are disrespectful.There are some things that there is no compromise such as abortion for instance. If you believe life began at conception, where is the point of compromise? Sorry, but once again that is simply stating the conservative view. It is not in any manner criticizing anyone else's views.Lastly, simply because a woman has CKD does not mean that they cannot carry a pregnancy successfully even on dialysis. We have lot's of successful pregnancies to date in the medical literature. Nancy Spaeth had both of her children after being chosen through the Seattle life and death committees. Whether transplant or dialysis, pregnancy is quite possible.Nancy Spaeth was accepted by the Life and Death Committee in Seattle in 1966, and after two years of in-centre treatment embarked on home haemodialysis. She recalls attending fund-raising events for Dr Scribner, Dr Henry Tenchkhoff holding her first baby, and participation in Dr Joseph Eschbach's first study of erythropoietin treatment. She had 4 transplants and two children, so has experience of all the ups and downs, and most of the different peritoneal and haemodialysis regimens. http://historyofnephrology.blogspot.com/
Quote from: Hemodoc on December 26, 2012, 08:32:28 PMQuote from: KarenInWA on December 26, 2012, 07:07:49 PMMy thought on the abortion issue:This is a support forum for people of both genders, of many ages, who all suffer from renal failure. This is, as we all know, a life-threatening disease that requires essentially life support and other beyond-the-norm treatment to keep said individual alive. This technology was not available just a mere 50 years ago.Out of respect, there are women of child-bearing age who are on this forum, some of them who may have had abortions - not because they chose to, mind you - but because they *HAD* to. These are women who, if they had the gift of being healthy enough, would never have chosen that path for their pregnancies. They would have chosen to *have* the baby. There are also other women on here who have had painful pregnancy experiences that have ended tragically. As well, there are also women who have been able to carry their pregnancies either to term, or far along enough to give birth to a healthy or healthy-enough child. There is no way to predict how these high-risk pregnancies will turn out, there are only statitistics that their doctors, and these women, can go by. To keep bringing up the abortion issue like it keeps being brought up by certain individuals - and *ESPECIALLY* comparing it the outright EVIL that was done in Newtown, CT just a short time ago, is a show of disrespect to these women. Until you have been in *their* shoes - who is ANYONE on this page or ANYWHERE to judge? I am 39 years old, a woman who has known about her CKD since the young age of 23. Having children was not an option for me. Thankfully (more or less) that hasn't been an issue for me, since men do not like me. Given that, it has never been an issue in my life. But, if I had become pregnant at anytime in my CKD/ESRD journey, I would have been faced with making a HUGE decision that is not an easy one to make. That does NOT make me a "baby killer". What that makes me is this - a woman with a serious disease that does not allow my body to fully support a pregnancey in the way it should be able to. Hell, my body couldn't even keep my own self alive w/o a machine, then a major surgery where I now have someone else's kidney. And guess what?? I am not the only one on this page who has this problem!!!!!!!So please, going forward, RESPECT the women on this page/forum who have had to go through the painful decision of terminating a pregnancy due to the fact that she has one of the many kidney-killing diseases we all know and hate. To do otherwise is absolutely tasteless.KarenInWADear Karen, you have lost me on this. This is what I stated to Moosemom with respect to conservatives and the issue of compromise as what is at the heart of congress. I disagreed and used abortion as an example of that. Please note the even though IHD is a support center for CKD folks, it is also mainly a discussion board. In this arena, it is a political discussion thread. I stated absolutely nothing disrespectful of anyone. If folks don't agree with my views, that is not justification of stating my views are disrespectful.There are some things that there is no compromise such as