The Prometheus League
Breaking News and Updates
- Abolition Of Work
- Ai
- Alt-right
- Alternative Medicine
- Antifa
- Artificial General Intelligence
- Artificial Intelligence
- Artificial Super Intelligence
- Ascension
- Astronomy
- Atheism
- Atheist
- Atlas Shrugged
- Automation
- Ayn Rand
- Bahamas
- Bankruptcy
- Basic Income Guarantee
- Big Tech
- Bitcoin
- Black Lives Matter
- Blackjack
- Boca Chica Texas
- Brexit
- Caribbean
- Casino
- Casino Affiliate
- Cbd Oil
- Censorship
- Cf
- Chess Engines
- Childfree
- Cloning
- Cloud Computing
- Conscious Evolution
- Corona Virus
- Cosmic Heaven
- Covid-19
- Cryonics
- Cryptocurrency
- Cyberpunk
- Darwinism
- Democrat
- Designer Babies
- DNA
- Donald Trump
- Eczema
- Elon Musk
- Entheogens
- Ethical Egoism
- Eugenic Concepts
- Eugenics
- Euthanasia
- Evolution
- Extropian
- Extropianism
- Extropy
- Fake News
- Federalism
- Federalist
- Fifth Amendment
- Fifth Amendment
- Financial Independence
- First Amendment
- Fiscal Freedom
- Food Supplements
- Fourth Amendment
- Fourth Amendment
- Free Speech
- Freedom
- Freedom of Speech
- Futurism
- Futurist
- Gambling
- Gene Medicine
- Genetic Engineering
- Genome
- Germ Warfare
- Golden Rule
- Government Oppression
- Hedonism
- High Seas
- History
- Hubble Telescope
- Human Genetic Engineering
- Human Genetics
- Human Immortality
- Human Longevity
- Illuminati
- Immortality
- Immortality Medicine
- Intentional Communities
- Jacinda Ardern
- Jitsi
- Jordan Peterson
- Las Vegas
- Liberal
- Libertarian
- Libertarianism
- Liberty
- Life Extension
- Macau
- Marie Byrd Land
- Mars
- Mars Colonization
- Mars Colony
- Memetics
- Micronations
- Mind Uploading
- Minerva Reefs
- Modern Satanism
- Moon Colonization
- Nanotech
- National Vanguard
- NATO
- Neo-eugenics
- Neurohacking
- Neurotechnology
- New Utopia
- New Zealand
- Nihilism
- Nootropics
- NSA
- Oceania
- Offshore
- Olympics
- Online Casino
- Online Gambling
- Pantheism
- Personal Empowerment
- Poker
- Political Correctness
- Politically Incorrect
- Polygamy
- Populism
- Post Human
- Post Humanism
- Posthuman
- Posthumanism
- Private Islands
- Progress
- Proud Boys
- Psoriasis
- Psychedelics
- Putin
- Quantum Computing
- Quantum Physics
- Rationalism
- Republican
- Resource Based Economy
- Robotics
- Rockall
- Ron Paul
- Roulette
- Russia
- Sealand
- Seasteading
- Second Amendment
- Second Amendment
- Seychelles
- Singularitarianism
- Singularity
- Socio-economic Collapse
- Space Exploration
- Space Station
- Space Travel
- Spacex
- Sports Betting
- Sportsbook
- Superintelligence
- Survivalism
- Talmud
- Technology
- Teilhard De Charden
- Terraforming Mars
- The Singularity
- Tms
- Tor Browser
- Trance
- Transhuman
- Transhuman News
- Transhumanism
- Transhumanist
- Transtopian
- Transtopianism
- Ukraine
- Uncategorized
- Vaping
- Victimless Crimes
- Virtual Reality
- Wage Slavery
- War On Drugs
- Waveland
- Ww3
- Yahoo
- Zeitgeist Movement
-
Prometheism
-
Forbidden Fruit
-
The Evolutionary Perspective
Category Archives: Euthanasia
Letter to the Editor: Connecticut lawmaker wrong to advocate for euthanasia – New Haven Register
Posted: June 24, 2017 at 2:53 pm
A Massachusetts court convicted Michelle Carter of involuntary manslaughter for the death of her boyfriend, Conrad Roy. Roy had obviously been suffering from depression when Carter sent him repeated text messages urging him to go ahead and kill himself. Eventually he complied. He sat in his truck while the cab filled with carbon monoxide. Carters encouragement of Roys suicide, including her instruction to him to get back into his truck, is deplorable. Few would dispute this.
If he had been suffering from metastatic cancer, rather than depression, there are undoubtedly those who would have been praising Carter for her act of compassion. Of course, Carters actions were morally reprehensible, and they would be just as bad had Roy been suffering physically rather than psychologically.
If you agree that Carter lacks moral decency you should take a close look at Connecticut state Rep. Josh Elliott. He has introduced HB 6238, An Act Concerning the Option to Die with Dignity. Elliott, along with his friends at Compassion and Choices, wants to make it legal for Connecticut doctors to prescribe lethal cocktails of medications to patients that are suffering from severe physical pain. Make no mistake; Rep. Elliotts proposal is just as morally corrupt as Carters actions. Physicians helping patients commit suicide, is no better than manipulative, teenaged girls pushing their boyfriends to asphyxiate themselves. Doctors have plenty of means to help patients who are in suffering or in pain. There is no need to engage in euthanasia.
