I often wonder what reaction I'd get if I opened a practice that refused to treat Christians?
I would, of course, never do it (Hippocratic oath, and all that), but I would love to see the reaction of theists to this.
Now, let me say that I've never had a problem with a Christian patient, apart from the standard problems patients pose, unlike a Muslim patient I once had.
But, freedom of religion, in the context of refusing service to people whose lifestyles you don't agree with, works BOTH ways. Some Conservative Christians don't seem to think of it this way.
I would, of course, never do it (Hippocratic oath, and all that), but I would love to see the reaction of theists to this.
Now, let me say that I've never had a problem with a Christian patient, apart from the standard problems patients pose, unlike a Muslim patient I once had.
But, freedom of religion, in the context of refusing service to people whose lifestyles you don't agree with, works BOTH ways. Some Conservative Christians don't seem to think of it this way.
Dying to live, living to die.