abortion for instance. If you believe life began at conception, where is the point of compromise? Sorry, but once again that is simply stating the conservative view. It is not in any manner criticizing anyone else's views.Lastly, simply because a woman has CKD does not mean that they cannot carry a pregnancy successfully even on dialysis. We have lot's of successful pregnancies to date in the medical literature. Nancy Spaeth had both of her children after being chosen through the Seattle life and death committees. Whether transplant or dialysis, pregnancy is quite possible.Nancy Spaeth was accepted by the Life and Death Committee in Seattle in 1966, and after two years of in-centre treatment embarked on home haemodialysis. She recalls attending fund-raising events for Dr Scribner, Dr Henry Tenchkhoff holding her first baby, and participation in Dr Joseph Eschbach's first study of erythropoietin treatment. She had 4 transplants and two children, so has experience of all the ups and downs, and most of the different peritoneal and haemodialysis regimens. http://historyofnephrology.blogspot.com/My only concern is the feelings of the women on this board who have had to go through this decision, whether they wanted to or not. HemoDoc, with all due respect, you do not know the personal health histories of everyone on this board, and neither do I. I have probably read more of the different threads on here than you have, and have seen some very personal and tragic stories on here. These are whom I think of. No matter my feelings on abortion, I would never bring it up on a page like this one, and especially compare it to the evil of the Newtown tragedy like was done on a different thread earlier this month. All I am simply saying is to think first of these women before going off about abortion.Also, as for transplant patients being pregnant, it really does depend on the patient and the state of their transplant. Some of the medications are very harmful to the fetus, and a woman may not be able to be off of them for any period of time, depending on the state of the transplant. In my case, my transplant was injured by a biopsy. My creatinine is stable at 3.3, w/a GFR of 17. I am forever grateful to my live donor who was so kind, generous, and loving as to give me this wonderful gift. However, due to a biopsy, it is not performing optimally. I most likely would not be able to carry a pregnancy to term *and* keep this gift working as well. This is a reality for me. Who knows what other patients realities are? We are not them, we do not live their lives, we are not their doctors. Each case is unique and individual. To judge otherwise is none of our business.That is all I am saying. I prefer to be compassionate rather than judgemental or all-knowing. KarenInWA
Please note the even though IHD is a support center for CKD folks, it is also mainly a discussion board.
Lastly, simply because a woman has CKD does not mean that they cannot carry a pregnancy successfully even on dialysis. We have lot's of successful pregnancies to date in the medical literature. Nancy Spaeth had both of her children after being chosen through the Seattle life and death committees. Whether transplant or dialysis, pregnancy is quite possible.
Quote from: Hemodoc link=topic=28065.msg448028#msg448028 Please note the even though IHD is a support center for CKD folks, it is also mainly a discussion board.NO. It is mainly a support forum. You do not get to redefine the nature and purpose of this forum because it suits your argument. If this is mainly a discussion board, then I need to hear that from a mod, or preferably an admin, so that I can leave permanently. With so many worthy causes in this world, I do not wish to donate my time and money to "mainly a discussion board". A support forum with sideline discussions is a worthy cause in my estimation, a discussion board with support as an afterthought is not. I am dead serious about this, so if I have got this wrong, I would appreciate clarification from someone with the authority to do so.
MM, you know I love you, so I have to say it, but You do know what the definition of insanity is? (DOing the same thing, over and over, expecting different results?) Dont let some ... person *ahem* cause you to feel or be insane. some people are just stubborn... i love that you ask questions and stuff, so dont let one person change that in you.
