Canada’s CBC Pushes Suicide Culture
By Wesley J. Smith
The media are society’s premier suicide pushers.
Oh sure, they decry suicides of teenagers and veterans. But they push suicide for the elderly, the disabled, the chronically and terminally ill–sometimes even, the mentally ill.
Canada’s CBC is the latest example. It interviewed an octogenarian about his plans to commit suicide before becoming too old. Then, after he died, they ran the profile. From the story:
“A Toronto man’s decision to end his
life, simply because he felt it was time to die, has raised questions
and concerns among family, friends and experts, some of whom say it
could take the assisted suicide debate down a ‘slippery slope.’
“John Alan Lee, a former professor of
sociology at the University of Toronto, died in December. He had
carefully planned his own death for months and discussed his decision
with a CBC crew.”
Do you see how insidious this is? By going out with cameras and
wide-eyed reporters to cover his suicide plan, the CBC actually
validated Lee’s desire to die. Indeed, I would warrant it would make it
harder to walk back.How often have we seen this? Suicides are given high profile, even laudatory coverage. And the “experts” are quoted as saying we have to have the difficult conversations about permitting assisted suicide.
Then, once we do, the conversation is over forever because a new “right” has been created that can’t be taken away.
The CBC gives great respect to the idea that suicide can be “rational,” a dangerous meme in the mental health professions against which I have been warning for years:
Lee’s position reflects a broader philosophy known as “completed life” or “rational suicide.” The Dutch Parliament recently debated giving seniors over the age of 70 the right to euthanasia, regardless of illness.
The story even says Socrates embraced his own [rational] suicide as a way of avoiding old age–without mentioning that he drank hemlock in the context of a death penalty:
“John’s philosophy that you choose
the time of your death to avoid physical decline is controversial, but
not novel. Centuries the Greek philosopher Socrates famously welcomed an
early death, telling his followers he was avoiding the worst part of
life.”
Beyond that, when the media promotes suicides, it pushes us–with malice aforethought, in my book–toward a suicide culture. That’s why the WHO [World Health Organization] Media guidelines urges media not to highlight particular suicides–it validates suicide and gives some readers/viewers ideas.
But media have taken sides on legalizing assisted suicide, big time! So, WHO go away. Media will only refuse to glorify suicide or laud those who so died when it involves cases with which they disagree.
Editor’s note. This appeared on Wesley’s great blog.
Source: NRLC News
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