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EUTHANASIA WORLD
National Review, mail ^ | 10-17-03 | Wesley J Smith

Posted on 10/20/2003 4:01:03 PM PDT by MarMema

The worst culture.

By Wesley J. Smith

The New York Times often wears its heart on its sleeve, or, more precisely stated, on its front page. Important stories that undermine or offend the Times's ideological or cultural predilections may receive page-16 coverage — if they are reported at all — while events of less national import that support the Gray Lady's worldview sometimes receive unwarranted banner headlines.

The latest example of this phenomenon occurred on September 27, when the adamantly pro-euthanasia "paper of record" ran a front-page story about the assisted suicide in France of Vincent Humbert ("Son's Wish to Die, and Mother's Help, Stir French Debate"). Until then, most Americans had never heard of Humbert. He was, however, well known in France for writing President Jacques Chirac and asking for the right to be euthanized. He subsequently wrote a book detailing the suffering caused by his becoming disabled in an auto accident — he was blind, mute, and quadriplegic — and urging that euthanasia be legalized. The book was released just before his mother overdosed him with sedatives, spurring renewed interest in France about legalizing euthanasia.

The coverage of the Humbert tragedy by the Times and other media followed the dreary pattern usually seen in reportage of such stories. First, it was written to wrench the heart rather than engage the mind. Second, the killing was depicted unquestioningly as beneficent and compassionate. The implicit message: It should be legal to grant a man experiencing such terrible suffering the mercy of the death he desires. Finally, there was no exploration of the broader, big-picture issues that must be considered if we are to make a truly informed decision about a public policy as radical as legalizing euthanasia.

Bring up the issue of assisted suicide, and we suddenly are transported to Euthanasia World, an idealized land where euthanasia's dark side is conveniently ignored. In Euthanasia World, money is never an issue, doctors make house calls, no one is ever abandoned or coerced, and every "death with dignity" is freely and carefully chosen just before natural death occurs and there is no other way to relieve unbearable suffering.

In fact, legalized assisted suicide and euthanasia would take place in the context of a harsher real world of abuse and neglect of the elderly, family dysfunction, relatives' desiring to inherit property or collect on fat life insurance policies, and subtle pressures on the ill, disabled, or elderly to cease being a burden ("Gee Grandma, because of the nursing home bills, we can't send little Timmy to college").

Our medical-financing system is in disarray. Millions are without health insurance. Medicare and Medicaid are in financial trouble. HMOs are constantly cutting costs and sometimes quality of care. Our doctors are harried by too heavy caseloads. Nursing staffs have been cut to the bone by hospitals bleeding red ink. Meanwhile, many of our foremost bioethicists are pushing a "futile-care theory" that would allow physicians to singlehandedly cut off treatment to their most desperately ill and seriously disabled patients — offering an inducement to the quicker end of assisted suicide.

Then there is the widespread fear and loathing of disability, an ugly fact of modern life that gave the Humbert's euthanasia much of its dark, seductive appeal. Many believe that becoming disabled is the worst thing that can happen in life. Perhaps this explains why Jack Kevorkian became something of a national hero as he assisted the suicides of about 130 mostly disabled people.

Similarly, when a Canadian farmer named Robert Latimer murdered his twelve-year-old daughter Tracy because she had cerebral palsy, thousands of Canadians leapt to his defense, demanding that the "loving father" be freed. After a jury convicted Latimer of second-degree murder, the trial judge even tried unsuccessfully to circumvent the mandatory minimum legal sentence because he believed Tracy's killing was "altruistic."

Disabled people have noticed that — and are afraid because — their killers' motive for murder is applauded as compassion and mercy. "People with disabilities are the target of the euthanasia movement," worries Diane Coleman, founder and executive director of the disability-rights group Not Dead Yet, a national organization that fights against legalizing assisted suicide.

I asked Coleman for her reaction to the New York Times Humbert story. "The fact that this euthanasia was deemed worthy of front- page attention is consistent with the paper's longstanding editorial policy that pretty much says, 'Better dead than disabled.' Yet, when 200 people, mostly motorized wheelchair users, recently endured the hardships of a two-week march from Philadelphia to the United States Congress demanding home-care services and freedom from nursing homes, the Times did not bother to cover it."

Consider the irony. Coleman asserts that disabled people are likely to be supported if they express a desire to die, but may be refused access to the very services that could help them realize that their lives are worth living. Indeed, this crucial aspect of the Humbert case went completely unexplored by the Times and other media. "We know people similar to Vincent Humbert who have chosen to live," Coleman told me. "So we would still ask, why did he want to die? Obviously, most people think they know the answer to that question, and he himself wrote about it, but it's not simply that he was so severely impaired. You also have to look at the social situation."

