"Brain death" never was true death, nor will it ever be. Neurologists and organ transplanters have known this since the multi-billion-dollar organ procurement/transplant industry began. So if a declaration of "brain death" is not actual death, but organs are taken legally in accord with "accepted medical standards" under the Uniform Determination of Death Act (UDDA) why not continue to make "acceptable" less stringent criteria? That is precisely what is happening right now, which is why the present volume is being republished. There is a push by the American Academy of Neurology (AAN) to revise the UDDA to declare people dead who not only still have a beating heart but also have brain function. These registered organ donors are technically mentally disabled, not dead; they are put to death by the removal of their organs because those who receive their organs are judged by the elites more worthy to live on, and, of course, these transplant centers rake in billions of dollars on the backs these uninformed altruistic organ donors. The desire of the AAN reflects the "life unworthy of life" aspirations in Hitler's Germany, and the pro-life Roman Catholic Church has always opposed human atrocities like the one the AAN presently endorses and zealously supports.