Hehe, *she* may have trusted her husband, but I don't. Not that anyone
is asking me, but that's my opinion for what it is worth. I think he
is just tired of dealing with a wife that is inconveniently not dying.
I think he would rather it was all over so he can concentrate on his
current family.

Dana


On Fri, 25 Feb 2005 21:40:03 -0600, Gruss Gott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Dana wrote:
> > But John there are also some very fine reasons not to believe him.
> > However the case goes, this case teaches us all to make our wishes
> > known, because as we saw in an earlier thread, not all of us would
> > want that plug pulled.
> >
> 
> She did make her wishes known: she told her husband what she wanted
> and left it at that since that's the law.  That's the frustrating
> thing for me - neither my wife or I have "our wishes" stated because
> we trust each other to take care of things and the law says we can do
> that.
> 
> Why is the assumption in this case that she didn't trust the law or
> her husband, but failed to take action on that mistrust?
> 
> 

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