Rep. Elliott should concern himself with our states actual problems, like our current financial situation. Although, if he is like most Democrats, he will probably argue that this bill will help state residents by reducing carbon emissions. Those carbon monoxide suicides really do burn through a lot of fossil fuels.
Advertisement
Frank J. Mongillo III, M.D.
New Haven
Here is the original post:
Letter to the Editor: Connecticut lawmaker wrong to advocate for euthanasia - New Haven Register
Posted in Euthanasia
Comments Off on Letter to the Editor: Connecticut lawmaker wrong to advocate for euthanasia – New Haven Register
Euthanasia pioneer alarmed by what he unleashed – WND.com – WND.com
Posted: June 23, 2017 at 6:44 am
The Dutch psychiatrist whose lawsuit opened the door to allowing assisted suicide in the Netherlands for people suffering depression is now having second thoughts.
Boudewijn Chabot
Boudewijn Chabot, in an article titled Worrisome Culture Shift in the Context of Self-Selected Death, decries the new practice of allowing psychiatrists without a therapeutic relationship with a patient to determine whether assisted suicide is permissible under the law.
Wesley Smith, a leading bioethics expert and opponent of assisted suicide and euthanasia, writes in a column for National Review that he predicted the development.
Euthanasia consciousness changes mindsets. It alters societal morality, he said. It distorts our views of the importance of vulnerable lives. It leads to abandonment and various forms of subtle and blatant coercion. Over time, it cant be controlled.
Was Terri Schiavos death really assisted suicide? Get the book that powerfully and comprehensively tells Terris Story: The Court-Ordered Death of an American Woman at the WND Superstore
The Netherlands became the first nation to allow assisted suicide after a series of court cases in the 1980s formalized the criteria for it, culminating in a 2002 law.
Chabot was prosecuted in the early 1990s for assisting the suicide of a deeply depressed woman who wanted to die after the deaths of her two children. He met with the womanfour times over several weeks but never actually treated her, Smith recounted.The psychiatrist then supplied her with poison pills, which she took.
Smith said Chabots lawyer told him in an interview for his book Forced Exit that the Dutch government never had anyintention of actually imprisoning or even sanctioning Chabot.
The purpose, the lawyer said, was to set a precedent to allow deep psychological suffering to justifyassisted suicide.
Smith said the DutchSupreme Court in 1994 ruled, essentially, that suffering is suffering, whether physical or emotional, and its the suffering thatjustifies assisted suicide, not the disease itself.
Get the hottest, most important news stories on the Internet delivered FREE to your inbox as soon as they break! Take just 30 seconds and sign up for WNDs Email News Alerts!
Two decades later, he said, Dutch psychiatrists euthanize mentally ill patients, whose organs may be voluntarily harvestedafter their death.
Now, he said, Chabot has been stricken by conscience, recognizing euthanasia groups have recruited psychiatrists to kill.
Chabot argued in his paper that without a therapeutic relationship, by far most psychiatrists cannot reliably determine whether a death wish is a serious, enduring desire.
Wesley J. Smith
Even within a therapeutic relationship, it remains difficult. But a psychiatrist of the clinic can do so without a therapeutic relationship, with less than ten in-depth conversations?
Smith, a senior fellow at the Discovery Institutes Center on Human Exceptionalism, is a consultant for the Patients Rights Council who has been named by the National Journal as one of the nations top expert thinkers in bioengineering for his work in bioethics. He is among the worlds foremost critics of assisted suicide and utilitarian bioethics.
Chabot, in his article, recounted three reports of euthanasia of deep-demented persons who could not confirm their death wish.
One of the three was identified as having been done without due care; her advance request could be interpreted in different ways. The execution was also done without due care; the doctor had first put a sedative in her coffee. When the patient was lying drowsily on her bed and was about to be given a high dose, she got up with fear in her eyes and had to be held down by family members. The doctor stated that she had continued the procedure very consciously.
Smith commented that Chabot is examiningthe social and moral wreckage he helped unleash and wonders: Where did the Euthanasia Law go off the tracks?
Chabot writes that theeuthanasia practice is running amok because the legal requirements which doctors can reasonably apply in the context of physically ill people, are being declared equally applicable without limitation in the context of vulnerable patients with incurable brain diseases.
In psychiatry, Chabot writes, an essential limitation disappeared when the existence of a treatment relationship was no longer required. In the case of dementia, such a restriction disappeared by making the written advance request equivalent to an actual oral request.
Lastly, Chabot says, it really went off the tracks when the review committee concealed that incapacitated people were surreptitiously killed.
Horrible picture
In February, a Dutch doctor carrying out a lethal injection on an elderly woman ordered her family to restrain her when she resisted, creating what even euthanasia advocates called a horrible picture.
The case in Amsterdam, the National Catholic Register reported, was one of several similar instances of resistance, including a sex-abuse victim in her 20s, a 41-year-old alcoholic, a woman with ringing in her ears and now an Alzheimers patient.
In nearby Belgium, euthanasia was broadened three years agoto include children.
