Re: Praying man let his daughter die
- From: Desertphile <desertphile@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 02 Aug 2009 17:47:50 -0600
On Sun, 2 Aug 2009 21:47:21 +0200, nospam@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (J. J.
Lodder) wrote:
Sapient Fridge <use_reply_address@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/8180116.stm
"A US jury has found a man guilty of killing his sick 11-year-old
daughter by praying for her recovery rather than seeking medical care.
The man, Dale Neumann, told a court in the state of Wisconsin he
believed God could heal his daughter.
She died of a treatable disease - undiagnosed diabetes - at home in
rural Wisconsin in March last year, as people surrounded her and prayed.
Strange, for Wisconsin has a state law
that currently exempts faith healing practices
from prosecution for child neglect and abuse.
Have they changed it?
All states in the USA have occult-based exemptions under the
several Child Protection Acts passed during the 1970s and 1980s.
Details are found in "Deadly Blessings" written by Richard J.
Brenneman. Federal law states that each state must have an occult
exception to its anti-child abuse laws before each state may
receive federal funding to combat child abuse. Freaky, but true.
The Church of Christ Christian worked hard and paid enormous sums
of money to pass this law, to protect their "Practitioners" from
child abuse, child neglect, and from practicing "medicine" without
a license.
The laws in most states use the phrase "... or other remedial
aid...." when the laws mandate that parents and/or guardians are
required to acquire medical treatment for minors under their care.
"Other remedial care" includes praying or other occult ritual,
which was the whole point of the exemption requirement.
Much of this has changed since the 1980s when the Davies in
Colorado cheerfully allowed their daughter to die in horrible
screaming agony as a Christanic human sacrifice to their gods.
Since the mid 1990s district attorneys have been ignoring the
exemption clauses in their states' child protection laws, and they
have been prosecuting deaths due to parental neglect of children.
Jan
--
http://desertphile.org
Desertphile's Desert Soliloquy. WARNING: view with plenty of water
"Why aren't resurrections from the dead noteworthy?" -- Jim Rutz
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