Wednesday 27 June 2012

Letter to editor

Well there has been some talk in the media about euthanasia so I thought I would post a letter to the editor I had published in a local paper on my blog. It still states how I feel on this issue. Here it is .....    
Editor,

Recently a committee of the Quebec National Assembly recommended that rules be established that shelter doctors who perform assisted suicides from prosecution.
Canada has laws against this but now the QNA is trying to skirt this and basically allow euthanasia. If allowed this will spread across Canada.
This cannot be allowed. Do we as Canadians not hold the value of all life as sacred?
The argument people use is the fact that they want to die with dignity. Can you still not have dignity even if you have lost everything else including your health? This is not just an issue for those seeking assisted suicide but also an issue for the vulnerable of society.
One example of this exploitation of the vulnerable is evident in the case of Robert and Tracy Latimer. Because she was severely handicapped he did not think her life should continue so he killed her.
However, because he made the case that it was an act of mercy, he was only found guilty of second degree murder (thought it was clearly premeditated) and given only a two-year sentence (of which only one would be spent in prison).
Eventually his sentence was appealed and he received the minimum ten year sentence.
Because he was in minimum security he was able to complete apprenticeships in prison and still managed his farm.
Apparently disabled people like Tracy are not protected by the law to the same extent as fully autonomous people because they do not demonstrate the same degree of autonomy as others. Understood this way, human dignity is not really for humans – it is dignity for autonomous agents.

If removing choice and control (autonomy) is tantamount to removing dignity, than dignity is subjective and easily lost. Infants, the disabled, seniors, and even people who are sleeping have lost control over themselves.
Another example is a prisoner of war in a concentration camp – what dignity would they have if they lost the ability to make choices in accordance with their aspirations?
If the court is going to be consistent, it would have to conclude that these people have also lost their dignity.
Yet this is contrary to reality. We recognize prisoners of war with medals of bravery and hold them in high esteem for what they went through.
Rather than hoping that their lives be extinguished to preserve them further suffering, we rejoice when they persevere against all odds.
Likewise we treat our grandparents with even greater care when they lose some of the functioning that makes it more difficult to look after themselves.
We also applaud the disabled for their determination. In all of these situations, it is apparent that dignity is not about making a choice to give up.
Rather, it is about facing life with courage, gentleness, kindness, decency, hope, determination, and faith in spite of the circumstances of life.
Legalizing euthanasia and assisted suicide further would weaken the legal protection for Canada‘s most vulnerable people.
The sad reality is that in countries where euthanasia is legalized, a large percentage of those who die never give their consent.
Others decide for them that their life isn‘t worth living.
For example, the 2009 statistics from the Netherlands that were just released show that 550 deaths happened without explicit request or consent.
To add to that, the overall number of euthanasia deaths increased by an astounding 13% over 2008.
Why are these numbers skyrocketing? Who decides when someone no longer has the dignity to continue to live?
In an aging welfare society where seniors and the disabled are increasingly seen as a burden on the state, it is hard to believe that the patient‘s dignity is what determines whether they live.
Using dignity talk to justify this shameful reality reveals that the concept itself is being exploited. Let us hope and pray that this doesn’t become legal.
And let us get this out before it’s too late!
Russ Bosch,

1 comment:

  1. I totally agree with this position, and the Tracy Latimer case hits very close to my heart, as I had severe epilepsy myself when I was younger. So severe, in fact, that I had to leave high school because of it and was being considered for AISH as there was no expectation for me to ever be considered "employable". One last attempt effort was made to assist me and I was given the typical "don't expect a cure, you're not going to get it" speech prior to having brain surgery. Almost 17 years later I have now completed high school, have gained and maintained employment for over 15 years, and volunteer regularly in the community (and am completely free of seizures). Coming from a place of having 8-10 seizures a day, weighing in at 93 lbs as a grown adult, and sleeping on average 16 hours a day just so I could recuperate from my illness, what if my family had decided that I no longer had a dignified life? Would all of this life that I have now been considered unlikely enough to justify ending that life?

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