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Reflections on "Deadly Medicine:
Creating the Master Race"
By Dave Andrusko
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Wesley J. Smith |
Over the years many of our
readers have written and emailed to tell me how much they enjoy
Wesley Smith's blog entries, which he so generously allows me to
reprint. It's not just the quality of his work that is so worth
reading, it is Wesley's keen insight into the mind of
"bioethicists."
I try to avoid analogizing what
many contemporary American bioethicists argue to the awful,
monstrous rationalizations that the Medical Establishment
provided for the Nazis--both in the early decades of the 20th
century and when Adolph Hitler assumed power. Sometimes,
however, it's hard not to draw parallels.
I mention that because I read
yesterday about the traveling exhibit "Deadly Medicine: Creating
the Master Race" which is now at Loyola Marymount University in
Los Angeles. Tooling around the web, I learned that version
draws its inspiration from "the acclaimed exhibition of the same
name that originally opened at the United States Holocaust
Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., in April 2004."
Reading
a story in the Los Angeles Times about the exhibit reinforced so
many lessons, so many warnings from Wesley and the late Rev.
Richard John Neuhaus. For example,
"But 'Deadly Medicine' also aims
to show that doctors' and scientists' role in the Holocaust
wasn't limited to measuring noses or conducting gruesome
experiments in concentration camps," writes Eryn Brown. "The
exhibit argues that by advancing the theory of eugenics--and
then providing cover for the Nazi regime when it used that
theory to buttress its racist and genocidal policies-- German
scientists helped lay the foundation upon which the Holocaust
was built."
Brown correctly picks up on a
crucial argument made by the exhibit. "But most of the exhibit's
artifacts illustrate the dark side of Nazi eugenics, in which
scientists called for mass sterilization--and eventually
'euthanasia'--for people with a variety of sometimes haphazardly
defined physical and mental illnesses."
She then shrewdly observes, "It
wasn't a terribly long leap, the exhibit suggests, from the
(comparatively limited, though still horrifying) task of
sterilizing or killing the ill to coordinating the mass murder
of ethnic groups that the Nazis--and their scientists --deemed
defective, including Jews. 'The euthanasia program provided a
model for the much larger project that was to come,' [curator
Susan] Bachrach [of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum]
said."
It is obviously not true of all
doctors or bioethicists, but whenever any of them start provided
justifications to exclude members of the human family from the
ring of legal protection, they must be called on it and stopped
cold in their tracks.
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