Kathryn Lopez: Suicide should never be a painless debate

By: Kathryn Jean Lopez

Friday, April 17, 2009 11:35 PM EDT

“Foolproofing Suicide with Euthanasia Test Kits.” The matter-of-fact headline should chill you, especially since it didn't appear in some fringe publication or advocacy magazine.
It appeared in Time magazine.

“When someone with a terminal illness decides to end their life by overdosing on barbiturates, they hope the drugs will lull them into a peaceful and permanent sleep,” the article began.

But if these drugs have expired or are not dosed properly, “the would-be suicide victim may actually survive,” although possibly in a coma.

Thank heavens (yes, that was sarcasm), euthanasia advocates plan “to sell barbiturate-testing kits to confirm that deadly drug cocktails are, in fact, deadly.”

The kits debut in Britain in May for $50.

The “seriously ill” don't want to mess around when they're trying to kill themselves, says Dr. Philip Nitschke. “They want to know they have the right concentration of drugs so that if they take them in the suggested way, it will provide them with a peaceful death.”

I spoke with Nitschke in 2001. At the time, he was already being referred to as Australia's “Dr. Death,” a label he was proud of: “People only start calling you names if and when you become effective.

“Someone needs to provide this knowledge, training or recourse necessary to anyone who wants it, including the depressed, the elderly bereaved (and) the troubled teen. If we are to remain consistent and we believe that the individual has the right to dispose of their life, we should not erect artificial barriers in the way of sub-groups who don't meet our criteria.”

Thanks to the tireless work of Wesley J. Smith, a consumer advocate turned defender of human life, that interview has caused some trouble for Nitschke in his native Australia as he's crusaded to make euthanasia legal.

That Time magazine would consider covering a doctor who has advocated the right of troubled teenagers to kill themselves should set off all sorts of alarm bells.

Nitschke is not alone. Dignitas is a euthanasia clinic that operates in Switzerland. Earlier this month, its founder, Ludwig Minelli, a human-rights lawyer, stated clearly that there should simply be no limits on suicide. “It is without conditions,” he said. “A human right is without any conditions except capacity.”

If we don't question the issue of assisted suicide and its seeming acceptance as an almost casual reality by the media, we're going to realize quickly that we have moved way beyond debating extraordinary care and the legality of assisted suicide in terminal cases. They sure have at Dignitas. Mentally ill patients have been assisted in their suicides there. “Suicide is a very good possibility to escape a situation which you can't alter,” Minelli told the BBC.

What's next, an organization with centers in every city dedicated to helping end human life?

If this sounds like an overly dramatized slippery slope, then those who can should recall where we were about a half century ago on the issue of abortion.

Minelli is currently working to help a Canadian woman kill herself alongside her husband. George has heart disease, and she wants to avoid the heartache of losing him.

George's wife will suffer a deep and painful lose when her husband dies (naturally or otherwise). But her life will not be over. And there's something sick - verging on terminally so - about a society that instead of working to affirm life's value makes it easier to end it at any and then all stages.

Lopez is the editor of National Review Online

(www.nationalreview.com). She can be contacted at klopez@nationalreview.com

The Citizens' Say

Post your comment - click here

There are 4 comment(s)

interested wrote on Apr 23, 2009 12:35 PM:

" I totally agree with Karl and Farmer's Gal. Well said, both of you :) "

sick of it wrote on Apr 19, 2009 7:35 PM:

" i can see if the older people are sick and ether in the hospital or at home and cant do anything for them selfs but teens unless they have a real bad illness. i say no. but if there real sick and want to yes that should be there right to say they want to end it. the only thing we can do as there family is be by there side with there choice and respecked it and to just be there by there side when they do pass. "

Farmer's Gal wrote on Apr 19, 2009 4:09 PM:

" If your pet is suffering, you can take it to the doctor and end its misery humanely. If your mother is dying a prolonged and horrible death, she herself can't legally chose to say, I've had enough! That's sick.

A person should be able to decide that s/he has had enough pain and suffering, and chose to die as painlessly as possible, with dignity and by his/her own choice.

It is SICK and SELFISH to want to force someone you love to just keep on enduring pain and suffering as long as possible just because you don't want to let go. If you really loved the person, you'd want the suffering to end.

Yes, an organization in every city where people can go to assist themselves in dying and putting an end to pain would be an advancement of humanity. Forcing them to continue to suffer is INhumane and cruel -- and SICK. "

karl the 2nd wrote on Apr 18, 2009 12:37 PM:

" What an excellent idea.

It is ABOUT TIME that the terminally ill and those in pain really have a merciful option for ending their suffering and pain.

The religious mandate of requiring one to suffer needlessly in extreme pain and hopelessness is the real "evil" in this debate. What a heartless, horrible fate that the religious dictators would demand from people who might not even share their twisted fate.

I would counter that there's something SICK about any Religion or any society that values PAIN and suffering above mercy! "

REGISTRATION IS FREE.
Registered users sign in here:
*Member ID:
*Password:
Remember login?
(requires cookies)
 
Unregistered users can register here:

Do not use usernames or passwords from your financial accounts!

Note: Fields marked with an asterisk (*) are required!

*Create a Member ID:
*Choose a password:
*Re-enter password:
*E-mail Address:
*Year of Birth:
 

(children under 13 cannot register)

First Name:
Last Name:
Company:
Home Phone:
Business Phone:
Address:
City:
State:
Zip Code:
 
E-Citizen
E-Edition
Wheels Etc.
Find a vehicle
Hot Jobs
Find a Job
Homes Etc.
Find a Home
TV Week
Find a program
Search Classifieds
Find, Buy
Place a Classified Ad
Sell
Skaneateles Journal
The Journal
New! Best Bridal
Here comes the bride. . .
Liven Up the Holidays
Fa-la-la-la-la-la-la-laaaaaa
Logo HereNew! Off the Menu
Good Eatin'!
Newspaper Ads
See it again
CNY Boats Etc.
Achors aweigh!
Sections
Special Sections

Top Jobs

The Citizen Copyright ©2009
A division of Lee Publications, Inc.
25 Dill Street
Auburn, NY 13021

Contact Us

Add to My Yahoo!