Alistair Thompson of the anti-euthanasia advocacy group Care Not Killing told the Register its a typical slippery-slope scenario.
The problem is that the law always evolves. Its always pushed on, a little bit, and a little bit. Once youve crossed the Rubicon, it becomes people who are not mentally competent, people who are frail or weary of life, he said.
In the Netherlands, assisted suicide is legal for infants up to a year old and for children over the age of 12. But doctors are already investigating allowing it for all children.
Duty to die
In the United States, six states allow doctor-assisted suicide, beginning with Oregons 1994 Death with Dignity Act, which was approvedby a voter referendum, 51 to 49 percent.
In an interview last fall with WND and Radio America, Jeff Hunt, director of the Centennial Institute at Colorado Christian University, warned that where doctor-assisted suicide is legal, it moves from what is generally called a right to die to a duty to die.
He pointed out that former Colorado Gov. Richard Lamm made that argument in 1984, stating elderly people who are terminally ill have got a duty to die and get out of the way. Let the other society, our kids, build a reasonable life.
Was Terri Schiavos death really assisted suicide? Get the book that powerfully and comprehensively tells Terris Story: The Court-Ordered Death of an American Woman at the WND Superstore
Hunt said that while assisted-suicide advocates paint the practice as the ultimate act of personal liberty, in every case where this is legalized, you are inviting government and youre inviting insurance companies to get involved in this decision and that is a very, very bad deal.
In Oregon, the Medicaid system has become involved with end-of-life decisions, Hunt said.
They would send letters to terminally ill cancer patients saying, Were not going to pay the $4,000 per month required for you to stay alive, but well pay the $100 for you to kill yourself.'
Another argument in favor of doctor-assisted suicide is that it mainly happens at the very end of life when the pain becomes unbearable. Hunt said the facts simply dont bear that out.
What the research actually shows is that most people who choose doctor-assisted suicide do it out of depression or theyre afraid because of their lack of mobility, their quality of life, he said.
Get the hottest, most important news stories on the Internet delivered FREE to your inbox as soon as they break! Take just 30 seconds and sign up for WNDs Email News Alerts!
Hunt said in places such asthe Netherlands, physically healthy young people access doctor-assisted suicide over relationships gone bad or the loss of a job.
He said the push for doctor-assisted suicide is especially horrifying for the disabled and those with special needs.
If you look at the organizations that are trying to stop this, it is primarily led by the disabled community, Hunt said. They understand what this is creating in the law. This is creating an entire classification of people that can be killed or choose to be killed.
We should be investing in great palliative care and good hospice care because doctor-assisted suicide brings with it a whole parade of terribles that we do not want in our society, Hunt said.
Read the original here:
Euthanasia pioneer alarmed by what he unleashed - WND.com - WND.com
Posted in Euthanasia
Comments Off on Euthanasia pioneer alarmed by what he unleashed – WND.com – WND.com
Netherlander Euthanasia Guru Bemoans His Handiwork – National Review
Posted: at 6:44 am
Boudewijn Chabot was the Netherlander psychiatrist who assisted the suicide of a deeply depressed woman who wanted to die after the demise of her two children. All she wanted to do was be buried between them. Chabot met with her four times over several weeksnever engaged actual treatmentand then supplied her with poison pills, which she took. He watched as she died.
That led to a prosecution. I put the word in quotes becauseas Chabots lawyer told me in an interview for my book Forced Exitthere was never any intention of actually imprisoning Chabot, or indeed, sanction him in any way. Rather, the purpose was to set a precedent to allow deep psychological suffering to justify euthanasia.
The gambit worked. The Supreme Court ruled, essentially, that suffering is sufferingand whether physical or emotionalIT is what justifies assisted suicide/euthanasia, not disease itself.
Twenty or so years later and Netherlander psychiatrists euthanize mentally ill patients, whose organs may be voluntarily harvested post-death.
Now, Chabot has been stricken by conscience. He notes that euthanasia groups have recruited psychiatrists to kill. From his article, Worrisome Culture Shift in the Context of Self-Selected Death:
Without a therapeutic relationship [ME: which he didn't really have, by the way], by far most psychiatrists cannot reliably determine whether a death wish is a serious, enduring desire. Even within a therapeutic relationship, it remains difficult. But a psychiatrist of the clinic can do so without a therapeutic relationship, with less than ten in-depth conversations?
Hey, you opened this door: Own it! More:
In 2016, there were three reports of euthanasia of deep-demented persons who could not confirm their death wish. One of the three was identified as having been done without due care; her advance request could be interpreted in different ways. The execution was also done without due care; the doctor had first put a sedative in her coffee. When the patient was lying drowsily on her bed and was about to be given a high dose, she got up with fear in her eyes and had to be held down by family members. The doctor stated that she had continued the procedure very consciously.
Chabot looks at the social and moral wreckage he helped unleash and wonders:
Where did the Euthanasia Law go off the tracks? The euthanasia practice is running amok because the legal requirements which doctors can reasonably apply in the context of physically ill people, are being declared equally applicable without limitation in the context of vulnerable patients with incurable brain diseases.
