Friday, February 20, 2009

SHS in the Telegraph:"Right to Die Can Become Duty to Die"

After three rousing speeches and media appearances with David Prentice in Ireland on cloning and ESCR, I am off today over the Irish Sea to London, where I will speak Monday night in the Parliament Building about assisted suicide. Ahead of the event, I was asked by my sponsors to write a piece for placement in the UK Media. I was delighted that it made today's Telegraph. From my column:

Imagine that you have lung cancer. It has been in remission, but tests show the cancer has returned and is likely to be terminal. Still, there is some hope. Chemotherapy could extend your life, if not save it. You ask to begin treatment. But you soon receive more devastating news. A letter from the government informs you that the cost of chemotherapy is deemed an unjustified expense for the limited extra time it would provide. However, the government is not without compassion. You are informed that whenever you are ready, it will gladly pay for your assisted suicide.

Think that's an alarmist scenario to scare you away from supporting "death with dignity"? Wrong. That is exactly what happened last year to two cancer patients in Oregon, where assisted suicide is legal.
I opened with that story--oft discussed here at SHS--because of the rationing that is taking place in the NHS: It's use in the UK as a form of resource preservation is a threat that I hope will be considered in the latest round of emotionalized assisted suicide agitation that appears almost daily in the media.

For example, MS patient Debbie Purdy sued to ensure that her husband could take her to Switzerland for assisted suicide without legal consequence. She lost--technically--but the court all but said that the authorities would not pursue the matter should that event take place. Her campaign is being used by advocates--among other "suicide tourism" deaths--as reasons to legalize in the UK on the premise that people who want to die should be able to kill themselves with the help of a doctor at home, rather than be "forced" to fly overseas. (Rarely mentioned, is that Purdy not terminally ill.)

But that could place sick and vulnerable people at considerable risk of feeling duty-bound to put themselves out of their families or society's misery. I point out that Oregon studies show that most patients receive poison prescriptions in Oregon for existential reasons rather than pain:
Much as I sympathise with her [Purdy's] plight, such a guarantee would lure us on to the slippery slope where the old and the sick come under pressure to end their lives. A study published in the Journal of Internal Medicine last year, for example, found that doctors in Oregon write lethal prescriptions for patients who are not experiencing significant symptoms and that assisted suicide practice has had little do with any inability to alleviate pain--the fear of which is a chief selling point for legalisation...

When a scared and depressed patient asks for poison pills and their doctor's response is to pull out the lethal prescription pad, it confirms the patient's worst fears--that they are a burden, that they are less worth loving. Hospices are geared to address such concerns. But effective hospice care is undermined when a badly needed mental health intervention is easily avoided via a state-sanctioned, physician-prescribed overdose of lethal pills.
I conclude:
Oregon has become the model for how assisted suicide is supposed to work. But for those who dig beneath the sloganeering and feel-good propaganda, it becomes clear that legalising assisted suicide leads to abandonment, bad medical practice and a disregard for the importance of patients' lives.
I am convinced that assisted suicide can be stopped in the UK, as opponents have there before. I hope this column contributes to that continuing struggle.

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9 Comments:

At February 21, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

I am glad that SHS believes that things can be turned around in England, because SHS does seem to see how things really are. (Except re the issue of animal experimentation but when was I ever able to make a post without mentioning that.) I am not as confident about that, though. England (and if it's not called that any more, no matter, as far as I'm concerned it still is, but the change in terminage reflects the overall scenario) does not seem to be as it was after having become more cosmopolitan and the Princess Diana/Elton John/and who is that recent prime minister who was part of all that, and after having lost its backbone with political correctness, etc. Still, SHS does have a good grasp of things. As was proven by Obama's choice of Secretary of State, Hillary, yesterday, when she put human rights secondary to "the world economy" and "global warming." Who and what are the economy and our handling of the environment suppose to serve, if not humans and their rights (and non-human animals and their rights as well). No I don't think she's talking about the rights of the earth itself in the sense of radical environmentalism, she's looking at it from the standpoint of the liberal rhetoric about if we mess up the earth we can't survive (which is true); the other thing "libs" are preternaturally concerned about despite their own rhetoric is money, which they think that they should have and that it grows on trees. Similarly they attach no realistic value to life, while they go on about "cost." Well anyway if anyone can make an impact over in England and forge a further link in the world anti-death-culture fight, Wesley can. This will be wonderful.

 
At February 21, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

Correction: I don't know how Hillary is looking at it and what she thinks, just what rhetoric she's using. What I suspect she and the rest of this crew we're stuck with right now think, and how they look at things, is chilling. I wish there were another country -- England, France, Ireland, Italy, Greece, Germany, Japan, India, SOMEbody -- who could tell us how to get rid of them and save the country right now, and/or help us do it. This has got to stop; it's getting worse every day and no one's sovereignty over their own life is going to be safe. Most people don't realize how bad it was already, and not realizing that, some may not realize how dangerous Obamanation is; if that weren't the case, those who made things this way and let things get this way wouldn't have been able to elect Obama. Something radical has to happen, and as long as we're in a medieval state, I think what we need is to get rid of all medical research, back off from the medical technological advancements for a bit, and everybody go back to doing physical labor, growing their own food, etc. For a time; I'm not saying forever. I'm serious. To stop the death culture the medical research, which is based on use of non-human animals, has to stop. That disrupts the lobby process, bad legislation getting pushed through, etc. Meanwhile get rid of insurance companies. And end credit. At the same time re-acquaint people with actual work and real value, and there wouldn't be any more of this death culture baloney. There can't be any more of this "people with education are better than people without it and too good to do manual labor" stuff. That's how we got to this point and how we got the problems we have. OH, God, there's Obama on the radio saying that computerizing everyone's medical records will save lives. Right, at the same time embryoes, foetuses, the disabled, and the elderly are destroyed. He's just a stooge for those who want socialism and a death culture. I'm telling you, if people don't go back, for a while, to living on their own land, growing their own food, having to do actual work, being willing to defend their own homestead with a shotgun, and a lot of this modern-civilization stuff isn't reined in, they're going to end up with the plug pulled on them.

