Assisted suicide: An idea that loses its appeal when it is understood
By Alex Schadenberg, Executive Director, Euthanasia Prevention CoalitionThe state of Minnesota is currently debating assisted suicide bill SF 1880. Today, there is a hearing in the Minnesota Senate’s Health, Human Services and Housing Committee on the bill.
Yesterday, an article by Charles Camosy, “Assisted suicide: An idea that loses appeal as it becomes tangible,” appeared in the local Star-Tribune newspaper. After reading Camosy, a professor of bioethics at Fordham University, liberals may find themselves opposed, as they should be.
Camosy first explains how education and liberal opposition to assisted suicide was important in defeating a measure in Massachusetts:
The truth about assisted suicide
is that it 1) takes time to understand and that it 2) turns political
stereotypes on their head.
Let’s go back to June 2012, five
months before the elections that year. Massachusetts has assisted
suicide on the ballot. Polls indicate “overwhelming support” in that
liberal state: 68 percent support legalizing it, while 19 percent favor
its remaining illegal.
But then something remarkable happened. The people of Massachusetts began to understand the issue.
Support of assisted suicide is
thought to be a liberal idea, but supporters often sound quite
conservative. “I want my personal freedom! Government stay out of my
life! My individual rights trump your view of the common good!”
The summer of 2012 saw
Massachusetts liberals calling this out. Victoria Kennedy, wife of the
late U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy, published a piece titled “Question 2
Insults Kennedy’s Memory.” Washington Post columnist E.J. Dionne Jr.
also wrote a piece arguing against the measure, “Liberals Should be Wary
of Assisted Suicide.” Disability-rights and physicians groups also were
fundamentally opposed.
The result? In a mere five months, the liberal case defeated assisted suicide.
Virtually everyone is sympathetic
in cases of extreme and unbearable pain, but palliative care and
terminal sedation now can keep patients from feeling it. Indeed,
physical pain doesn’t even make the top five reasons people choose
assisted suicide.
Assisted suicide is more about
not wanting to be a burden on others and having control over how one
dies. But especially in a culture that prizes autonomy and freedom, it
just isn’t clear — once we open the door — how we can put limits on this
choice. Why, as in the case of Oregon, limit it to those who will die
within six months? Why not six years? Why must one be terminally ill at
all? If it’s simply “their choice,” why any limitation?
Think this is scaremongering?
Consider the Netherlands, a country with a similar love for individual
autonomy, which has had euthanasia for two generations. It first was
permitted only in a case of “hopeless and unbearable suffering.” But two
years ago an otherwise healthy woman, who asked to die because she was
going blind, was euthanized. Thousands of Dutch have called for
euthanasia for people over 70 who are “tired of life.” Along with those
who argue for assisted suicide in Minnesota, the dominant value in the
Netherlands is personal freedom and choice. Who are we to judge?
Against the individualist
approach, liberals focus on how policies impact vulnerable people who
are pushed to the margins. In a youth-worshiping culture, older people
are understood as a drain or burden on their families and society.
Hardly surprising, then, that older people would feel “tired of life”
and seek a way out. But it is diabolical to make it easier for
vulnerable people on the margins to kill themselves. Good liberals must
absolutely affirm the goodness of their existence — especially when the
surrounding culture can make them feel unwanted and burdensome.
Cracks are already starting to
form in the policies of states with legalized assisted suicide. In
Oregon, physicians have witnessed depressed patients receiving deadly
drugs. Minnesota’s bill follows Oregon in requiring that death be fewer
than six months away. But Jeannette Hall, who at first requested
assisted suicide after being told she had six months to live, is alive
today (15 years later) because she kept fighting.
Yes, our health care system has
terrible gaps that cause tremendous suffering for patients and their
families. But the proper response, especially from liberals, should be
to work to reform. Let’s kill the pain, not the patient. Care and
accompaniment must trump violence and abandonment.
Editor’s note. This appeared in alexschadenberg.blogspot.com
Source: NRLC News
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