In psychiatry, an essential limitation disappeared when the existence of a treatment relationship was no longer required. In the case of dementia, such a restriction disappeared by making the written advance request equivalent to an actual oral request.
And lastly, it really went off the tracks when the review committee concealed that incapacitated people were surreptitiously killed.
Please. It was all so predictable. Heck, I predicted it.
Euthanasia consciousness changes mindsets. It alters societal morality. It distorts our views of the importance of vulnerable lives. It leads to abandonment and various forms of subtle and blatant coercion.
Over time, it cant be controlled.
See the article here:
Netherlander Euthanasia Guru Bemoans His Handiwork - National Review
Posted in Euthanasia
Comments Off on Netherlander Euthanasia Guru Bemoans His Handiwork – National Review
Blind elderly couple seeks DIG’s nod for euthanasia | Kanpur News … – Times of India
Posted: at 6:43 am
KANPUR: Alleging police inaction against their neighbour, an elderly visually impaired couple had written to the DIG seeking permission to undergo euthanasia. In the letter, Gaya Prasad, who resides in the staff quarters with their niece, who is a class IV employee, on the premises of Lala Lajpat Rai Hospital, alleged that he and his wife Prem Lata were recently assaulted by their neighbour Kamlesh Kumar when they asked him not to tie cattle in front of their house. The couple also alleged that the police have not taken any action against the accused despite a complaint. The visually impaired couple then wrote a letter to DIG to grant them justice or allow them to undergo euthanasia. Taking cognizance of the letter, circle officer Gaurav Banswal visited the elderly couple's house on Wednesday and assured them of police action. "On the instructions of DIG, we visited the spot and removed the cattle tied up by the accused in front of the couple's house on Wednesday ," the CO said. The couple had alleged that they are being harassed by accused Kamlesh Kumar. No arrests have been made so far.
See original here:
Blind elderly couple seeks DIG's nod for euthanasia | Kanpur News ... - Times of India
Posted in Euthanasia
Comments Off on Blind elderly couple seeks DIG’s nod for euthanasia | Kanpur News … – Times of India
Dutch Euthanasia Pioneer Disturbed by Kill Rates – Church Militant
Posted: June 22, 2017 at 5:41 am
THE HAGUE, Netherlands (ChurchMilitant.com) - The pioneer for legalized euthanasia in the Netherlands is denouncing a lack of ethics as legal safeguards for vulnerable patients erode.
Dutch euthanasia pioneer and psychiatrist Boudewijn Chabot wrote an opinion pieceFriday that described the "worrisome rate" at which dementia and psychiatric patients are killed. He claims the legal safeguards protecting the vulnerable are being quietly eroded. He also claims panels reviewing the requests are concealing incidents of wrongful death.
Chabot is most worried about the increase in euthanasia of dementia patients. While he considers the numbers to be relatively small with 141 killed in 2016 diagnostic tests are identifying age-related chronic psychiatric diseases earlier. Thus, this more often leads to a large increase in the number of patients with "incurable" conditions. And the cost for years of medical care can lead to financial devastation adversely affecting the patient's quality of life. He predicts "this could cause a skyrocketingincrease in the number of euthanasia cases."
Free clip from CHURCH MILITANT PremiumWATCH MORE LIKE THIS
Chabot notes these patients are not euthanizedin hospitals but mostly in the country's End of Life Clinics. Like abortion mills, the doctors there do not provide care for the patient but only purport to alleviate suffering by killing him. Doctors and patients soon learn the keywords and phrases to use to get the desired result.
"Within the End of Life Clinic, a group culture has emerged in which euthanasia is regarded as virtuous labor," says Chabot.
Chabot was prosecuted for the 1991assisted suicide of a50-year-oldhealthy woman suffering from "existential distress." Though he wasfound guilty of the crime, he wasn't punished. The case became a landmark, however, leading to the Euthanasia Act of 2002, which legalized assisted suicide in the Netherlands.
Since its legalization, the Netherlands has steadily loosened its restrictions on assisted suicide. In 2016, it looked into expanding the age range for children to be euthanized, broadening it from age 12 all the way down to age one.
Chabot explains that "lawful" euthanasia must fulfill three criteria, the first being that the patient must make a voluntary and deliberate request; second, he must be experiencing unbearable suffering with noprospect of improvement; and third, there must be no reasonable alternativetreatment.
Chabot notes that dementia patients are put to death mostly by doctors and the End of Life Clinics, not in hospitals. He says since the standards for physical illnesses are being used for psychiatric illnesses, the clinic's psychiatrists won't need to enter into a treatment relationship with patients before prescribing death. A psychiatrist himself, he says it is difficult to determine if a death wish is "serious and enduring," even with a developed patient-doctor relationship.
Chabotsees the shift in thinking in the comment made byGovertHartogh, an ethicist from the evaluation committee: "The patient suffers unbearably when he says he suffers unbearably, and an alternative is not a reasonable alternative if the patient rejects it."
With this comment, Chabotnotes that the patient's own judgment of suffering is given the most weight, similar to what the abortion industry has done with the woman's evaluation of "distress"in order to get an abortion.
What worries Chabot is the recent development that prior written consent for euthanasia is now taken to have the same weight as verbal consent. The patients' own determinations of "unbearable suffering" as well as his written consent now being sufficient, "the door has been opened wide for euthanasia of patients with severe dementia."
