Monday, September 14, 2009

A More Perfect Death

By ROSS DOUTHAT

As if there weren’t enough end-of-life anxieties floating around the health care debate, the Montana Supreme Court has chosen this month to weigh whether their state should join nearby Oregon and Washington in endorsing physician-assisted suicide.

What’s at stake is the right to voluntary euthanasia, not the sort of involuntary plug-pulling that some Republicans have claimed is concealed in the finer print of the current health care reform proposals. But you don’t have to share Sarah Palin’s death panel fears to see perils lurking at the intersection of physician-assisted suicide and health care reform.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/07/opinion/07douthat.html?_r=1

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Monday, August 17, 2009

Justifying one's existence

Barbara Kay

Choosing to live out one’s natural life will soon be as unpopular as refusing an abortion.
Have you noticed that the subject of euthanasia/ assisted suicide is picking up momentum -- that it is, so to speak, taking on a life of its own? I mean in particular that we seem to be approaching one of those interesting tipping points in public debate where the tone of those supporting a once-shocking idea is shifting from defensive to offensive.

http://www.mercatornet.com/articles/view/justifying_ones_existence/

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Friday, August 14, 2009

The duty to die

Sheila Liaugminas
It has already been a growing threat under the influence of the ‘right to die’ movement and spreading ‘futility care laws’. Now it’s looming larger in the 1,018 page health care proposal as written, and more Americans are starting to become aware that it practically mandates rationing that will discriminate against the most vulnerable.

http://www.mercatornet.com/sheila_liaugminas/view/the_duty_to_die/

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Friday, July 31, 2009

The notion of a right to a 'good death' undermines society

If my life has no objective value, then why should anyone else care for it, asks Vincent Nichols.

By Vincent Nichols
We have seen a significant defeat in Parliament for proposals to legalise assisted suicides, and learnt of the joint suicides at the Dignitas apartment in Switzerland of the eminent conductor Sir Edward Downes, and his wife, Lady Downes. While there are many ethical, medical and legal issues surrounding assisted suicide, at its heart lies the notion that we have an absolute moral entitlement to have whatever kind of death we choose. This is surely the triumph of the philosophy that proclaims individual rights above all other considerations and the relativist insistence that what is good is a matter of personal judgment.


The consequences of this attitude lie at the root of the weakening of social structures, including the decline of the family as the core unit, the rise of anti-social behaviour, the pursuit of profit at all cost and the increasing intolerance of non-materialist, philosophical or ethical views. It can be summarised as the age of convenience; the pursuit of what we want despite its cost and impact on others.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/personal-view/5845658/The-notion-of-a-right-to-a-good-death-undermines-society.html

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Monday, June 29, 2009

Giving the green light to suicide

Kevin Yuill
Revelations that non-terminally ill people were euthanised in Switzerland calls into question the ‘right to die’ campaign.
The concern about suicidal people with non-fatal illnesses travelling to Dignitas in Switzerland – where they were euthanised – underlines some of the fatal flaws in the case for legalising euthanasia here in Britain and elsewhere in Europe
http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php/site/article/7072/

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Monday, June 15, 2009

When the Right to Die Becomes a Duty

By Colleen Carroll Campbell
Linda Fleming, a 66-year-old, legally bankrupt cancer patient living alone in Sequim, Wash., recently became the first person to kill herself under her state's new assisted-suicide law. As in neighboring Oregon, where a similar law has facilitated more than 400 suicides since 1997, the measure that paved the way for Fleming's death allows suicidal adults to obtain lethal prescriptions as long as they are competent and have been diagnosed with a terminal condition by two physicians.

http://www.eppc.org/publications/pubID.3838/pub_detail.asp

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Sunday, May 31, 2009

Canada considers doctor-assisted suicide a third time

Charlie Butts - OneNewsNow

Canadians will again consider a euthanasia bill.It will mark the third attempt at getting the bill passed, one that goes much further than doctor-assisted suicide in the United States. Alex Schadenberg heads the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition in Canada.

http://www.onenewsnow.com/Culture/Default.aspx?id=537882

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Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Past your “use by” date? What’s next?

Margaret Somerville

Dying human beings are not disposable products.
A private member's bill to legalize assisted suicide is being studied in the Canadian parliament. And it's been reported that police in Minnesota expect to charge William Melchert-Dinkel, a nurse, for allegedly using the Internet to encourage Ottawa resident, 18-year-old Nadia Kajouji, who committed suicide, to kill herself. So far, at least, no one has argued that this was or should be ethically or legally acceptable.

