Pages to Show
- New York Home
- Click Here to Return to Main Site
- Reject Medical Aid in Dying Act
- ADA Will Trump Euthanasia Prohibition
- Newsletter: Focus on NY - East Coast
- Assisting Persons Can Have an Agenda
- Not Everyone Will Have the Support I Had
- I Am So Happy to Be Alive!
- “Even If the Patient Struggled, Who Would Know?”
- John Norton: A Cautionary Tale
- Deaths Will Be Certified as Natural
- Perpetrators Will Be Allowed to Inherit
- Dore Bio: Margaret Dore v David Leven
Thursday, May 30, 2019
Regarding Debate Rematch at Jefferson Ferry Long Island: Dore v. Leven
Friday, June 1, 2018
Legal Analysis of Bill A. 2383-A by Margaret Dore, Esq., MBA: Reject Euthanasia/Assisted Suicide
For the original pdf version, click the following links for a memo and appendices. For "quick facts," click here.
The bill is based on similar statutes in Oregon and Washington State. If enacted, the bill will apply to people with years or decades to live. The bill will also create new paths of elder abuse and exploitation, especially for people with money, meaning the middle class and above.
Other problems will include family trauma and suicide contagion. I urge you to reject this bill.
Thursday, May 3, 2018
Margaret Dore Testifies Against New York Bill
On May 3, 2018, Margaret Dore, president of Choice is an Illusion, testified before the New York Assembly Health Committee in opposition to Bill A.2383-A, seeking to legalize assisted suicide and euthanasia. The bill was based on a similar law in Oregon.
Proponents had sold the bill as limited to assisted suicide, with euthanasia (direct killing) prohibited. Dore, a practicing attorney, pointed out that the apparent prohibition was gutted by other language in the bill, so that euthanasia was in fact allowed.
Dore also testified that the bill would apply to people with years or decades to live. To illustrate the point, she held up a smiling photo of her friend, Jeanette Hall, talked out of assisted suicide in Oregon eighteen years ago.
On June 21, 2018, the Legislature closed without voting on the bill, effectively killing it.
Click here to watch video.
Sunday, March 4, 2018
New York Debate: Thank you Dawn Eskew and Everyone Else Who Came and Contributed
Dawn Eskew |
We had a great turnout and Dawn as the moderator, kept everyone in check, including me.
Monday, February 26, 2018
This Saturday, Register Now, Seats Limited!
Saturday March 3rd, 2018
Tickets are $10
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/euthanasia-or-aid-in-dying-you-decide-tickets-41520189003
Hofstra University Club, 225 Hofstra Blvd, Hempstead, NY 11550
To print an event flyer Click Here
For more information: 631-487-7578
Friday, July 29, 2016
The ADA: A Gift From the Disability Community to the Non-Disabled, Improving Access for All
http://www.npr.org/2015/07/24/423230927/-a-gift-to-the-non-disabled-at-25-the-ada-improves-access-for-all
"This elevator is a gift from the disability community and the ADA to the nondisabled people of New York," said civil rights lawyer, Sid Wolinsky. |
When the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) became law 25 years ago, "everybody was thinking about the iconic person in a wheelchair," says civil rights lawyer Sid Wolinsky. Or that the ADA — which bans discrimination based on disability — was for someone who is deaf, or blind.
But take a tour of New York City with Wolinsky — and the places he sued there — and you will see how the ADA has helped not just people with those significant disabilities, but also people with minor disabilities, and people with no disability at all.
Friday, July 1, 2016
Memo Opposing NY Bills A. 10059 and S. 7579
https://choiceisanillusion.files.wordpress.com/2016/06/ny-memo-05-31-16_001.pdf
The bills are titled “Medical Aid in Dying.” There is, however, no requirement that patients be dying. “Eligible” patients may have years, even decades, to live. The bills are also sold as a promotion of patient choice and control. The bills are instead stacked against the patient and a recipe for elder abuse. Finally, the bills are deceptively written; they are not what they appear to be. I urge you to vote “No.”