John QJohn QWhat is more important for me? The movie “John Q” made me think what should come first. Money, this subject is always with me. In the movie, the capitalism created one victim whose name was John Q. He was an ordinary father who worked at a factory and took care of his family. However, He took the emergency room hostage to save his son’s life. I think John Q’s actions of hijacking the emergency room are justified because the hostage situation was his only hope in his circumstance. He did not have enough money and time for the surgery, and he was not qualified for other financial aids.
Despite the financial hardship, John Q’s family was a loving and happy family. Tragedy struck the family unexpectedly when Michael collapsed during a baseball game, and he needed a heart transplant. The cost of the transplant was a quarter of a million dollars, and John was informed that his insurance cannot cover the procedure. John told Dr. Turner, “Can’t you perform my son’s operation on credit? I will pay it off… you have my word as a man.” However, it did not work. No money, no life for Michael.
Unwilling to let their only child die, John and his wife, Denise set about contacting various relief and assistance agencies in an effort to raise the money and save their son. In spite of applying for financial aid and children welfare, selling their possessions, accepting charity from their church, overtime works, and family tries to raise the money, the money was still short, and the hospital decided to release Michael. John was only working part time, and he no longer had full health benefit. Besides, he was not qualified for children welfare and Medicaid because he is employed. Desperate to keep his son in the hospital, John took matters into his own hands and took the emergency room and several people hostage. John had a very simple request, all his want was to have his sons name placed on the recipient
The Family
John was taken to the hospital, and in the process of his physical and mental deterioration, as well as psychiatric issues, his father found himself in custody, a situation that left his sons face-to-face with numerous others on the street. In a separate case, in March 2000, a neighbor had attempted to put John in an abandoned building that was supposed to be cleaned and cleaned regularly, leaving John to be physically and emotionally abused, and this included an attempt to kill her husband as she and other relatives attempted to rescue his son, which John refused to do. John’s family members attempted to get off the family property in a bid to get their son to stay, but these efforts have since gone ignored, though he had been given two jobs and is considered to be an active criminal.
On one side of the family land there is the building where John was held at the time of his death. In addition, there is the first of his children, who were in the basement at the time. His second son, a student at the University of Iowa, is listed as a student in John’s name. John was born on June 2, 1993, but he has been living in the Family since January 1995.
In addition to surviving, the case has resulted in numerous issues that include the release of John’s children and the removal of multiple children. After the funeral, John and Denise began dating, and John continues to live out his remaining days with Denise and the boys. On February 1, 1998, John received notification that Denise was pregnant with her third child. Despite Denise’s efforts to convince him that that is best for his daughter-in-law, she was still considered “unfit” and has still not reached an agreement on having a legal child in the United States. In 1996, John was asked to leave Colorado to continue to fight for an abortion rights case with a state-funded Planned Parenthood affiliate, but he had been offered a job that would require a permit and an attorney in order to file a motion to compel the permit application. The request was rejected, and John found himself back in Colorado with his two sons. This is the story that the family has written about the case, and the family maintains that that was John’s only way to get past this terrible situation. Their story was so successful however that their story has been included in this edition of the book.
John was taken to the emergency room. He began to get an intense headache and dizziness. Eventually he was placed in a medically medically induced coma. While in intensive care, John was able to talk for about an hour and a half while his family members had the room in tow. While an ambulance is not supposed to move through a state-level facility, all hospitals are equipped with a large number of temporary emergency room units where patients in desperate critical condition are kept until they are medically possible. A hospital cannot physically move an emergency patient to the hospital without prior permission, and such a hospital does not want to move an ambulance under its own authority.
According to the family, John received an emergency room prescription that read, “There’s no more time. Take time, please. Please do not leave here without proper prescription, you two