 
At February 21, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

Just looked at the numbers by the flags again. It looks as if even since last night, the pace is increasing to MORE than 1000 new visitors a day in the U.S. Have a great trip SHS. England needs to hear what you are going to say just as it needed to read what you just wrote.

 
At February 21, 2009 , Blogger SAFEpres said...

Congratulations on a great article!

 
At February 21, 2009 , Blogger victor said...

>SHS in the Telegraph:"Right to Die Can Become Duty to Die"<

I didn’t need to absorb all that you wrote concerning this post because your title was all that was really needed for me, myself and I to hit a mental home run.

To make a long story short personally I wonder how long I could convince myself to go on living thinking that I was a burden on society and it was acceptable and legal for me to make a dignified exit..

By the way Wesley I created a posted screed about "My Canadian Hockey Team" and took a little stab at you but I must say that my heart was not really in “IT” :)

Have a pleasant and enjoyable trip.

God Bless,

Peace

 
At February 22, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

Holy freaking coincidence, Batman.. Came here to you this moment to search your blog for something outstanding on "duty to die"..

Totally.. totally.. kewl.

Needed it for a simple "the other side" comment I'm fixin' to leave over at another blog, "The gods are bored", where they're announcing their anticipated involvement with a new movie..

Knew I'd previously heard the story they're alluding to pursuing.. One result of a very quick search immediately matched their description..

The one I found is of a Jimmy Miley who's been coming out about having taken his "helpless" brother, Buddy, to Dr. Kevorkian because they felt, in their eyes, they had exhausted all other options.. Buddy was a former football player who experienced a quadriplegia-inducing injury while playing high school football..

What little I've found on it always invokes the same rhetorically directed image.. For example, one HBO reference (HBO: Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel :: Impossible Choice), I just read says, "Buddy Miley lived in a state of unspeakable horror for more than half his life"..

:sigh:

Anyway...

Personally this moment, with other things going on around us, am not interested in seeing another "Million Dollar Baby" piece created specifically to 1) further desensitize assisted suicide for those without disabilities and 2) impress upon persons with disabilities some misguided societal (mis)directed duty to die (again)..

Can't get over this being your top post today.. You being driven to write this particular post at this particular time.....

ROCKS..

Cyber hugs from Talking Rock.. :)

 
At February 22, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

Now, to address what you wrote and after reading Victor's comment.. :)

Here on your own blog, at one point or another, I've made no bones about why I personally so desperately object to assisted suicide for anyone even coming close to walking in my Shoes..

To say I spent some portion of the last nigh on to ten years now feeling wholly a burden to those in my immediate, small, phenomenally-timed-in-its-creation circle of support would be putting it mildly..

I also would not be here without them and THEIR seeing some Value in me, in my Life..

And being able to express that Value to me in just the right way and at just the right time it was, yes, needed from another Human Being over the years when they could so easily have simply let the Dr. Kevorkians of the World have at me instead..

One more warm cyber hug from a overly brisk North Georgia this evening..

 
At February 23, 2009 , Blogger victor said...

Cindy Sue Causey,

Good luck with the new movie!

I think that "IT" was The Good Lord, His Angels and/or my imaginary friends from the hotel of fools who told me that I would be making my own movie someday and all my cells will be Staring in "IT"

There's no official date as to when it will be released but until "IT" becomes official I've been told to just rest in peace and not to get too exited about "IT"

I hear ya! Rest in peace? Actually Victor some think that you've been dead for a long time but no bodies had the heart to tell you yet:)

All kidding aside please send me an e-mail as to when "IT" is going to be shown cause I'd be interested in seeing this one and maybe also commenting on "IT".

P.S. Whatever you do, please don't let The "IT" get to you! :)

God Bless,

Peace

 
At February 28, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

Burden on society? What's society FOR but to protect and enable to live the individuals that ARE the society? Burden on the family? What's a family FOR? Wouldn't one do the same for a member of one's family? The life force isn't stronger than "consideration for others"? This isn't about manners, it's about survival!!! Now, this is the kind of thing where I can see the alignment between the "nice" of Christianity and the death culture. "Do unto others" cannot be relevant when life and death are at stake, for heaven's sake! It's not even one's life versus another's, it's just "burden." And even when it is one's life versus another's, it's healthy for one to want one's own to come out ahead. Consider how high a percentage of everyone we have to deal with is a burden one way or another. They should drop dead, or be willing to, because they inconvenience us? Burden schmurden. That's just an excuse for utilitarianism. Despite what everyone tells one (unasked, mind you) when one is "burdened" like that, when one is bearing the "burden" willingly, it doesn't feel like one at all, and if one is not willing when someone else's life is at stake, one deserves to be "burdened."

 

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