Everyone Matters, No Matter What
Part Three of Three
By Wesley Smith
Editor's note. The following
first appeared in the
publication First Things and is
reprinted with the author's
permission.
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Wesley J. Smith |
In 1992, Jack Kevorkian proposed
establishing a pilot program of
euthanasia clinics, which, he
argued in the Journal of
Forensic Pathology, would be
staffed by physician-killers,
permitted legally to painlessly
terminate patients who request
it. At the time, euthanasia
clinics were considered either a
far kook fringe idea, or perhaps
a splendid fictional image
reserved for dystopian science
fiction. No longer. Today,
suicide clinics operate legally
in Switzerland, to which an
international clientele make
one-way trips--a practice known
as "suicide tourism." Moreover,
the idea that killing is a
legitimate answer to the problem
of human suffering has become de
rigueur among the intellectual
class as a way of removing the
undesired unproductive from our
ranks, or even to "save the
planet."
The noted British novelist,
Martin Amis, became the latest
to support establishing a
radical euthanasia license. In
an interview in the January 24
London Sunday Times Amis
expressed views that were hardly
compassionate--the usual pretext
for supporting
euthanasia/assisted suicide. To
the contrary: He denigrated the
elderly as a "silver tsunami,"
whose very existence threatens
society. "There'll be a
population of demented very old
people like an invasion of
terrible immigrants, stinking
out the restaurants and cafes
and shops," Amis told the Times.
His answer to this malodorous
demographic incursion? "Suicide
booths on every corner," Amis
offered, a hyperbolic turn of
phrase that quickly went viral.
Mostly missed in the resulting
commentary about Amis' diatribe
is that he wasn't as much ageist
as self-loathing.
"Medical science has again
over-vaulted itself so most of
us have to live through the
death of our talent," Amis said.
"Novelists tend to go off at
about 70. And I'm in a funk
about it. I've got myself into a
real paranoid funk about it, how
talent dies before the body."
In other words, Amis rejected
his own intrinsic dignity and
moral worth in the apparent
belief that should he become
incapable of producing good
writing, his life would be
rendered useless. This terror of
not being "special"--certainly
not limited to the
cognoscenti--isn't really about
a feared loss of talent (or
productivity, or independence,
and so on), but an abiding worry
that if we lose our vigor or
health, we will become unworthy
of being loved.
From the post-modern
perspective, this is entirely
logical. If we believe moral
worthiness is solely a byproduct
of some measurable attribute or
capacity--rather than being
intrinsic--we will naturally
disdain our future selves when,
because of age, illness, or
injury, we lose whatever it is
that we decide gives life value.
From this wider angle, support
for euthanasia can be seen as
merely a symptom of the deeper
illness of nihilism, a social
cancer that has been gnawing
steadily away at us for more
than a century.
This existential terror can only
be overcome by embracing human
exceptionalism and its corollary
that each and every one of us
matters--no matter what. But
this corrective is quite beyond
the most brilliant intellectual
argument or reliance upon
religious or philosophical
principles--which at most,
effectively can be deployed as
holding actions.
If we really want to reverse the
tide, we must strive to love our
neighbor even more than we love
ourselves.
In this sense, we need to
demonstrate true compassion--the
root meaning of which is to
"suffer with"--by fully engaging
our neighbors' most trying
trials and tribulations. We see
that tonic administered all the
time--in the selfless care of a
daughter for her Alzheimer's
stricken mother and in the
hospice volunteer confronting
his own mortality by engaging
profoundly with dying strangers.
Love is what motivates the good
people who bring dogs and cats
into nursing homes to brighten
the day of residents and is the
ultimate motivation of the
pain-control physician who burns
the midnight oil seeking a
solution to an intractable
case--even though it is work for
which she will never be paid.
There will always be the Martin
Amises of the world raging in
despair against life's
vicissitudes. But they will be
rendered societally impotent if
each of us loves actively. As
St. Paul put it so eloquently,
love "bears all things, believes
all things, hopes all things,
endures all things. Love never
fails." In the end, if we want
to finally defeat euthanasia, it
will have to be so with us.
Wesley J. Smith, an
award-winning author, is a
senior fellow in human rights
and bioethics for the Discover
Institute. His Secondhand Smoke
is one of the First Things blogs.
Part One
Part Two |