Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Enouraged to suicide Australia does it more discretely but does it!

I have seen first hand how Australia pushes hard to get the poor and ill to suicide! We can take the Safety Institute of Australia as a starting point, an organisation that is suppose to be supporting health in this country but bans people with an illness that prevents them from working. Their one intent is to get me to suicide and leave them alone, but Jesus prevents that in my life.

Insurance companies were the same and after 3 years of battling their corruption the Lord had me walk away and put my trust in him to provide my and my families needs but these insurance comapanies and the Victorian Workcover Authority would have rather me suicide than highlight to the public the cruel, corrupt organisations they are.

The only people that have any empathy for the poor and ill are those who are suffering alongside us as the following article highlights. Australia is no better, just look at the suicide rates and when you have been homeless with a family and ripped off by insurance comapanies, trampled by a Safety Institute of Australia that is suppose to care about health, including mental health, you realise it's just a image that the SIA and the rest care, they don't care they just want to look after themselves and make money.

All I pray now is for Jesus to return quickly so this corrupt uncaring world will be judged!

Suicide bid sparks punch-up

From correspondents in Berlin

November 08, 2006 05:21am
Article from: Reuters

A YOUNG woman's rooftop suicide bid in Germany sparked a mass brawl between spectators encouraging the 21-year-old to jump and a group of homeless people trying to protect her.

The homeless people were angered when some teenagers in the crowd of hundreds started yelling to the woman she should throw herself from the roof of the town hall of the southwestern town of Loerrach, said police spokesman Dietmar Ernst.

"The homeless people started shouting at the kids not to say that, using some strong language," Mr Ernst said. "Morally speaking though, the homeless people were in the right."

A punch-up involving around 40 people then ensued, during which time police managed to coax the woman back indoors - three and a half hours after her ordeal began.

Some 35 officers, six of whom were injured during the fight, were needed to break it up. Eight participants were arrested, most of them school children aged between 16 and 19.

Mr Ernst said he was doubtful that the brawl, which involved at least one girl, had stopped the woman from jumping.

"She was about 70m up and probably wouldn't have seen much of what was going on," he said.

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