Legalizing euthanasia: "there
will be casualties"
Part Three of Three
This is reprinted from the
Euthanasia Prevention Coalition
Newsletter.
A recent article written by
Michael Cook for Mercator.net
examined the current trends in
the euthanasia lobby and
concluded that the legalization
of euthanasia will lead to
people dying against their will
or the death of people with
chronic depression or mental
illness.
 |
|
Phillip Nitschke |
The first case that Cook
examined was the recent
statistics from Australia
concerning people who have died
from the use of Nembutal, a drug
used by Veterinarians for the
euthanasia of animals. Philip
Nitschke, known as Australia's
"Dr. Death" has been promoting
the use of Nembutal to commit
suicide.
A recent Australian study found
that at least 51 people in
Australia died from Nembutal use
with 14 of those being under the
age of 40. Of the 38 cases that
were fully investigated by the
coroner, only 11 involved people
with chronic physical pain or
terminal illness. This means
that the people who are
acquiring Nembutal through mail
order, flights to Mexico, or
stealing it from Veterinary
hospitals are often chronically
depressed or mentally ill and
rarely are they suffering
unbearable pain.
Nitschke told the Australian
media that the actual number of
Nembutal deaths was probably
closer to 125. In response to
the number of young or depressed
people who died by Nembutal
Nitschke was reported to have
said: "There will be some
casualties".
In the Netherlands a group of
leaders from the euthanasia
lobby is petitioning the Dutch
government to allow people who
are over the age of 70 to simply
obtain a lethal dose for the
person to use at any time.
The group is led by Eugene
Sutorius, the former President
of the Dutch Euthanasia society
and the lawyer who extended
euthanasia to people who are
chronically depressed by
successfully defending the Dutch
Psychiatrist who euthanized a
person who was chronically
depressed.
The petition has received more
than 100,000 signatures which is
the number required by the Dutch
parliament to allow the petition
to be debated in parliament.
When you are told that the
euthanasia lobby is only
concerned about legalizing
euthanasia for the terminally
ill consider the fact that the
Dutch and Swiss do not require a
person to be terminally ill bur
rather suffering.
Then there is the case of Ray
Gosling, the retired BBC
broadcaster in the UK who
confessed to smothering to death
his former male lover who had
aids, twenty years ago.
Finally, there is the interview
with writer Martin Amis in the
UK who stated that the answer to
the aging population is to
set-up euthanasia booths on
street corners in the large
cities. As much as Amis was
trying to be provocative, his
message has resonated with the
people in society who think that
life is expendable.
The euthanasia lobby is that
scary.
Please send your comments to
daveandrusko@gmail.com.
Part One
Part Two |