One other troubling aspect is that in cases where dementia patients are being killed without their express consent and against their wishes, the review committees are not identifying the execution as wrongful.Chabot notes that dementiapatients are being secretly drugged prior to the arrival of doctors, either by the family or by the doctors themselves, to avoid resistance by the patients. This technique is used to execute patients with severe neurological disabilities to get around consent laws.
In one case, the doctor put sleep medication in a patient's coffee, but the woman woke up just before the injection and began to fight off the doctor. The family was called in to hold the woman down so they could administer the lethal dose. The doctor claimed the procedure was done with "care."
Current rates of doctor prescribed euthanasia at clinics are about one per doctor per month. Chabot wonders what happens to the doctors when prescribing death becomes "routine." He believes they may have good intentions, but they might be "fuel[ing] the death wish in vulnerable people who are still trying to live with their disabilities."
Have a news tip? Submit news to our tip line.
Like our work? Support us with a donation.
Link:
Dutch Euthanasia Pioneer Disturbed by Kill Rates - Church Militant
Posted in Euthanasia
Comments Off on Dutch Euthanasia Pioneer Disturbed by Kill Rates – Church Militant
Fordham Won’t Pull the Plug on Pro-Euthanasia Efforts | ncregister … – National Catholic Register (blog)
Posted: at 5:41 am
Keating Hall at Fordham University (Doug Olson, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Panoramio and Wikimedia Commons)
Blogs | Jun. 21, 2017
Intentional euthanasia, whatever its forms or motives, is murder. It is gravely contrary to the dignity of the human person and to the respect due to the living God, his Creator. (CCC 2324)
Why is a supposedly Catholic university pushing assisted suicide? That's what some are asking Fordham University in New York. Last week I joined agroup opposed to assisted suicide outside the school. Assisted suicide/euthanasia has become a very hot debate in New York State (the so called Medical Aid in Dying Act) yet few really understand what legalization would actually mean.
According to its web site, Fordham has hosted at least four workshopsfor student creditin collaboration with the pro-euthanasia group End of Life Choices New York(EOLCNY) in justthe past year:
1.Being Mortal Documentary and Discussion(September 6, 2016) by EOLCNY and Fordham University, School of Social Work
2.How to Die in Oregon:Screening and discussion of NY Medical Aid in Dying Act (October 18, 2016) by Department of Sociology and Anthropology/Compassion & ChoicesLaurie Leonard, LMSW, Executive Director,EOLCNY
3. Choice in Dying: Current Legal, Policy and Ethical Issues(February 25, 2017) Fordham University Graduate School of Social Service
4.Palliative Art: Using the Arts to Improve Care at the End of Life(June 7, 2017) by EOLCNYFordham University, School of Social Work
EOLCNY is backing the Medical Aid in Dying Act currently being pushed in New York. The law allows terminally ill patients to request medication from a doctor to kill themselves. EOLCNY is a previous affiliate of Compassion & Choices (formerly the Hemlock Society). EOLCNY became independent of Compassion & Choices that same year courtesy of a $300,000 grant from the billionaire globalist George Soross Open Society Foundations.
The group'smission states clearly, We advocate to legalize medical aid in dying in New York through litigation or by legislation. EOLCNY has initiated a lawsuit which is currently making its way through the system. We seek a ruling to clarify that a mentally competent, terminally ill patient has the right to obtain medicine by prescription that he or she could ingest to achieve a peaceful death.
David Leven, executive director emeritus and senior consultant for EOCNY, and a regular guest lecturer for Fordham Graduate School of Social Service, gave the Fordham presentation in February. He's said publicly that neither the Catholic Church for any other religious group has a say in end-of-life issues, dismissing the voice of the disabilities rights community as well.
It's disturbing that a Catholic university hasn't offered a single presentation or workshop on theCatholic perspective on assisted suicide. In fact, the NY Alliance Against Assisted Suicide has offered to present, with no response. Calls to the university for comment were not returned.
Outside the university, we had dozens of interactions with students, faculty, and administrators of Fordham. Most had no idea how one-sided the euthanasia issue is being presented to students. We encountered many peopleon the street who say they support the legalization of assisted suicidebut have no idea what is actually in the Bill says and what the real-life ramifications are. Some were truly shocked to learn the facts.
I didn't either until I was clued in. It's not as simple an issue as assisted suicide advocates would have us believe.
Did you know the family of the person seeking to end his life does not have to be notified? One pro-euthanasia person I spoke to found that very surprising. She said she strongly supports assisted suicide laws so that people can check out when they want to. Actually, she didn't believe me that the family wouldn't be notified. But it's true. The pending New York law does not require the immediate family who very well might want to discuss such a drasticfataldecision with the personbe informed.
Did you know that doctors cannot opt out of participating inan intentional deathassisted suicide? Legalization requires them to either provide the lethal dose or refer to a doctor who will do so. What about their freedom of conscience? And what about a physician who knows he can cure the patient but is denied the opportunity to use his medical skills and curative treatment (along with the patient who is similarly denied such treatment)? One student I spoke to who is from Oregon described what a disaster legalization has been for his state.