That is not the case in relation to George and Betty Coumbias, two 73-year-old British Columbia residents. George suffers from serious heart disease; Betty is healthy. But in Betty's words, "I don't think I can face life without (George), and since we read about Dignitas (a Swiss organization that assists people to commit suicide), we felt what would be better than to die together, you know, to die in each other's arms?"

http://www.mercatornet.com/articles/view/past_your_use_by_date_whats_next/

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Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Archbishop Burke's Keynote Address

So much of Archbishop Burke's address at the National Catholic Prayer Breakfast was fantastic, but here is just a piece of it:

"6. Over the past several months, our nation has chosen a path which more completely denies any legal guarantee of the most fundamental human right, the right to life, to the innocent and defenseless unborn. Our nation, which had its beginning in the commitment to safeguard and promote the inalienable right to “Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness” for all, without boundary, is more and more setting arbitrary limits to her commitment (cf. The Declaration of Independence: Action of Second Continental Congress, 4 July 1776, in The Constitution of the United States with the Declaration of Independence and the Articles of Confederation, New York: Barnes and Noble Books, 2002, p. 81). Those in power now determine who will or will not be accorded the legal protection of the most fundamental right to life. First the legal protection of the right to life is denied to the unborn and, then, to those whose lives have become burdened by advanced years, special needs or serious illness, or whose lives are somehow judged to be unprofitable or unworthy.

7. What is more, those in power propose to force physicians and other healthcare professionals, in other words, those with a particular responsibility to protect and foster human life, to participate, contrary to what their conscience requires, in the destruction of unborn human lives, from the first or embryonic stage of development to the moment of birth. Our laws may soon force those who have dedicated themselves to the care of the sick and the promotion of good health to give up their noble life work, in order to be true to the most sacred dictate of their consciences. What is more, if our nation continues down the path it has taken, healthcare institutions operating in accord with the natural moral law, which teaches us that innocent human life is to be protected and fostered at all times and that it is always and everywhere evil to destroy an innocent human life, will be forced to close their doors.

8. At the same time, the fundamental society, that is, the family, upon which the life of our nation is founded and depends, is under attack by legislation which redefines marriage to include a relationship between two persons of the same sex and permits them to adopt children. In the same line, it is proposed to repeal the Defense of Marriage Act. At the root of the confusion and error about marriage is the contraceptive mentality – which would have us believe that the inherently procreative nature of the conjugal union can, in practice, be mechanically or chemically eliminated, while the marital act remains unitive. It cannot be so. With unparalleled arrogance, our nation is choosing to renounce its foundation upon the faithful, indissoluble, and inherently procreative love of a man and a woman in marriage, and, in violation of what nature itself teaches us, to replace it with a so-called marital relationship, according to the definition of those who exercise the greatest power in our society."

Sorry that's a lot, but it lays out the major crises to the Culture of Life we are facing now.
Read the full speech here. (Click the banner near the top.)

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Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Signs of things to come in medicine

Sheila Liaugminas

Currently happening largely under radar, in Montana. Physicians in Montana could be facing “kill-on-demand” orders from patients who want to commit suicide if a district court judge’s opinion pending before the state Supreme Court is affirmed.

http://www.mercatornet.com/sheila_liaugminas/view/signs_of_things_to_come_in_medicine/

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Tuesday, May 5, 2009

ADF joins in Montana battle against euthanasia

Charlie Butts - OneNewsNow -

The Alliance Defense Fund (ADF) has filed a brief along with others to overturn a Montana judge's order claiming a constitutional right to physician-assisted suicide. In October 2007, two men -- along with some physicians and a suicide-advocacy group -- filed suit in Montana to decriminalize doctor-assisted suicide. Last December a judge found a "right" to physician-assisted suicide in the state constitution. The state appealed that ruling.

http://www.onenewsnow.com/Legal/Default.aspx?id=515960

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Saturday, April 18, 2009

Doctor-assisted suicide legalized, ignored

Charlie Butts - OneNewsNow

More than four months after a Montana judge legalized doctor-assisted suicide, no one in "Big Sky Country" has used it for end-of-life issues. Jeff Laszloffy with the Montana Family Foundation believes Montana doctors want nothing to do with it.

http://www.onenewsnow.com/Culture/Default.aspx?id=487796

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Monday, April 13, 2009

Wrong way to relieve pain

Sheila Liaugminas

Disguised as compassion, the euthanasia movement is trying to invade the health care system to help end suffering. By ending lives. We know this, but Wesley Smith explains more in this article from my bioethics file. It’s getting more and more timely.

