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The Modern Roman Colosseum: Euthanasia as a Spectator Sport
Townhall.com ^ | August 8, 2011 | Rachel Alexander

Posted on 08/09/2011 10:50:51 AM PDT by Kaslin

Last month, Nikolai Ivanisovich, a 62-year old Russian man with brain cancer, sold the rights to broadcast his euthanasia to BattleCam.com, a 24/7 reality TV website. The proceeds were reportedly enough to take care of his surviving family. In June, BBC2 broadcast a documentary showing the suicide of terminally ill Peter Smedley, including his pitiful cries for water that were refused by the doctor.

A disturbing trend has developed over the last few years of broadcasting the suicides of the weak and elderly in society for entertainment. Much of it is due to the glamorization of assisted suicide by a Swiss suicide clinic known as Dignitas. London’s Sky TV broadcast one of the first assisted suicides on TV at Dignitas in 2008 in the documentary “Right to Die?” Located in the beautiful mountains of Zurich, with Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony playing in the background at the patient’s request, the clinic provided a false picture of what assisted suicide is really about. In contrast, the BBC2 documentary “Choosing to Die” purposely left out the details of a second terminally ill suicide performed at Dignitas, because the patient took 90 minutes to die, prompting the staff to instruct his mother not to hug him because it was prolonging his life. Euthanasia proponents selectively choose what to show in order to mislead the public.

Two assisted suicides recently broadcast on television were of people with Motor Neurone Disease. This disease includes amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), known in the U.S. as Lou Gehrig’s disease. Patients diagnosed with it gradually lose use of their muscles, motor functions and become weak. Life expectancy after diagnosis is two to five years, and death can be due to suffocation.

However, doctors are not always right. Miracles can happen. Professor Stephen Hawking was diagnosed with Motor Neurone Disease in his 20s and told he would not live to see age 30. He is now 69 and is considered one of the most prominent and brilliant scientists of this era, making important contributions in the areas of cosmology, gravity and black holes.

It is true that some situations are truly heartbreaking, like that of former French schoolteacher Chantal Sebire, who suffered from a horrendous facially disfiguring disease known as esthesioneuroblastoma that also caused her to go blind. Children would run away when they saw her in public. But this does not make it right to encourage someone like that to kill themselves. Many people suffer from debilitating illnesses, disfigurement, paralysis and other difficult afflictions. Why not encourage the millions afflicted with these diseases to kill themselves then? Somehow they are able to cope. We need to set up comprehensive assisted living facilities for those who suffer like Chantal Sebire, where she could have lived with others who would love her and not treat her cruelly.

Where were the loved ones of those who have taken their own lives on camera? Did they try to talk them out of killing themselves, and offer to care for them? Motor Neuron Disease sufferer Craig Ewert, whose suicide was broadcast on Sky TV in 2008, said if he did not go through with it, he would “inflict suffering on my family.” After a retired doctor with supranuclear palsy took her life at Dignitas, her son said, “She was ready to go and that makes it all the easier for us.” What did he mean by that, was he tired of taking care of her? What happened to caring for the ones you love? She cared for him as a child growing up when he was dependent upon her, where is the reciprocal kindness? Average life expectancy from supranuclear palsy is seven years; was that too long of a “burden” on him to take care of his mother? The reality is, suicide usually deeply disturbs the loved ones left behind, it does not make their lives any easier. Life is full of difficulties, what makes caring for a loved one any worse than other problems, requiring it to be resolved by death?

One of the most outspoken opponents of euthanasia is Mme. Maryannick Pavageau, who was awarded France’s highest decoration, the Legion d’Honneur, for her efforts. Mme. Pavageau suffered a stroke at age 29, and after being in a coma for three months, ended up paralyzed with Locked-in-Sydrome, barely able to speak. Yet she believes that all life is worth living, explaining, “I am firmly against euthanasia because it is not physical suffering that guides the desire to die but a moment of discouragement, feeling like a burden. All those who ask to die are mostly looking for love.”

