jno - //andy, I agree, I think they are in the wrong; nonetheless, there are no moral certainties, and if doing what they've done is ok by their own standards, then I can't complain. His family may well protest, but when a person becomes public property (even totally involuntarily, as in Rigby's case), others have something invested in him too. //
A fair point, but I would argue that actions within an individual moral code do not mean that objections cannot reasonably be raised by people whose moral code differs - that is part of life in a free society - they have a legal, of not moral right to do it, and the majority of us on here have the same rights to object to it.