Quote from: Hemodoc link=topic=28065.msg448028#msg448028 Please note the even though IHD is a support center for CKD folks, it is also mainly a discussion board.NO. It is mainly a support forum. You do not get to redefine the nature and purpose of this forum because it suits your argument. If this is mainly a discussion board, then I need to hear that from a mod, or preferably an admin, so that I can leave permanently. With so many worthy causes in this world, I do not wish to donate my time and money to "mainly a discussion board". A support forum with sideline discussions is a worthy cause in my estimation, a discussion board with support as an afterthought is not. I am dead serious about this, so if I have got this wrong, I would appreciate clarification from someone with the authority to do so. Quote from: Hemodoc link=topic=28065.msg448028#msg448028 Lastly, simply because a woman has CKD does not mean that they cannot carry a pregnancy successfully even on dialysis. We have lot's of successful pregnancies to date in the medical literature. Nancy Spaeth had both of her children after being chosen through the Seattle life and death committees. Whether transplant or dialysis, pregnancy is quite possible.Just because it has been done BY OTHER PEOPLE does not mean that Karen or anyone else would or could have the same outcome. It is some wickedly bad science to suggest that anyone with CKD could have a successful pregnancy without serious, even fatal, consequences. I was advised to have an abortion by a transplant nephrologist if I wanted to save my kidney. I think he knew a bit more about the situation than anyone here does.Karen, I agree with you and made a similar argument about how homosexuality is discussed on here. Just because it is a political section does not mean anything goes. If people are going to compare having an abortion to shooting children in a school, that analogy is, in my husband's words, "heinous". It is sad when appealing to a person's human decency fails to bring about even a slight change in tone or words. I agree that this is entirely disrespectful to the women of IHD who have made that choice (whether to save their lives/health or for other reasons) and to the women on here who know they would be forced to make that choice should the situation arise.
erm, whats funny about that?
Banning is still an option however, and a cautionary thought that everyone who likes to participate in the debates needs to keep in mind before hitting the "Post" button. Reread, rewrite, or delete first, everyone, please. I've done it myself to tone down my initial sarcastic responses.
I also find it wonderful that we can offer support and comfort to people with whom we may disagree on other topics. These political threads, in my very humble view, provide the perfect opportunity to live up to what some have termed "Christian ideals", to show compassion and care to those who are ill no matter who they are or what they believe.
You are too funny. LOL.
So I am criticized for explaining why there is no compromise in the area of abortion as an example and that is taken as a personal attack against women with CKD. Yes, it is funny, absolutely since it is so ridiculous thank you.
Quote from: Hemodoc on December 28, 2012, 12:28:59 PMSo I am criticized for explaining why there is no compromise in the area of abortion as an example and that is taken as a personal attack against women with CKD. Yes, it is funny, absolutely since it is so ridiculous thank you.I know I was referring to your statements in the first thread about Newton in which shooting 20 six and seven year olds was compared to abortion. I found it tasteless. And disrespectful to women, yes. I didn't say anything about it being a personal attack. And you're welcome!
After giving it some thought, I have to admit that I can understand how certain folks participating in this discussion could draw an analogy between what they see as the "slaughter" of abortion and the huge amount of gun-related deaths that is endemic in the United StatesGuns are made to kill. Period. Whether it is another human being or an animal, they are used to kill. I do make an exception for those who use guns in competition/target shooting. As in most things, there are exceptions.Despite the fact that so many people die because of guns, owning a gun is legal.Abortion used as mere birth control is tragic. I personally do not think of a newly fertilized egg as a baby, but I understand that others do. But even though I feel very uncomfortable with using abortion as birth control, there are just too many cases where continuing a pregnancy is too dangerous for a woman, and exceptions must be made. What is too often ignored is that a woman who should not continue with a pregnancy for medical reasons often has other children and a husband for which she must care, and it is wrong to willfully deprive the children who already exist of their mother and to willingly deprive a man of his wife. Despite the fact that embryos (refuse to call them "babies") are aborted daily, abortion is legal.So, I can see the parallels, but I can also see where we shouldn't view either of these issues uncompromisingly.Hemodoc, if a pregnant woman with severe CKD is advised by her nephrologist to have an abortion, or if a woman with a transplant is advised by her tx nephrologist to have an abortion, what do you think she should do? Should her husband's and children's needs be a factor in her decision? What do you think?
Dear Moosemom, you ask very good and interesting and thought provoking questions. However, I am not going to answer your question because of other people on IHD who call me Jerkface and openly threaten bans against me in a horribly immature manner. This is a political discussion thread. Sorry, but I have nothing more that I have to offer to IHD on these issues. If you have any questions, please send me a PM. I am always glad to answer your questions no matter what they are and thank you for your respectful discourse over the years. Take care, Peter.
Perhaps the analogy lacks merit, but the discussion can still be valid. But I have no wish to go there.
Thank you for essentially pointing out that we should get back on topic! LOL!