The real dignity lies in letting people with terminal diseases know that their lives have value, we care about them, and want to help them, not knock them off. It is telling that the organization formerly known as the Voluntary Euthanasia Society has changed its name to Dignity in Dying to disguise what is really going on. It is not brave to assist someone with taking their own life, it is brave to help them take on the challenges associated with helping them cope with their illness. What is compassionate about shortening someone’s life, which brings up horrendous moral issues? If they are Christian or Jewish, assisted suicide is not helping them adhere to religious tenets. Ecclesiastes 7:17b says, “Do not be a fool – why die before your time?” Some believe that the Sixth Commandment, “Thou shalt not murder,” includes suicide. We should encourage the terminally ill to find strength in their religion. It is telling that there is virtually no mention of God or heaven by the terminally ill who have broadcast their suicides, nor do the relatives accompanying them provide any spiritual comfort.

The states of Oregon, Washington and Montana (the latter through court ruling) have legalized some form of assisted suicide. It is legal in a handful of countries, and in the Netherlands, is legal for infants and often practiced without the consent of the patient. Over 10,000 citizens carry “Do Not Euthanize Me” cards in case they are ever admitted to a hospital unexpectedly. There is very little difference between euthanasia, where a doctor takes the fatal steps terminating life, and assisted suicide, where the doctor or someone else prepares everything for the patient to make the final move, which is usually by drinking a cocktail of barbiturates.

Advances in palliative care have made it possible to die in dignity and comfort. We have access to the best painkilling drugs today. People are living much longer lives due to modern medicine and able to do more activities at an advanced age than they used to. Doctors understand this and generally oppose physician-assisted suicide. A report by Palliative Medicine analyzed numerous studies of doctors in England and found that the majority of doctors in almost all of the studies opposed euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide.

Although there are some heartwrenching stories which are difficult to stomach, normalizing euthanasia will open a Pandora’s Box. The box already has a crack in it, evidenced by laws that have been passed legalizing it and the increasing number of broadcasts on TV and the internet. The UK’s Prolife Alliance has tracked how euthanasia in Britain began with the terminally ill, then progressed to people with progressive, but not necessarily fatal diseases like multiple sclerosis. Now, people with severe but non-fatal conditions including a man who was paralyzed and a woman merely afraid of the future are committing suicide. The healthy wife of an ailing Belgian man killed herself at the same time he took his life.

The rationing of certain surgeries and treatments for the elderly and weak has already begun, due to soaring healthcare costs. As euthanasia is normalized, there will be pressure put on elderly people to commit suicide. Elderly people may feel guilty about being a burden and become convinced it is the right thing to do, as was revealed in some of the highly publicized assisted suicides. Relatives eager for inheritances may pressure the elderly into taking their lives prematurely. Glamorizing it will make it more attractive to others – including healthy people and teenagers.

What does it say about our society that we are hurrying along and exploiting the deaths of the elderly and weak in our society in the name of TV ratings? It is trivializing death in the name of greed and false compassion. We are sliding down the slippery slope to becoming like the ancient barbaric Romans, who took pleasure in watching Christians and others murdered for sport in public arenas.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: euthanasia; moralabsolutes; prolife

1 posted on 08/09/2011 10:50:56 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
Our hospitals are already doing this, my family was hit from behind by a driver who fell asleep, the younger ones were treated & released the older ones held hostage while they do nothing to help them & hope they'll just die.
2 posted on 08/09/2011 10:56:05 AM PDT by de.rm ('Most people never believe anything you tell them unless it isn't true."-Groucho Marx)
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To: Kaslin

I am reminded of an old Charlton Heston movie, “Soylent Green”...

Euthanasia is a very old idea, but never more popular than recent years. Getting rid of the “useless eaters” is very appealing to some. It is, also, no surprise that in this day and age of 1.5 million abortions per year, that the idea that human life is sacred is considered “quaint”, at best.

