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Comments by "Numbers Stations Archive" (@numbersstationsarchive194) on "Wendigoon" channel.
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The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
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The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness.
1
The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi. Do some research before spouting such disrespectful crap. Shame on you.
1
@JessieP07 Did you even read the comment, you disrespectful moron? The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
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@yourcasualfinn2213 Clearly none of you have ever lost a family member.
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Found the groomer
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This simply isn't true. The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
@johnd.2778 Sure, it is selfish of his wife to do something like that, but you would understand if you had ever lost someone close to you in a slow and painful way.
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It saved his coworker, Masato Shinohara, who survived for almost a year, mostly due to his skin grafts being successful.
1
Your argument is based purely on fearmongering and misinformation. Nuclear power is actually one of the safest and least polluting forms of power.
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The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness.
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The United States is the only country in the world to have medical bills. Japan, and every other country on earth, has free healthcare.
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Shut the fuck up and do some research before spouting such disrespectful nonsense. The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi. Shame on you.
1
They DID ask him if he wanted to die. The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
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Coal and oil are slowly ending us, and renewable energy is too inefficient to replace it. Funny how green nuts focus exclusively on nuclear energy killing a few people a year on average in freak accidents, and never on coal or oil killing millions a year from lung cancer, destroying communities by raising the sea level, wiping species off the face of the earth.
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The skin grafts were conducted successfully, the issue was that his body wasn't accepting the grafts, which caused his skin to become infected.
1
The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
How is it possible for someone to make such a callous assumption? You don't know what his family felt, you aren't them, so shut the fuck up and keep your idiotic, disrespectful opinion to yourself.
1
This simply isn't true. The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
@ballinonabudget6229 The fact that he allowed doctors to continue to treat him until the end should be proof enough.
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@ballinonabudget6229 Alright then, keep believing your sensationalised view of events. You really are grasping at straws.
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How so?
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This simply isn't true. The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
This simply isn't true. The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi. Have some respect for Ouchi's family, the medical team treating an extremely complex case, and Ouchi himself.
1
The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
This simply isn't true. The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
Did you even watch the video? This simply isn't true. The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
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@Bewefau It's so obvious that you're trolling. Try harder.
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The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness.
1
The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness.
1
...No, that's not at all what happened, and that's not how radiation works.
1
That's simply not true. The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
@rustykilt You cannot agree with his own decision to prolong his suffering in the hope that he may survive?
1
This simply isn't true. The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
Actually, that's not true at all. The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
@Chillerll This simply isn't true. The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
The sensationalist bullshit makes me feel sick. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
This simply isn't true. The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi.
1
They couldn't. The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness.
1
The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness. The belief that he was kept alive against his will as some sort of cruel medical experiment is a myth that has existed since the early 2010s, and can be attributed to a single poorly-researched sensationalist pop-sci article. The same article also misattributed a now infamous image of a US burn ward patient as being a photograph of Ouchi. Shame on you for spouting such ignorant bullshit. Have some respect for the parties involved.
1
The only person who could have consented to ending his medical treatment was Ouchi himself, and he clearly didn't consent to it, even in his final days of consciousness.
1
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