Thanks Tom. What would be the justification for firing a funeral director or embalmer for speaking out? Would it be the jeopardizing the greater good argument (i.e. based on the idea that their findings are rare and/or unrelated)?
Thanks Tom. What would be the justification for firing a funeral director or embalmer for speaking out? Would it be the jeopardizing the greater good argument (i.e. based on the idea that their findings are rare and/or unrelated)?
Funeral directors and embalmers do "quiet" work. They do not like stirring up any necessary controversy by talking about the dead. It's not good for business. But thankfully, a few good ones like Richard Hirschman felt that it was his ethical duty to let the world know that these new "white fibrous clots" are a NEW phenomenon that he had never seen before the year 2021 in his 20 years as a practicing embalmer who embalms 300 or more bodies every year.
Thanks Tom. What would be the justification for firing a funeral director or embalmer for speaking out? Would it be the jeopardizing the greater good argument (i.e. based on the idea that their findings are rare and/or unrelated)?
Funeral directors and embalmers do "quiet" work. They do not like stirring up any necessary controversy by talking about the dead. It's not good for business. But thankfully, a few good ones like Richard Hirschman felt that it was his ethical duty to let the world know that these new "white fibrous clots" are a NEW phenomenon that he had never seen before the year 2021 in his 20 years as a practicing embalmer who embalms 300 or more bodies every year.