The Worth of Every Life
Part One of Three
By Dave Andrusko
Good evening, and
thanks to all our readers for taking time to read Today's News &
Views. Part Two explores what makes a physician become an
abortionist. Part Three follows up on the New City Council's
attack on CPCs. Over at National Right to Life News Today (www.nationalrighttolifenews.org),
we examine why free speech IS important to pro-lifers. In
addition, there is a helpful link to materials provided by the
NRLC State Organizational Development Department. Please send
your comments on Today's News & Views and National Right to Life
News Today to
daveandrusko@gmail.com. If you like, join those who are
following me on Twitter at
http://twitter.com/daveha.
As
you get older, your life increasingly intersects with the lives
of people who are much older and who are, medically, often in a
very vulnerable state. I mention that at the beginning because
this exposure means I am keenly aware how susceptible otherwise
good people are to various rationalizations to withhold or
withdraw treatment, on the one hand, and "aiding" the elderly to
die, on the other hand.
What's really changed,
however, is that like the virus that "jumps" from animals to
humans, the anti-life virus has jumped age categories. Beyond
that, the justifications for "aiding" people in dying have now
predictably moved from so-called terminally ill patients to (for
now) elderly people who are otherwise healthy but who are
"depressed" or don't feel life is "worth living."
Canada just rejected Bill
C-384, a euthanasia bill introduced by MP Francine Lalonde.
According to Evan Menzies, writing in yesterday's National Post,
the bill stated "that doctors would not be prosecuted if they
help a person who is at least 18 years of age, who after being
given or refusing treatment, continues to, 'suffer experience
severe physical or mental pain without any prospect of relief,'
or suffers from terminal illness."
It is of a piece with a
movement in (where else?) the Netherlands "that demands that
people who are more than 70 years old, and tired of life, should
have the right to be killed humanely," Menzies writes. He adds
ominously, "It is a movement gaining increased public support."
Menzies offers a
thoughtful critique of this brand of thinking (http://life.nationalpost.com/2010/11/21/opinion-every-life-is-worth-the-compassion-of-saving).
He begins with a thought experiment--a hypothetical with a guy
threatening to jump off the roof.
Our traditional response
is for the police to try to dissuade the jumper and then help
him receive the kind of psychiatric help he needs.
But if a measure like
C-384 passed, a police offer could say, in effect, just take a
breath, step down and we'll help you "find a way to obtain
physician-assisted suicide, a less messy form of
self-destruction." As Menzies argues, that would not be a
fanciful scenario.
In his final sentence,
Menzies offers a value judgment you either gratefully accept and
defend as a precious heirloom or grow annoyed at because you
consider it an out-of-date hindrance that must be swept away:
"No matter the physical or mental state of a person, the
sanctity of their being and worth cannot be measured in
quantifiable terms."
If you don't find this
compelling, how far before legalized euthanasia hold sways? How
long before patients have to justify NOT being killed? How long
before quiet talk of "reliev[ing] the financial burdens of our
families and the health-care system" becomes a loud and angry
demand?
Closer to home, it is
comparative easy to engage people's attention when National
Right to Life explains how ObamaCare forwards the abortion
agenda of the Abortion Establishment. But NRLC is one very few
voices that consistently and forcefully talks about the
inducements to rationing that are embedded in ObamaCare.
If you want to help repeal
and replace ObamaCare, be sure to read the materials you find
about ObamaCare and rationing found at
http://powellcenterformedicalethics.blogspot.com.
An especially useful
entry--several cogent, straightforward talking points--can be
found at
http://www.nrlc.org/HealthCareRationing/TalkingPointsHCR.pdf.
The bottom line is, as the
Robert Powell Center for Medical Ethics puts it, "If the Obama
Health Care Rationing Law is not repealed by 2013 before its
most dangerous provisions come into effect, the result will be
the rationing denial of lifesaving medical treatment, and
consequent premature and involuntary death, of an unknown but
immense number of Americans. The pro-life movement must devote
itself over the upcoming critical years to ensuring that the
American people are given the facts needed to counter the
misinformation."
Please send your
comments on Today's News & Views and National Right to Life News
Today to
daveandrusko@gmail.com. If you like, join those who are
following me on Twitter at
http://twitter.com/daveha.
Part Two
Part Three |