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Pushing Suicide to End the Pain
of Grief By Wesley J.
Smith
Editor's note. This first
appeared on Wesley's blog at
http://www.firstthings.com/blogs/secondhandsmoke/2010/10/18/pushing-suicide-to-end-the-pain-of-grief/
We've discussed this
before–promoting suicide as a prophylactic against the pain of
expected future grief. For example, the Canadian assisted
suicide advocate Ruth Von Fuchs specifically supported a woman
who wanted to commit suicide with her terminally ill husband at
the Swiss suicide clinic Dignitas. Australian Philip Nitschke
has argued that anyone who wants it should have access to
suicide pills, even "troubled teens." Jack Kevorkian argued that
eventually suicide clinics should assist virtually anyone who
wants to die into a peaceful death. And now Dignitas' owner,
Ludwig Minelli–who has already permitted his suicide clinic to
be used for double suicides–has publicly supported the idea.
From the story [http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1321547/Dignitass-Ludwig-Minelli-Let-partners-terminally-ill-commit-suicide-die-too.html]
Swiss suicide clinic Dignitas has
called for the healthy partners of chronically ill euthanasia
patients to be allowed to kill themselves too. Clinic head
Ludwig Minelli has called for suicide drug cocktails to be made
legally available to the heartbroken relatives who have just
helped their loved ones end their own lives. 'Relatives should
also be allowed to have a prescription for suicide drugs even
when they are not terminally ill,' Minelli told Swiss newspaper
Blick Sonntag.
I don't think these advocates are
fringe. I think they are candid. At the very least, their views
are the logical outcome of proclaiming a right to assisted
suicide as the "ultimate civil liberty." I mean, if we have a
fundamental right to be made dead, if it is tyrannous to prevent
people from "choosing the time, manner, and method" of their own
death, who can gainsay the reasons why someone might want to be
made dead.
This is the debate we should be
having. The stuff about restrictions to terminal illness and
guidelines to protect against abuse (which are never enforced)
are mere sops to convinced people to accept the principle that
suicide is a liberty. Should that happen, gravity will take care
of the rest. Culture of death, Wesley? What culture of death?
P.S. The Swiss law does not limit
assisted suicide to the terminally or chronically ill, as the
story asserts. It merely outlaws "bad motives" in the assistance
of suicide. It doesn't limit who receives assistance, or indeed,
who does the assisting. The Swiss Supreme Court has also created
a constitutional right to assisted suicide for the "mentally
ill." |