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Swiss Unable to Kick Assisted
Suicide Meth Poison By
Wesley J. Smith
Editor's note. This first
appeared on Wesley's blog at
http://www.firstthings.com/blogs/secondhandsmoke/
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Wesley J. Smith |
I warned that the Swiss plan to
restrict suicide tourism might falter–even though suicide
clinics like Dignitas have profoundly embarrassed the country.
You see, once a society accepts killing as an acceptable answer
to human suffering, the idea of placing meaningful limits on
being made dead–as least any that are rigorously
enforced–becomes very difficult logically. Sure enough, the
Swiss Justice Minister is now pushing against the proposed new
restrictions. From the story [http://www.eurasiareview.com/201008086658/swiss-justice-minister-rethinks-assisted-suicide-bill.html]
Justice Minister Eveline
Widmer-Schlumpf says she wants the government to rethink its
proposal to tighten legislation on assisted suicide.
Widmer-Schlumpf, in a SonntagsZeitung newspaper interview, said
assisted suicide should not only be limited to the terminally
ill who are close to death. In October last year, the justice
minister presented two draft bills, one of which foresees an
outright ban on right-to-die organisations such as Exit or
Dignitas. The other bill would introduce severe restrictions,
including the need for two doctor's certificates to prove that a
patient is suffering from an incurable and probably fatal
illness and that patients are making an informed decision to end
their lives.
The aim of the regulations is to
limit so called "death tourism". However, the proposals have
been widely criticised, and not only by the right-to-die
organisations. All parties represented in government, with the
exception of the centre-right Christian Democrats, have said the
existing laws allowing assisted suicide and passive euthanasia
("mercy killing") are sufficient.
The culture of death is like meth–it's
very hard to kick even though it destroys and debilitates. And
now the Swiss are finding it hard to kick the habit.
Remember, this is the country
with the Supreme Court that created a constitutional right to
assisted suicide for the mentally ill, as its constitution was
amended to include the intrinsic dignity of individual plants,
after which a big brained bioethics commission declared it
immoral to "decapitate" a wild flower. Rejecting human
exceptionalism leads to insidious–and frankly,
nutty–consequences. Culture of death, Wesley? What culture of
death? |