“Obsessional” Fear of Suffering Ushering in
Euthanasia Culture: Prominent Bioethicist
"If the point of society is to
make sure you don't suffer, that will often be making sure there aren't
any sufferers."
A culture that seeks to escape suffering and inconvenience at all costs
will end by eliminating not only pain, but by ending the lives of those
suffering or whose condition burden their families, warned bioethicist
Wesley J. Smith this weekend.
Smith spoke at the Second International Euthanasia Symposium held at
the National Conference Center in Lansdowne, Virginia. The symposium
was hosted by Canada's Euthanasia Prevention Coalition.
Reflecting on the euthanasia agenda amid the modern advances of
palliative care, Smith asked, "Why now?"
"We live in a time of - even despite the problems we're having - such
tremendous prosperity," said Smith. "If you had a burst appendix 100
years ago, you died in agony. Today, people don't have to, at least in
the developed world, die in agony."
Smith said he was further baffled after receiving piles of hate mail in
1993 for writing an article warning against euthanasia. "What happened
to my culture, and where was I when it happened?" he mused.
Smith said he found the answer in the reflections of philosopher and
bioethicist Yuval Levin, who stated: "Health has become the primary
good for society ... not only as a beginning, but also as an end,
relief and preservation from disease and pain, from misery and
necessity, become the defining ends of human action and therefore human
societies."
"The purpose of society had shifted from when I was growing up in my
formative years," said Smith. "From the concept of justice, from the
concept of eqality, mutual caring and mutual support, to - I would say
- an obsessional fear and loathing and avoidance of not only suffering,
but difficulty. ...
"It is distorting our culture ... into something that is not as
compassionate as we should be, that is not as caring as we should be,"
said Smith. "If the point of society is to make sure you don't suffer,
that will often be making sure there aren't any sufferers. Which isn't
only about making sure the sufferer doesn't suffer, but putting the
sufferer out of our misery."
"If we're going to defeat euthanasia and assisted suicide, we're going
to have to recognize that for a lot of people, the principle of right
and wrong don't matter anymore," said Smith. "What matters is making
sure there isn't suffering. And that can lead to some very bad and dark
places."
Smith told the story of a mentally ill, depressed woman who paramedics
allowed to die after drinking antifreeze, because she had left a note
asking not to be treated. Smith related the sentiments of her attending
physician, who said: "It's a horrible thing to have to do, but I
thought I had no alternative but to go with her wishes."
"Think about the kind of mental anguish somebody is going through to
drink antifreeze, and to do it more than once," said Smith. Allowing
her to die, he said, was "abandonment of the most profound kind."
"There are many things today that are better than in my formative
years, racism being one of them," he continued, "but there are a lot of
things that are not, and this is one of them: abandoning suffering
people, mentally ill, mentally anguished people, to suicide."
In an interview with LifeSiteNews.com, Smith noted that an avoidance of
suffering logically leads to "greater and greater extremes to try to
prevent the suffering to the place where you end up preventing the
sufferer." The current culture, he said, tries to prevent "not only the
suffering of the patient, but the suffering of the family and the
suffering of society who has to put up with these people, and see them
or pay for them, and be reminded of our own mortality."
Smith called the current trend toward euthanasia "a rather desperate
and sad attempt to avoid part of the human condition, which is
difficulty and suffering." "If you took it to the full extreme, we'd
all end up totally infantile, because the way people grow and gain
wisdom is to go through difficulties," he said. "It's not the only way,
but it's the essential way."
Although aware that such anti-humanistic policies as deep ecology and
euthanasia are becoming mainstream, Smith said he was optimistic about
the possibility of turning back the tide.
"This is not a shift that is a fait accompli, we are in the midst of
what I call a 'coup d'culture,' but the coup has not succeeded, the
contest is being waged," he said.
Smith urged those opposed to euthanasia and assisted suicide to be
proactive in asserting the sanctity and equality of human life.
"Unless people engage that with a clear eye that they're in a 'coup
d'culture,' that they need to man the battlements and ramparts to keep
the barbarians from getting through the gates, they'll get through the
gates," said Smith. "And believe me, if these people get through the
gates, they're not going to be gentle about 'tolerance' and 'freedom,'
because that's not their gig. That's their gig when they're on the
outside; when they're on the inside, their gig is power."
Contact: Kathleen Gilbert
Source: LifeSiteNews.com
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Date: June 3, 2009
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