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1🏏 ICC Men's T20 World Cup 2026: PAK vs SL,Super 8🏏
🏏 ICC Men's T20 World Cup 2026: NZ vs Eng 49th Match,27 Feb 🏏
NIGHT STAYY 27.2
Kya Rishta tyar hai ek aur leap lene ko? -SBS
US, Israel attack Iran : Trump announces ‘major combat operations’🔥
MAIRA HELPS MUKTI 28.2
Professional setback continues. Dp now out of The White Lotus
Alia Bhatt (for Gucci) & Diana Penty - at the Milan Fashion Week
IPL 2026 - (28 March to 31 May 2026)
The first course of action would be to go by their living wills. I know some relatives who would prefer the plug pulled. There are others who have stated that they do not want the plug pulled.
If there is no living will, I will go based on medical opinion. If the doctors say there is a less than 40% chance of living and/or coming out of coma, then I will pull the plug. I will get multiple opinions though.
However, in both cases eventually utilitarianism prevails. If resources were infinite then all life is priceless. With finite resources we have to make the difficult decision of choosing one life over another. Rather than lock up resources both financial and medical in serving a life that will never be a valuable contributing member in society ever again, I would rather divert those resources to someone who will recover and live.
Personally, I'm a pull a plug kind of person. Yes, life is precious, but not that precious. Stop clinging onto false hope. The world does not have endless resources to sustain you or your loved ones forever. Do the right thing, give the chance to someone who actually stands a chance. You may be taking one life by pulling a plug. But think of how many lives you may indirectly take by refusing to give that hospital bed, doctor's time, expensive resources to someone else waiting in line.