Wednesday, August 30, 2006

Teen Suicide Epidemic Puzzles the Netherlands: It Shouldn't

This is an excellent column by Colleen Carroll Campbell, a fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center (EPPC). Apparently, a teenage "suicide craze" has hit the Netherlands and the government wonders why. But Campbell knows. The Dutch do "not seem to grasp the obvious," she writes. "The law is a teacher and Dutch law has taught its young citizens well. The radical and sweeping embrace of suicide as an answer to the problem of human suffering, and the elevation of euthanasia to the status of a basic human right, has convinced Dutch teenagers that suicide must be a noble act, the kind that wins plaudits, prestige, and even legal protection.

"Adults can preach all they want about the evils of suicide to their teenage charges, but when asked why suicide is wrong for some people in some situations while fine for others, supporters of Dutch euthanasia laws will be hard pressed to offer an answer that passes muster with any reasonably intelligent 12-year-old. So Dutch children will continue to see suicide as a reasonable, even admirable solution to the difficulties of daily life. And the culture of death in the Netherlands will march on."

This seems unassailable, to me. And we see the same paradigm beginning to unfold in Oregon where the Department of Health is worried about a spike in elder suicide. Either killing is an acceptable answer to human suffering of whatever cause, or it isn't. Mixed messages don't stick.

11 Comments:

At August 30, 2006 , Blogger Wesley J. Smith said...

Ah, Winston Jen. Trying to prevent suicides, causes them. Good logic.

 
At August 31, 2006 , Blogger Wesley J. Smith said...

Winston Jen: What world do you live in? Nobody treats suicidal peole as "evil." Good grief. If you can't argue from reality, quit arguing.

 
At August 31, 2006 , Blogger bmmg39 said...

Yup. Again: "People who disagree with me must have led perfect lives with no problems at all." Yup.

 
At August 31, 2006 , Blogger Wesley J. Smith said...

Gee, Winston Jen. You sure have my number. Why, if I had experienced trouble in my life, I would want to kill suffering people. Such as my dad who died of colon cancer after a 2 1/2 year desperate fight, and my uncle, who just died of Alzheimer's. And the people who I became close to as a hospice volunteer.

But, in my 57 years, I have never had any problems. Not even a paper cut!!! If I had, I would surely embrace suicide.

Sorry, but your contributions are growing increasingly banal.

 
At September 01, 2006 , Blogger bmmg39 said...

Come now, Jennie. I'm sure they have irony Down Under. Read more closely.

 
At December 10, 2007 , Blogger Odile S said...

Hi,

I'm a parent and I'm living and raising in the Netherlands. The Netherlands has little sunlight in the winter and this in itself can facilitate depression. Further there is a very strong middle class in the Netherlands, a strong social pressure to stay within the middle range at schools.
I fail to see a link to euthanasia.

 
At December 10, 2007 , Blogger Wesley J. Smith said...

Hi, OdieS. Thanks for writing.

The connection is that the Netherlands sends a mixed message about self killing as an answer to human difficulties. How can it permit euthanasia/assisted suicide for the sick and disabled--and even depressed and grieving (the Chabot case)--and then tell depressed and troubled teens that self killing is not for them? It is like telling kids not to smoke but if they do, use a filter cigarette.

 
At March 03, 2008 , Blogger Jessica said...

I am mother of 23 years old boy. He always talks about suicide. Can he seriously take this step? Please suggest me what I have to do. I am worried about it. What are the symptoms ofteen suicide.

http://www.troubledteensearch.com/

 
At March 03, 2008 , Blogger Wesley J. Smith said...

uvraashi: You didn't leave me an e-mail and your profile doesn't have one. Please contact a mental health professional immediately because it sounds as if you are right to be concerned. Young people sometimes do this. He may be depressed and there are treatments. Better safe than sorry. Contact someone today. WJS

 
At March 31, 2008 , Blogger Eddie Janssen said...

The absolute numbers of suicide for people younger than 20 years in the Netherlands between 1995 and 2006 were (at 16½ million inhabitants):

1995-1999 49 (this is an average per year over this period)
2000-2004 42 (again, an average per year over this period)
2005-2006 51 (an average over these 2 years)

I am wondering what caused the ‘sharp decline’ and the subsequent ‘sharp rise’.
(source: http://www.cbs.nl/NR/rdonlyres/84CFEED4-01C2-4FE4-9F81-44DF3F43728F/0/2007k4b15p73art.pdf)

 
At July 01, 2008 , Blogger jenyfer said...

Now a day’s numbers of suicide case of troubled teens has been revealed. These teenagers think that suicide is a best way to solve every problem. Actually they become more mentally disturbed at that time.

http://www.ala4christ.com/

 

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