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“So you think they have a big wall or something? They don't have planes? That other countries allow hoardes of blood-refusing-near-death JWs to flood across their borders each day? Pretty much all nations run themselves so I'm not sure what that 'sovereign' part has to do with the price of milk.”
Simon,
What you raise is an important factor to examine. It goes to the question of “What is the population of JWs serviced by healthcare facilities in New Zealand?” This value is important in my extrapolation because it’s a direct corollary with the number of statistical deaths due to refusing blood.
A large part of my research on this article was about this very issue. I didn’t share all this research in order to avoid burying the main point (numbers of needless deaths) in a lot of tedious background information. When I began this project my impression was that surrounding island communities were probably serviced by the New Zealand healthcare system with the effect that I should include these JWs in my calculation. The information I gathered suggested my impression was not the case, and was probably not much of a factor anyway.
What I found was that most JWs in regions surrounding New Zealand who needed healthcare where the “no blood” position was likely to be an issue were not being serviced in New Zealand but, rather, either in their own communities or else Australia. When I looked at the number of JWs in the vicinity of New Zealand that were not being serviced in Australia, the number was so low that it wouldn’t have made much difference anyway. In the end, as stated in a post above, I used the number of JWs in New Zealand to compare against statistical deaths among JWs in New Zealand due to refusing blood.
Marvin Shilmer