Did you know the law doesn't allow for protecting a patient from any financial pressures from someone else that they end their life now? A Fordham law student I spoke with said, That's insane. Someone who'sgetting an inheritance might be urging assisted suicide, and if the pressured person is disabled, has a mental health issue, or is on medication, they could be especially vulnerable to such pressure.
Did you know that the death certificate for a person who dies by assisted suicide/euthanasia reads 'terminal illness' rather than assisted suicide? This only helps someone with murderous intentions, someone who could benefit from the person's death, as there would be no legal way to prosecute. One woman on her lunch breakhad no idea legalization would actually protect a potential murderer from 'getting away with murder.' This woman stood and chatted with us for a while, signed our petition against legalization, and helped us hand out brochures with the factsall on her way tonoonMass.
Did you know that most disability groups oppose legalizing assisted suicide/euthanasia, understanding that it discriminates against the disabled in encouraging them toend their lives? They resent being viewed only as a financial burden and not as individual people with innate dignity. A young guy passing our group in his electric wheelchair stopped to read our signs and our brochure andmade this crucial point to us.
Assisted suicide poses a threat to those with disabilities or who are in vulnerable circumstances. When assisted suicide becomes an option, pressure can be placed on these individuals to take that option. Research shows that most people who say they want to die by assisted suicide would not want to if they had sufficient love and support around them. Prescription requests from terminally ill individuals for suicide drugs are often based on fear and depression. Most cases of depression among terminally ill people can be successfully treated. Yet primary care physicians are generally not experts in diagnosing depression. Nothing in the Oregon or Washington assisted suicide laws compel doctors to refer patients for evaluation by a psychologist or psychiatrist to screen for depression or mental illness.
If assisted suicide is made legal, it quickly becomes just another form of treatment and as such, will always be the cheapest option. In an already cost-conscious healthcare environment, this is a serious concern. Oregonian Barbara Wagner was denied coverage of her cancer treatment but received a letter from the Oregon Health Plan that stated the plan would cover assisted suicide. Another Oregon resident, Randy Stroup, received an identical letter, telling him that the Oregon Health Plan would cover the cost of his assisted suicide, but would not pay for medical treatment for his prostate cancer.
One would think that even asecularuniversity would offer at leastone opposing viewto fourpresentations all with the same agenda.
There are hundredsof groups that are sincerely opposed to assisted suicide legalization, including the group I protested with, NY Alliance Against Assisted Suicide,doctors and nurses groups, pro-life groupsand disability groups, including the poignantlynamed, Not Dead Yet. Other groups that have been suggested to Fordham to present the authentic Catholic view include the Human Life Alliance and Catholic Hospice.
Continue reading here:
Posted in Euthanasia
Comments Off on Fordham Won’t Pull the Plug on Pro-Euthanasia Efforts | ncregister … – National Catholic Register (blog)
Euthanasia mindset looms over disabled baby’s legal fight, ethicist warns – Catholic News Agency
Posted: at 5:41 am
London, England, Jun 22, 2017 / 03:01 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Legal efforts to bar the parents of a British baby born with a disabling medical condition from seeking treatment overseas are based on deep ethical errors, a Catholic expert in medical ethics has warned.
It seems to me completely wrongheaded that the state should be stepping in here when the decision that the parents are making is really aimed at the best interests of the child, Dr. Melissa Moschella, a Catholic University of America philosophy professor, told CNA.
Its not crazy, its not abusive, its not neglectful. Its the decision of parents who want to, however they can, to give their very sick child a chance for life.
She said such a decision should be completely within the prerogative of the parent, citing the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights. According to Moschella, that declaration clearly indicates that the parents, not the state will have primarily responsibility.
Charlie Gard, now aged 10 months, is believed to suffer from a rare genetic condition called mitochondrial depletion syndrome, which causes progressive muscle weakness. The disorder is believed to affect fewer than 20 children worldwide. Charlie has been in intensive care since October 2016. He has suffered significant brain damage due to the disease and is currently fed through a tube. He breathes with an artificial ventilator and is unable to move.
His parents, Connie Yates and Chris Gard, have wanted to keep him on life support and transport him to the United States in order to try an experimental treatment.
However, their decision was challenged in court by hospitals and an attorney appointed to represent Charlie. The parents appealed a High Court decision, and their appeal to the U.K.s Supreme Court was rejected.
Their final legal challenge is presently before the European Court of Human Rights. The court has said Charlie must continue to receive treatment until its judges make a decision.
Moschella said the legal decisions favoring ending life support for Charlie are effectively telling the parents that their childs life has no value and that therefore they should cease any effort to heal him of his disease.
These decisions represent a quality of life ethic and an ideology that say human life is valuable only if it meets certain capacities.
Its the same ideology that underlies allowing euthanasia or physician assisted suicide, she said. Thats completely opposed to the Catholic view in which every human life has intrinsic value regardless of the quality of that life.
Charlies parents have raised more than $1.6 million to help seek experimental treatment for him in the U.S. Their decision faced legal challenge from Great Ormond Street Hospital, where he is being treated.
In early April, the babys hospital challenged their efforts. The hospitals experts argued in court that long-term life support should be withdrawn from the baby because his quality of life was so poor.