http://www.mercatornet.com/sheila_liaugminas/view/wrong_way_to_relieve_pain/

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Friday, April 3, 2009

Dignitas to expand suicide service from the ill to the well

In the first broadcast interview he has given in five years, the Swiss founder of the controversial assisted suicide service Dignitas has defended suicide as a "marvellous possibility". In an interview with the BBC, Luigi Minelli said that "Suicide is a very good possibility to escape a situation which you can't alter." And he dismissed the notion that his service should only be available to the terminally ill: "It is not a condition to have a terminal illness. Terminal illness is a British obsession. We are not a clinic. As a human rights lawyer I am opposed to the idea of paternalism. We do not make decisions for other people."

http://www.bioedge.org/index.php/bioethics/bioethics_article/8542/

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Thursday, April 2, 2009

Terri’s day

Sheila Liaugminas 31 March 2009

Her legacy is only growing stronger. Four years ago today, Terri Schiavo succumbed after being starved and dehydrated to death by court order. The final days of her ordeal and her family’s ripped into American consciousness when the media no longer had any choice but to cover the story in her last days that some of us had been covering for months in ‘alternative’ media, both print and radio. But the mainstream media never got the story right, and to this day they continue to refer to Terri, but with lies and distortions to advance an agenda that promotes abortion to euthanasia. Because the other thing that was ripped was the fabric of this culture that is now accepting the recently unacceptable, all under the language of ‘rights’.

http://www.mercatornet.com/sheila_liaugminas/view/terris_day/

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The Nazis did this

Sheila Liaugminas

So did slave owners. De-personalize a certain class of human beings, and you can use, abuse or eliminate them however you choose. That’s exactly what’s happening in the new civil rights movement that covers the pre-born to the not-yet-dead. One of the strategies is to change the language, including “diagnoses” like “persistent vegetative state”. No one wants to think of a human being as a vegetable. Good. Don’t. Because no one is. Tell that to Jane Brody.

http://www.mercatornet.com/sheila_liaugminas/view/the_nazis_did_this/

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Instinct to protect

Sheila Liaugminas

This sounds like science fiction. Only I can’t imagine making it up. It was jarring the day I read it. But even more so after considering the case of Baby OT (see post below). A couple is suing a hospital for keeping their baby alive.

http://www.mercatornet.com/sheila_liaugminas/view/instinct_to_protect/

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The last great act of living

Margaret Somerville

Legalising euthanasia would deny the full potential of the human spirit.

An extraordinary public exchange of letters between two Canadians over the past six months has illuminated in a very personal way the profound issues posed by death and all that leads to it. Ian Brown, who writes for the Globe and Mail, has a disabled son, Walker. Jean Vanier is the founder of L’Arche, a world-wide organization that provides a refuge and life-long home for intellectually disabled people. In their latest exchange of letters Brown asked Vanier, “Are you fearful of death?” Vanier replied, “No, I cannot say I am”.

http://www.mercatornet.com/articles/view/the_last_great_act_of_living/

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Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Pro-life 'hero' unable to stop legalized killing

Charlie Butts - OneNewsNow

Luxembourg has become the third nation to legalize doctor-assisted suicide. While that isn't good news to pro-lifers, there is a pro-life hero in the story. The vote on the bill was 30-26, but it was stalled for some time. Alex Schadenberg of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition explains. "The fact is that they've now gone to extreme measures even to carry this out because the Grand Duke of Luxembourg originally refused to sign the bill into law," he says. That forced Parliament to take drastic action to make it legal. "They went as far as to change their constitution in order to make sure that he didn't need to sign the bill into law for it to become law," says the pro-life activist.

http://www.onenewsnow.com/Culture/Default.aspx?id=458380

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Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Some doctors oppose 'death-on-demand,' some don't

Charlie Butts and Marty Cooper - OneNewsNow

Washington's doctor-assisted suicide law goes into effect today. Doctors will now be able to prescribe, by a patient's request, lethal doses of medication to terminally ill patients with less than six months to live. However, many doctors are hesitant to speak publicly about their stance on the "Death with Dignity" law, according to The Associated Press.

http://www.onenewsnow.com/Culture/Default.aspx?id=436258

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Tuesday, March 3, 2009

It’s a murder ring by another name

Sheila Liaugminas

The Death With Dignity movement is trying to fast-track assisted suicide laws through the states.

Final Exit is sidestepping the legal process. And the law.