Euthanasia World isn't the real world. People who advocate assisted suicide pretend that killing would be an enlightened, compassionate measure of last resort — rarely applied, and only to alleviate unbearable suffering. But Diane Coleman knows this isn't true. She warns us that in the real world of human imperfection, euthanasia would be a dagger's blade aimed at the very heart of the disabled community.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: catholiclist; cultureofdeath; euthanasia; schiavo; terri; terrischiavo
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"In Euthanasia World, money is never an issue, doctors make house calls, no one is ever abandoned or coerced, and every "death with dignity" is freely and carefully chosen just before natural death occurs and there is no other way to relieve unbearable suffering."

Wesley is brilliant.

1 posted on 10/20/2003 4:01:03 PM PDT by MarMema
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To: Chancellor Palpatine; Salvation; ventana; BlackElk; Polycarp; sitetest; sinkspur; agrace; ...
PING!!

This is what killing Terri is about....developing the slope to make way for expansion.

2 posted on 10/20/2003 4:02:54 PM PDT by MarMema (KILLING ISN'T MEDICINE)
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To: MarMema
Not Dead Yet, a national organization that fights against legalizing assisted suicide.

Great name and great group. God bless 'em.

3 posted on 10/20/2003 4:05:15 PM PDT by Saundra Duffy (For victory & freedom!!!)
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To: MarMema
Bring up the issue of assisted suicide, and we suddenly are transported to Euthanasia World, an idealized land where euthanasia's dark side is conveniently ignored.

Yes, and it was exactly the same thing with abortion in the early '70s. We were treated to heart-rending sob stories, eked out by horrible tales of back-alley butchery, and solemnly assured that abortion would occur only under the most dire of circumstances.

4 posted on 10/20/2003 4:08:44 PM PDT by Agnes Heep
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To: MarMema
They should call it Crazy World but the Anti Smoking Crowd already took that one for their WWE Wrestling commercials.
5 posted on 10/20/2003 4:10:16 PM PDT by Coral Snake (Why do we allow a purjuring, software pirate traitor to continue to run our computers?)
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To: hocndoc; Pegita; Humidston; Destro; TexasCowboy; Libertina; syriacus; Florida Mama; honeygrl; ...
ping
6 posted on 10/20/2003 4:13:25 PM PDT by MarMema (KILLING ISN'T MEDICINE)
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To: Agnes Heep
it was exactly the same thing with abortion in the early '70s

An excellent point!

7 posted on 10/20/2003 4:14:07 PM PDT by MarMema (KILLING ISN'T MEDICINE)
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Consider the irony. Coleman asserts that disabled people are likely to be supported if they express a desire to die, but may be refused access to the very services that could help them realize that their lives are worth living
8 posted on 10/20/2003 4:18:36 PM PDT by Askel5
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To: sweetliberty; Budge
Bring up the issue of assisted suicide, and we suddenly are transported to Euthanasia World, an idealized land where euthanasia's dark side is conveniently ignored. In Euthanasia World, money is never an issue, doctors make house calls, no one is ever abandoned or coerced, and every "death with dignity" is freely and carefully chosen just before natural death occurs and there is no other way to relieve unbearable suffering. In fact, legalized assisted suicide and euthanasia would take place in the context of a harsher real world of abuse and neglect of the elderly, family dysfunction, relatives' desiring to inherit property or collect on fat life insurance policies, and subtle pressures on the ill, disabled, or elderly to cease being a burden ("Gee Grandma, because of the nursing home bills, we can't send little Timmy to college").

Ping and see post #4. Ain't it the truth! We are in the same position as those who fought unsuccessfully against legalized abortion! The responsibility is humbling!

<><

9 posted on 10/20/2003 4:23:10 PM PDT by viaveritasvita
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To: viaveritasvita
"We are in the same position as those who fought unsuccessfully against legalized abortion!"

And still fight as the culture of death pushes onward to new and more formidable depths.

10 posted on 10/20/2003 4:26:26 PM PDT by sweetliberty ("Having the right to do a thing is not at all the same thing as being right in doing it.")
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To: Askel5
Thank you for sharing this article. We have been asked many times to allow our daughter to "go into Gods arms"... everytime I am amazed that they cant see the life in this little girl.

We were asked to terminate before she was born, we were asked to sign DNR papers before my emergency C~section (which, i was advised not to have "why do you want to have a surgery done to your body for a child who will most likely die right at or soon after birth, dont put yourself thru that".) We were advice atleast 5 times over the next 14 days to turn the ventilator off... she is a beuatifully handicapped little two year old now.

I could not imagine my life without her, I Could not imagine being the schindlers right now watching their child die before there eyes.

Being the caregiver of a handicapped individual is alot of work, it is a daily obligation, for the rest of their lives. Emmas schedule is overwhelming, by my love for her, and her joy for life outweigh any burden her medical care might be on our family. As I have said in posts in the past "My head told me to let her go, My heart is why she is alive today"...I trust my heart on this issue.