Charlies court-appointed lawyer argued before a High Court judge that any treatments in the U.S. would be experimental and long-term life-support would only prolong the process of dying.
Charlies parents had their own legal representative in the case, who argued that travel to the U.S. for treatment would not cause the boy significant suffering or harm and could give him another chance.
Yates, Charlies mother, has argued that she would welcome any treatment that could help him live. She also suggested anything learned during an experimental treatment could help treat future babies who suffer from the disorder.
According to Moschella, who has a background in parental rights and medical ethics, said parental rights derive both from the special intimate relationship they have with their child and from their primary obligations to care for their own children. Interfering with their conscientious best efforts is akin to violating religious freedom, she said.
It is a deep violation of conscience, when, without a very serious reason, the state presents parents from fulfilling that conscientious obligation, she said.
She noted that what Charlies parents are trying to do by helping secure extraordinary treatment is not ethically required by Catholic ethics.
It would be perfectly morally acceptable should they choose to forgo seeking further treatment and take the baby off life support and allow him to pass away naturally due to the underlying disease, the professor said. But its also acceptable, on Catholic ethics, to do whatever you can to heal a person if you think that theres any chance that a treatment could have a positive effect.
She suggested that extraordinary treatment could be unethical only when there is absolutely no hope of any benefit whatsoever and the treatment is painful to the patient, or the treatment would take away important resources that are needed to help other patients who could benefit.
Moschella said there should only be legal intervention against the wishes of parents in cases when there is a clear case of abuse or neglect or some significant threat to the public order.
Neither of those situations is the case here.
Read the rest here:
Euthanasia mindset looms over disabled baby's legal fight, ethicist warns - Catholic News Agency
Posted in Euthanasia
Comments Off on Euthanasia mindset looms over disabled baby’s legal fight, ethicist warns – Catholic News Agency
Catholic Fordham University Hosts Workshops With Euthanasia Group Promoting Assisted Suicide – LifeNews.com
Posted: at 5:41 am
Catholic pro-life advocate Patty Knap works hard to raise awareness about the growing push to legalize assisted suicide in the United States.
The Catholic Church strongly opposes assisted suicide and euthanasia, as well as abortion, because they destroy precious, valuable human lives. And Knap and many other Catholics are uniting with disability rights groups, medical professionals, pro-lifers and others to stop assisted suicide from becoming law across the U.S.
So Knap said she was extremely concerned to learn that Fordham University, a Catholic school in New York state, hosted several workshops with a pro-euthanasia group during the past school year. In contrast, Knap said she could not find a single workshop at the university that presented the Catholic perspective on assisted suicide.
In a column for the National Catholic Register, Knap wrote:
According to its web site, Fordham has hosted at least four workshopsfor student creditin collaboration with the pro-euthanasia group End of Life Choices New York(EOLCNY) in justthe past year
EOLCNY is backing the Medical Aid in Dying Act [doctor-prescribed suicide] currently being pushed in New York. The law allows terminally ill patients to request medication from a doctor to kill themselves. EOLCNY is a previous affiliate of Compassion & Choices (formerly the Hemlock Society). EOLCNY became independent of Compassion & Choices that same year courtesy of a $300,000 grant from the billionaire globalist George Soross Open Society Foundations.
Knap said the New York Alliance Against Assisted Suicide, an alliance of disability rights, health care, civil rights, faith-based and patient advocacy groups, offered to give a presentation at the university, but it did not receive a response.
New York state lawmakers have been debating legislation that would legalize doctor-prescribed suicide in the state. The bill euphemistically describes the deadly procedure as medical aid in dying. It would allow doctors to prescribe a lethal dose of drugs to an adult patient with intention to commit suicide.
An analysis by the New York State Catholic Conference states the bill lacks basic safeguards to protect vulnerable patients and adequate conscience protections for health care workers.
Keep up with the latest pro-life news and information on Twitter.
Knap said she and a group of fellow advocates held an event outside Fordham last week to educate people about the bill.
Most had no idea how one-sided the euthanasia issue is being presented to students, she said. We encountered many peopleon the street who say they support the legalization of assisted suicide but have no idea what is actually in the Bill and what the real-life ramifications are.
Knap said many different groups are opposed to assisted suicide for various reasons, including doctors and nurses organizations, disability rights groups like Not Dead Yet and the Catholic-based Human Life Alliance, any one of which could provide a life-affirming perspective on the issue at Fordham.
One would think that even asecularuniversity would offer at leastone opposing viewto fourpresentations all with the same agenda, she wrote.
Society increasingly is encouraging vulnerable people to end their lives prematurely rather than receive treatment and support. Canada recently legalized assisted suicide, leading to nearly 1,000 government-condoned suicide deaths in the first year. In the United States, five states and Washington, D.C. now allow people to commit doctor-prescribed suicide. Data indicates that depression is the most common link to these suicide deaths, not physical pain.