I have seen euthanasia up close. The withholding of “extraordinary means” is absolutely appropriate. However, dying of dehydration is not pretty, and if anyone ever sees it, they will wonder (quietly and to themselves, of course), what the difference is between that and the torture and murder at the hands of an anonymous serial killer. Overdosing them on narcotics, as opposed to pain management? That’s not euthanasia- that’s murder by asphyxiation and that isn’t a pretty thing to watch, either. And the administrator is now part of an unnatural death.

Think that’s harsh? Then you ain’t seen it. And at what point do they expand the choices for expansion of such a program? When do they choose to leave loved ones out of the decision? When will it be YOUR turn? When you are too old to be productive?

Never forget- the left (the ones totally immured in this, at least, since Sanger) will apply to YOU what they will not apply to themselves.


3 posted on 08/09/2011 11:12:13 AM PDT by 13Sisters76 ("It is amazing how many people mistake a certain hip snideness for sophistication. " Thos. Sowell)
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To: 13Sisters76
Exactly why I mentioned how different the hospital staff treated the elders in my family different, I know it's not long before I'm next.

Dr. Toddler came in ("there gettin' younger & younger",), ask my father "Do you know what day it is?, when he gave the correct answer Dr. Toddler looked fumed & gave us the hairy eyeball like we had prompted him, he then said "how do you know?", my dad , doing a perfect George Costanza pointed to the Times and said "I read the paper".

4 posted on 08/09/2011 12:12:06 PM PDT by de.rm ('Most people never believe anything you tell them unless it isn't true."-Groucho Marx)
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To: Kaslin; little jeremiah; wagglebee; Salvation; metmom; wintertime; Impy; GOPsterinMA; JulieRNR21

This is just beynd sick. I don’t so much blame the people who want to end it all- they want to leave their families and loved ones a decent estate- but the people who produce add broadcast this stuff are depraved.


5 posted on 08/09/2011 12:26:38 PM PDT by Clintonfatigued (Illegal aliens collect welfare checks that Americans won't collect)
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To: Kaslin; Clintonfatigued; 185JHP; 230FMJ; AKA Elena; Albion Wilde; Aleighanne; Alexander Rubin; ...
Moral Absolutes Ping!

Freepmail wagglebee to subscribe or unsubscribe from the moral absolutes ping list.

FreeRepublic moral absolutes keyword search
[ Add keyword moral absolutes to flag FR articles to this ping list ]


6 posted on 08/09/2011 12:57:59 PM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: Clintonfatigued; Kaslin; little jeremiah; wagglebee; Salvation; metmom; wintertime; Impy; ...

And we haven’t bottomed out yet...that’s what I find to be the most scary.


7 posted on 08/09/2011 12:59:42 PM PDT by GOPsterinMA (Perry/Bachmann 2012 - they can share hair care products.)
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To: GOPsterinMA
And we haven’t bottomed out yet...that’s what I find to be the most scary.

People looked at the horror of the Nazi Holocaust and cried, "Never again."

Then the same people largely ignored the genocide on an ever larger scale in the Soviet Union, China, Cambodia and other places.

The "Greatest Generation" then turned around and forced abortion on America. Today the average American has no clue that there have been over 53 MILLION abortions in America since 1973 and over ONE BILLION worldwide in the last century.

I don't know what it will take for civilization to "bottom out," but I know that it will be far more horrible than we can begin to imagine.

8 posted on 08/09/2011 1:08:28 PM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: wagglebee

Fantastic synopsis - and tragically spot on.


9 posted on 08/09/2011 4:52:57 PM PDT by GOPsterinMA (Perry/Bachmann 2012 - they can share hair care products.)
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To: GOPsterinMA; Clintonfatigued; fieldmarshaldj; Perdogg; BillyBoy

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0093894/

Coming soon?


10 posted on 08/11/2011 2:35:49 PM PDT by Impy (Don't call me red.)
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To: Kaslin
Pinged from Terri Dailies


11 posted on 08/14/2011 11:03:59 AM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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