Resist We, Mulch

“Natural organic reduction” is a new technology that many in the mortuary science world are embracing. It’s legal in six states, including Washington, where one Minnesota man dying of cancer last year had to arrange to have his body shipped after his death to undergo the process. The composted remains were then sent back to Minnesota, said Taelor Johnson of Twin Cities-based Mueller Memorial and Interra Green Burial.

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“Steve died last September, and he got his wish to be transformed into highly regenerative soil,” said Johnson during her testimony Tuesday on HF2669, which would make it legal for licensed morticians to operate natural organic reduction technology for corpses. “It may seem hard to believe, but Steve was excited at this plan for his disposition because it would help him make meaning out of his own death.”

Ed Morrissey

In most religious faiths (not all), the body is sacred, which requires a respectful interment or cremation. Letting bodies rot into the ground as fertilizer deliberately is hardly respectful; it suggests that the worth of a body is equivalent to dung.

Of course, people can decide that for themselves, but the activism of enviros to push this is pretty creepy. Just sayin'. 

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