Tuesday, October 10, 2006

A "Harvestable" Child Harvestable No More

We hear continually from the elites of bioethics about how people diagnosed as permanently unconscious (persistent vegetative state, or PVS), are no longer persons, and thus, they can be treated as if they were not fully human. That is abhorrent in any event, but the PVS diagnosis is often wrong, as in this case of a young boy named Devon Rivers who was apparently unconscious for 22 months and then, unexpectedly awakened.

We will now undoubtedly hear much dissembling from this sector that Devon wasn't really PVS and all that jazz. But these pushers of crass utilitarianism are on record as advocating that profoundly disabled people like Devon can, in some cases, should, be made to die by having their feeding tubes removed. Some assert that people in PVS are actually "dead" and thus can be used for organ harvesting. Others, would use patients like Devon--who they would have claimed was not really a patient when doctors thought he was permanently unconscious--are perfectly suitable for medical experimentation.

This is the key point: None of us is expendable. None of us should be viewed as a mere thing to be used for the benefit of others. There should be no disposable human caste. This is true of Devon and every other PVS patient whether they awaken or not.

5 Comments:

At October 10, 2006 , Blogger Jason Dulle said...

Mr. Smith.,

Great blog! I've been reading you every day for a year or so. Your blog is quite unique, and very informative.

I wanted to let you know that the link to the story is bad. You have an extra "/" that needs to be removed.

Jason

 
At October 10, 2006 , Blogger Wesley J. Smith said...

Thanks, Jason. It worked for me, but I will check it out.

 
At October 10, 2006 , Blogger Don Nelson said...

When anyone's life is expendable, everyone's life becomes negotiable.

 
At October 13, 2006 , Blogger Laura(southernxyl) said...

Shaila, bless you all for not giving up.

My very healthy and "abled" daughter and I watched a TV show once that was very slanted toward the horribleness of keeping people alive with tubes and machines when their organs could be going to help other people. In the midst of all that she turned to me and said very clearly, "Don't turn me off." I said, "I won't." Of course, one hopes one will never be faced with such a decision. But if, God forbid, we ever are, I can stop people saying "this is what she would have wanted" in their tracks.

 
At October 14, 2006 , Blogger Wesley J. Smith said...

Shaila: Thank you and your family for unconditionally loving Devon. It is interesting, a common theme in many of these "awakening" stories is the love and committed devotion of family and friends to the disabled patient.

May Devon continue to improve. My warmest best wishes to you all.

Thanks so much for taking the time to visit Secondhand Smoke.

 

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