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Justice in Medicine and Public Health
ROSAMOND
RHODES
a1
a1 Rosamond Rhodes, Ph.D., is Associate
Professor of Medical Education and Director of Bioethics Education at
Mount Sinai School of Medicine and Associate Professor of
Philosophy at the Graduate School, The City University of New
York. She is Co-editor of the American Philosophical Association
Newsletter on Philosophy and Medicine and Co-editor of Medicine
and
Social
Justice:
Essays
on
the
Distribution
of
Health
Care (Oxford,
2002).
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rhodes r

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On the beautifully clear and sun-filled morning of September 11,
2001, just before I went to vote in the New York City primary
elections, news came over the car radio that a plane had crashed into
the North Tower of the World Trade Center. As I drove toward Manhattan
after casting my ballot, newscasters reported a second plane crashing
into the South Tower. It became instantly clear to everyone that these
were acts of terrorism. We were under attack. All around me the
behavior of New York City drivers immediately converted from the
standard aggressive mode to a remarkably accommodating style, and in a
dramatically uncharacteristic way cars yielded to make way for the
emergency vehicles that were suddenly racing down the highway. Only one
car surged to follow in their wake. a
Footnotesa This
paper is a revised and shortened version of my chapter, “Justice
in Allocations for Terrorism, Biological Warfare, and Public
Health” in Public
Health
Ethics, edited by Michael
Boylan, Kluwer; 2004. Portions of this material were presented at the
International Bioethics Retreat, Pavia, Italy, June 2003, and at the
meetings of the Association for Politics and the Life Sciences,
Philadelphia, September 2003.
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