Posted on 03/29/2005 5:42:30 AM PST by Tirian
Misery can only be removed from the world by painless extermination of the miserable. a Nazi writer quoted by Robert J. Lifton in The Nazi Doctors: Medical Killing and the Psychology of Genocide
The case of Terri Schiavo has been framed by the media as the battle between the right to die and pro-life groups, with the latter often referred to as right-wing Christians. Little attention has been paid to the more than twenty major disability rights organizations firmly supporting Schiavos right to nutrition and hydration. Terri Schindler-Schiavo, a severely disabled woman, is being starved and dehydrated to death in the name of supposed dignity. Polls show that most Americans believe that her death is a private matter and that her removal from a feeding tubea low-tech, simple and inexpensive device used to feed many sick and disabled peopleis a reasonable solution to the conflict between her husband and her parents over her right to life.
The reason for this public support of removal from ordinary sustenance, I believe, is not that most people understand or care about Terri Schiavo. Like many others with disabilities, I believe that the American public, to one degree or another, holds that disabled people are better off dead. To put it in a simpler way, many Americans are bigots. A close examination of the facts of the Schiavo case reveals not a case of difficult decisions but a basic test of this countrys decency.
Our country has learned that we cannot judge people on the basis of minority status, but for some reason we have not erased our prejudice against disability. One insidious form of this bias is to distinguish cognitively disabled persons from persons whose disabilities are just physical. Cognitively disabled people are shown a manifest lack of respect in daily life, as well. This has gotten so perturbing to me that when I fly, I try to wear my Harvard t-shirt so I can pass as a person without cognitive disability. (I have severe cerebral palsy, the result of being deprived of oxygen at birth. While some people with cerebral palsy do have cognitive disability, my articulation difference and atypical muscle tone are automatically associated with cognitive disability in the minds of some people.)
The result of this disrespect is the devaluation of lives of people like Terri Schiavo. In the Schiavo case and others like it, non-disabled decision makers assert that the disabled person should die because he or sheordinarily a person who had little or no experience with disability before acquiring onewould not want to live like this. In the Schiavo case, the family is forced to argue that Terri should be kept alive because she might get betterthat is, might be able to regain or to communicate her cognitive processes. The mere assertion that disability (particularly cognitive disability, sometimes called mental retardation) is present seems to provide ample proof that death is desirable.
Essentially, then, we have arrived at the point where we starve people to death because he or she cannot communicate their experiences to us. What is this but sheer egotism? Regardless of ones religious beliefs, this is obviously an attempt to play God.
Not Dead Yet, an organization of persons with disabilities who oppose assisted suicide and euthanasia, maintains that the starvation and dehydration of Terri Schiavo will put the lives of thousands of severely disabled children and adults at risk. (The organization takes its name from the scene in Monty Python and the Holy Grail in which a plague victim not dying fast enough is hit over the head and carted away after repeatedly insisting he is not dead yet.) Not Dead Yet exposes important biases in the right to die movement, including the fact that as early as 1988, Jack Kevorkian advertised his intention of performing medical experimentation (hitherto conducted on rats) on living children with spina bifida, at the same time harvesting their organs for reuse.
Besides being disabled, Schiavo and I have something important in common, that is, someone attempted to terminate my life by removing my endotracheal tube during resuscitation in my first hour of life. This was a quality-of-life decision: I was simply taking too long to breathe on my own, and the person who pulled the tube believed I would be severely disabled if I lived, since lack of oxygen causes cerebral palsy. (I was saved by my family doctor inserting another tube as quickly as possible.) The point of this is not that I ended up at Harvard and Schiavo did not, as some people would undoubtedly conclude. The point is that society already believes to some degree that it is acceptable to murder disabled people.
As Schiavo starves to death, we are entering a world last encountered in Nazi Europe. Prior to the genocide of Jews, Gypsies, and Poles, the Nazis engaged in the mass murder of disabled children and adults, many of whom were taken from their families under the guise of receiving treatment for their disabling conditions. The Nazis believed that killing was the highest form of treatment for disability.
As the opening quote suggests, Nazi doctors believed, or claimed to believe, they were performing humanitarian acts. Doctors were trained to believe that curing society required the elimination of individual patients. This sick twisting of medical ethics led to a sense of fulfillment of duty experienced by Nazi doctors, leading them to a conviction that they were relieving suffering. Not Dead Yet has uncovered the same perverse sense of duty in members of the Hemlock Society, now called End-of-Life Choices. (In 1997, the executive director of the Hemlock Society suggested that judicial review be used regularly when it is necessary to hasten the death of an individual whether it be a demented parent, a suffering, severely disabled spouse or a child. This illustrates that the right to die movement favors the imposition of death sentences on disabled people by means of the judicial branch.)
For an overview of what end-of-life choices mean for Schiavo, I refer you to the Exit Protocol prepared for her in 2003 by her health care providers (available online at http://www.cst-phl.com/050113/sixth.html). In the midst of her starvation, Terri will most likely be treated for pain or discomfort and nausea which may arise as the result of the supposedly humane process of bringing about her death. (Remember that Schiavo is not terminally ill.) She may be given morphine for respiratory distress and may experience seizures. This protocol confirms what we have learned from famines and death camps: death by starvation is a horrible death.
This apparently is what it means to have rights as a disabled person in America today.
Joe Ford 06 is a government concentrator in Currier House.
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Wow. I wonder how many more examples like that there are?
I would think there are many more than one might think.
Just wow. Sobering.
It was dark.
I was living in NY, expecting my first child, in 1970, when abortion laws were **liberalized** there, (about 3 years before Roe.) I was sickened at the thought that many children, just like the one I was carrying, were going to be killed, merely because the mother chose to kill them.
I phoned some close friends who lived in the Midwest, in shock that such a thing could happen. I felt like a nut job then, because (though my friends were against abortion) no one seemed to grasp what was going on.
**It's ironic that the legalization of elective abortions in the first 24 weeks, was called "liberalizing" the laws.
I saw that He was both goofy and sarcastically nasty to the woman who was interviewing him.
It was almost as if he needed another "hit" of some drug or another. Maybe he's been standing too close the the morphine drips he's been administering to his "patients"
One potentially redeeming effect of this is that the world is watching what is happening to Terri -- they can ignore what happens inside a mother's womb, but they can't ignore Terri. When they process the fruit of the culture of death, for some, at least, it will sink in.
If the media thought that they could set the terms of this debate with their push polls about politization, they were wrong. It is moving inexorably to fundamental morality in a nuanced way. The idea that the moral of the story was to get a living will was driving me nuts, and I am glad we are digging deeper today.
Praying that God will make this very clear, very soon to many people.
Though I've always been anti-abortion, I was super-Liberal (with Socialist leanings!!) until I saw what my party did to Clarence Thomas.
God Almighty, wake these people up! I actually prayed for Greer! That's how desperate I'm feeling.
Good point and excellent strategy.
If doctors are allowed to kill patients to whom they give unfavorable prognoses, their 'accuracy' rates will go up. Indeed, if a doctor who was allowed to fire a 12 gauge OO buckshot round point blank into the head of anyone he thought was PVS, the rate of 'false positive' diagnoses could probably be reduced to zero.
bttt
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