Jack Kevorkian: Would Be Human Vivisector
This is my last planned installment on the release of Jack Kevorkian from prison. The article could have been called "Kevorkian in His Own Words," for I present his motives for engaging in his assisted suicide campaign, as he stated them--the right to engage in human experimentation on people he was euthanizing or executing.
He began seeking the right to engage in what he came to call "obitiatry" as far back as 1959. In the 1980s, he continued writing in journals, adding the use of condemned prisoners' organs as a benefit to society out of the death penalty. When he was finally turned down by all prisons, he "conceived of the idea" of transferring this desire from the condemned to those seeking euthanasia. And this was the point all
along, as he wrote in Prescription Medicide:I feel it is only decent and fair to explain my ultimate aim: It is not simply to help suffering and doomed persons kill themselves--that is merely the first step, an early distasteful professional obligation (now called medicide) that nobody in his or her right mind could savor. [W]hat I find most satisfying is the prospect of making possible the performance of invaluable experiments or other beneficial medical acts under conditions that this first unpleasant step can help establish—in a word obitiatry.
What kind of experiments? Pure quackery:
If we are ever to penetrate the mystery of death--even superficially--it will have to be through obitiatry. Research using cultured cells and tissues and live animals may yield objective biological data, and eventually perhaps even some clues about the essence of mere vitality or existence. But knowledge about the essence of human death will of necessity require insight into the nature of the unique awareness of or consciousness that characterizes cognitive human life. That is possible only through obitiatric research on living human bodies, and most likely centering on the nervous system...on anesthetized subjects [to] pinpoint the exact onset of extinction of an unknown cognitive mechanism that energizes life.Kevorkian never quite got there, but he came close. He ripped out the kidneys of one of his later victims and held a press conference offering them to the public, "First come, first served."
Here is how I conclude:
Don't expect any of these disturbing issues to be raised by Mike Wallace or Kevorkian's other interlocutors. The media want to tell a fairy tale of Jack the Martyr jailed for pursuing the enlightened cause of compassion and "death with dignity." But the truly interesting story that will go mostly unwritten is how a clearly twisted personality--driven to his assisted suicide campaign by an obsession with human vivisection and a desire to exploit the weak and desperate for crass utilitarian purposes --became, for a time, the most famous and popular doctor in the world.
P.S.
I just was told by a radio producer that Wallace met Kevorkian when he got out of prison. In this story, Mike Wallace is not a journalist but an advocate.Labels: Jack Kevorkian. Motives.


3 Comments:
Wesley,
Drudge has the video of Mike Wallace coming out of the van picking up Kevorkian and hugging him. Not the usual path a journalist takes with an interview subject being released from prison, huh?
Jay
From a reader:"...I have a Masters degree in Recreatonal Therapy. I grew up in Oakland County, and was coordinating an RT program on a physical medicine and rehabilitation unit during the 90's - during which time Jack Kevorkian was - in my opinion - killing people. (I believe that he probably fits the profile of a serial killer - even more than that of a crackpot.)
I am so bewildered by the presses portrayal (and embrace) of him. Why is this? Is it because if they paint a more palatable picture of him - they can continue to gain big rating bonanzas - by interviewing him, etc? Or is it simply a lack of time which causes people to fill in blanks with assumptions that make the situation make more sense? The facts are so horrific. SO HORRIFIC.
Currently, I am a consultant to a charity in southern California where I now live. I love what I do.
I can't stand the idea that this man is free again - and that the media is lining up to (exploit?) garner ratings off of simplistic and false portrayals of him.
Morally, spiritually, it feels very painful."
Kevorkian makes me feel like my skin has jumped off my body and is crawling around on the floor. The media are accomplices in his sick fantasies. And the more I read about this man, the more I, too, think he's more of a serial killer than anything else.
A very sick soul with far too few people willing to stand up and say so. He needs our prayers desperately!
(BTW, I linked to your article and this post here.)
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