A wide-ranging investigation into an alleged suicide assistance ring led to charges against four people and raids in nine states as authorities looked into how many deaths might have been involved.

http://www.mercatornet.com/sheila_liaugminas/view/its_a_murder_ring_by_another_name/

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Assisted suicide ring defends actions

Greg Bluestein

ATLANTA - Members of an assisted suicide ring say they've done nothing wrong and seem eager for a court battle over criminal charges they helped a Georgia man kill himself, while their supporters are using the case as a rallying cry for more debate about end-of-life issues.

http://www.onenewsnow.com/Headlines/Default.aspx?id=431956

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Assisted suicide case revives right-to-die debate

GREG BLUESTEIN

ATLANTA- The case against an alleged assisted suicide ring known as the Final Exit Network has revived a long-simmering debate over the right to die. The network's president, its medical director and two other members are due in court Friday on charges they aided the suicide of a 58-year-old Georgia man who suffered for years from cancer of the throat and mouth.

http://www.onenewsnow.com/Headlines/Default.aspx?id=430700

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Thursday, February 26, 2009

4 charged in multi-state suicide assistance probe

GREG BLUESTEIN- Associated Press Writer

ATLANTA- A wide-ranging investigation into an alleged suicide assistance ring led to charges against four people and raids in nine states as authorities looked into how many deaths might have been involved.

http://www.onenewsnow.com/Headlines/Default.aspx?id=429122

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Terminal Patients Not Dying Fast Enough for Specter?

Check out this video of Arlen Specter from the Senate Floor on February 23, 2009, who stated that healthcare poses "the greatest problem for the deficit as we look to the future years." Is Specter suggesting that terminal patients are not dying fast enough? Watch for yourself below.

http://www.onenewsnow.com/Blog/Default.aspx?id=426486

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Made to pay for defending life

Sheila Liaugminas


As the bioethics nurse who sent me this put it…..this is adding insult to injury.
The judge who ruled that physician-assisted suicide is legal in Montana has ordered the state to pay attorneys’ fees to the plaintiffs’ lawyers in an amount yet to be determined…

Continue...

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Don’t call it dignity

Sheila Liaugminas

And don’t call it the right to die. We’re all headed there anyway, no avoiding that.
But the ‘right-to-die’ movement keeps re-naming themselves to sell death as a choice to avoid suffering.

Continue...

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Monday, January 19, 2009

Death by mail - Montana's new assisted suicide law

Charlie Butts - OneNewsNow - 1/19/2009

Physician-assisted suicide is legal now in Montana, although the court ruling legalizing it is under appeal. Doctor-assisted suicide is legal in Oregon and Washington, but Rita Marker of the International Task Force on Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide says what sets the situation apart in Montana is that the ruling has no boundaries or safeguards.

Continue...

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Thursday, January 15, 2009

Peddling death by all means

by Sheila Liaugminas

We aren’t paying enough attention, as a society, to the creeping threat of euthanasia.

Of course there are people and organizations heroically devoted to the dignity and civil rights of all human beings, but the public generally pays little to no attention to stories (even startling ones) unless they burst onto the nation’s consciousness because even the media can’t ignore them eventually. Like the Terri Schiavo ordeal, which is still largely misunderstood because the complicit mainstream media misreported it all along (except for one or two big name news folks).

Continue...

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If doctors who won't kill are 'wicked,' the world is sick

by Licia Corbella

When doctors are called "wicked" for not killing patients, something is amiss.

Talk about Orwellian. A woman described as a "leading expert in ethics" has declared that doctors who refuse to kill their patients are "genuinely wicked." I'm not making this up.

Continue...

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Monday, January 5, 2009

'Never Again' - combatting a culture of death

Charlie Butts - OneNewsNow - 1/4/2009

The Second International Symposium on Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide will be held in May in Landsdowne, Virginia.

In the aftermath of the passage of an assisted suicide constitutional amendment in Washington State, Alex Schadenberg, executive director of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, says the meeting and discussion are especially important "to build a culture that rejects 'mercy killing.'"

"And the purpose of the symposium itself will be to bring together our leadership and other people who are interested in the issues of euthanasia and assisted suicide and to forge a stronger and forceful direction as to why euthanasia and assisted suicide should remain illegal and why it is a direct threat to our most vulnerable in society," he notes.

According to Schadenberg, that includes the handicapped and the elderly. While top experts will be there, he says it is important for the everyday citizen to join with them as well.

"We should all be concerned about it, but those people who are particularly wanting to do something to stop the onward thrust of this death lobby, they need to understand the directions we need to all go," he points out.

Aside from Washington, only Oregon permits doctor-assisted suicide. The theme for the symposium is "Never Again." Schadenberg says almost every leader in combating assisted suicide and euthanasia in the United Kingdom and North America will be attending or lecturing at the symposium.

http://www.onenewsnow.com/Culture/Default.aspx?id=371712

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