Mixed in with those topics Potter gets more personal, describing his life as a journalist, then a PR man in the health care industry, and later as a whistle blower.
This forms part of the manifesto plan, which talks of a quality of life depending on such things as safety and security, employment, good schools, care and personal heritage.
Would anybody care to tell me how this does not constitute the very death scenario that Betsy McCaughey believed would be the result of a one-time discussion with your personal physician whereby you could tell the doc how you would like your care handled when you reach the end of life?