As parents we are put here to protect our children, to help them, nourish them, support them. Can you imagine how helpless they must feel right now? The very thing a mother is called to do is being denied by a court order. You would have to bury me along with my child.

Thank you again for sharing this article, the importance of this situation has long been overlooked. Soon legalized murder is going to come knocking at the door of our handicapped children, and a court order will be in place to back it up.

Blessings to all those who are the voice for the voiceless.
~Heather
www.Emmas2Hearts.com
11 posted on 10/20/2003 4:37:07 PM PDT by Florida Mama (My head told me I should let her go, my heart is why she is alive today- www.Emmas2Hearts.com)
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To: Florida Mama
Soon legalized murder is going to come knocking at the door of our handicapped children, and a court order will be in place to back it up.

A nightmare coming true!! Staggering!

May God richly bless you and your family! I will pray for you tonight.

<><

12 posted on 10/20/2003 4:41:53 PM PDT by viaveritasvita
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To: Florida Mama
Soon legalized murder is going to come knocking at the door of our handicapped children, and a court order will be in place to back it up.

It is a concern. We have several disabled children and we are looking at leaving the country in the next few years...

13 posted on 10/20/2003 4:52:57 PM PDT by MarMema (KILLING ISN'T MEDICINE)
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To: Florida Mama
But in the meantime I am going to try to KICK these death-groupies in the butt as often as I can and as hard as I can..
14 posted on 10/20/2003 4:53:36 PM PDT by MarMema (KILLING ISN'T MEDICINE)
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To: MarMema
Euthenasia is technically illegal in Sweden. That did not stop two nurses from giving my grandfather an overdose of morphine when a family friend went to the lobby to get my uncle.

Once euthenasia sets in, involuntary euthenasia follows shortly. The culture of death and socialised medicine demand it.
15 posted on 10/20/2003 5:01:52 PM PDT by rmlew (Peaceniks and isolationists are objectively pro-Terrorist)
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To: rmlew
I agree except there are a few remaining places where there is socialized medicine, but the culture has firmly and boldly rejected the culture of death.

Two such places are Ireland and Czech Republic.

16 posted on 10/20/2003 5:04:47 PM PDT by MarMema (KILLING ISN'T MEDICINE)
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To: rmlew
And, ahem, in Ireland they mostly speak English....I hear it is pretty too.
17 posted on 10/20/2003 5:05:54 PM PDT by MarMema (KILLING ISN'T MEDICINE)
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To: 2nd amendment mama; A2J; Alouette; aposiopetic; attagirl; axel f; Balto_Boy; Blue Scourge; ...
2nd amendment mama; A2J; Alouette; aposiopetic; attagirl; axel f; Balto_Boy; Blue Scourge; bulldogs; cantfindagoodscreenname; Carlucci; Charlie OK; cgk; conspiratoristo; cpforlife.org; CyberCowboy777; Dahlseide; dcwusmc; DED; Delphinium; EdReform; EODGUY; ER_in_OC,CA; fellowpatriot; Ferndina; happymom; HighRoadToChina; hocndoc; HungarianGypsy; hunyb; =Intervention=; Invincibly Ignorant; Iron Eagle; IslandTrash; ItsOurTimeNow; jgrubbs; Jimmyclyde; jla; KeyBored; Khepera; Knither; Kuksool; libertygirl; Lloyd Grey; luckymom;madprof98; Mark; MayDay72; MdmKoochie; my4kidsdad; newguy357; No Dems 2004; Nyer;ohioWfan; pettifogger; pram; Prolifeconservative; Psalm 73; Rays_Dad; reformed_dem; Saundra Duffy; Sir_Ed; sljcookie; Sparta; Surge-on; T’wit; T Minus Four; Taiwan Bocks; The Citizen Soldier; TheWriterInTexas; TominPA; True Element; trussell; Vic3O3; victim soul; Victorious; WarSlut; WillRain; wordsofearnest; yhwhsman; Zack Nguyen ProLife Ping! If anyone wants on or off my ProLife Ping List, please notify me here or by freepmail.
18 posted on 10/20/2003 5:11:21 PM PDT by Mr. Silverback (Pray for Terry Schiavo, being murdered by a judge in Florida.)
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To: MarMema
BUMP
19 posted on 10/20/2003 5:49:48 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: Florida Mama
Soon legalized murder is going to come knocking at the door of our handicapped children, and a court order will be in place to back it up.

Tracy Latimer, the little Canadian girl referred to in the article. She had cerebral palsy and was gassed to death by her father Robert Latimer in 1993.

Robert Latimer murdered Tracy while her mother was at church.

Robert Latimer was convicted by a jury of second degree murder, but SURPRISE -- a Canadian JUDGE tried to apply a "constitutional exemption" and let Latimer off.

The Canadian Supreme Court in a rare moment of sanity reinstated Latimer's 25 year sentence.

20 posted on 10/20/2003 7:08:39 PM PDT by shhrubbery!
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