Visit link:
Posted in Euthanasia
Comments Off on Catholic Fordham University Hosts Workshops With Euthanasia Group Promoting Assisted Suicide – LifeNews.com
Barbara Kay: Doctors who conscientiously object to providing euthanasia referrals should not be forced to do so – National Post
Posted: at 5:41 am
From June 12 to 15, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice heard legal arguments relating to conscience rights for doctors in Ontario. Five doctors and three physicians organizations want the court to declare portions of policies created by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO) a violation of doctors rights enshrined in the Charter. A decision is expected later this year.
CPSO, the respondent in the case, has stated they may suspend or sanction a doctor that refuses to participate in an assisted suicide, which they duplicitously in my opinion call medical aid in dying (MAID). Euthanasiasts prefer the euphemism because aid in dying sounds softer and gentler than kill. But the true definition of MAID is palliative care, whose future as a medical discipline has been thrown into uncertainty by the CPSOs bullish stance on assisted suicide.
The CPSOs conscience-hostile position is both unnecessary and unjust.
It is unnecessary because conscientious objection does no harm.The CPSOs concerns are based largely on invented hypotheticals about helpless patients being blocked by conscientious objectors from receiving referrals to doctors who can assist with their suicide.A practical system can easily route patient wishes without moral agency having to be exercised by the objector. Nobody presently eligible for euthanasia need suffer from some doctors exercising their conscience rights. In cases where geographic isolation and dependence on a single care-provider is a concern, there are easier and better solutions (tele-consultations, for instance) than forcing a local doctor to act against his or her conscience.
It is unjust because conscientious objection is the outward expression of many individuals core identity.The fact that this identity tends to coincide with Christian faith (a politically unpopular belief system) does not mean it should receive less respect in a democracy than a core gender identity that claims to need its own pronouns (a more politically trendy cause that presently receives near-reverential public respect).
But it is not the practical progress from A (the wish for euthanasia) to B (death) that bothers the CPSO; rather it appears the CPSO is disturbed by some members temerity in harbouring politically incorrect beliefs. We saw the same attitude in 2008 in a policy document(currently under review) issued by the CPSO on physicians conscientious objection to performing or referring for abortions.There was no shortage of doctors willing to perform abortions. Yet the documents thrust was to threaten conscientious objectors with aggressive Human Rights Commission retaliation for failing to co-operate with abortion provision or referrals.
I find it passing strange that physicians bent on practicing only the primary tenets of their noble profession whether it is facilitating healthy pregnancies and deliveries, or healing illnesses and mitigating suffering should endure shunning within their professional organization merely for holding to the originalist criterion of their vocation.
If the CPSO were a country, it would be Sweden.
Ellinor Grimmark is a Swedish midwife and devout Christian who was professionally blacklisted in Sweden for her pro-life beliefs. She had taken up her vocation in order to deliver and provide after-care for mothers, and assumed she had the right to a conscience carve-out (as a few other doctors and midwives had before her). In the birth wards where Grimmark worked, only one per cent of pregnancies, all late-term, ended in abortion and those were pre-planned. Moreover, Sweden is drastically short of midwives. So her assumption would seem to have been well-founded.
But Swedens infamously rigid opinion corridor is becoming more and more punitive of dissenters from what is considered correct thought. In the final term of her studies, when she made her conscientious objections to abortion clear, Grimmark was denied the right to practice. One hospital supervisor furiously demanded, How could you even think of becoming a midwife with these opinions? Elsewhere, she was offered counselling to overcome her views. In January, a TV segment framed Grimmark as emblematic of a global wave of oppression against women.
Grimmark was forced to accept a position in neighbouring Norway, where objectors are accommodated (this involved a four hours commute each way; eventually she and her husband moved there, where she has delivered over 200 babies). Grimmark sued her countyand claimed damages for violation of the European Convention on Human Rights, which has been Swedish law since 1995. She lost her case, but will now appeal it to the European Court of Human Rights, which cannot overrule Swedens courts, but can order a compensation payment.
Norway and Denmark manage to deliver abortion services to all who require it without abrogating conscience rights. According to Grimmark, weve had mothers dying (in Sweden) because they didnt have midwives. Its crazy. Shes right.
Puritanism has been defined as the haunting fear that someone, somewhere may be happy. The CPSO knows there is no shortage of abortionists and euthanasists. They are beset by the haunting irritation that some doctors somewhere harbour politically incorrect opinions. The CPSO is locked into its very own windowless, anti-democratic opinion corridor. Lets hope our courts have the wisdom to emulate the Norwegian model of conscience accommodation, rather than the Swedish one.
National Post kaybarb@gmail.com
More:
Posted in Euthanasia
Comments Off on Barbara Kay: Doctors who conscientiously object to providing euthanasia referrals should not be forced to do so – National Post
Animal shelter holds town hall to reduce euthanasia – Savannah Morning News
Posted: June 21, 2017 at 4:44 am
Calling all pet lovers.
The Effingham County animal shelter is holding a town hall meeting to discuss the possibility of working with two nonprofit groups to lower euthanasia rates.
The meeting will be at 6 p.m. Monday, June 26, in the large conference room of the county Administration Building, at 601 N. Laurel St., Springfield.
Target Zero works on best practices to help shelters lower euthanasia rates and Fix Georgia Pets helps find grants to make spay and neuter affordable.
Effingham shelter director Lorna Shelton said the groups can help with trap-neuter-release programs for cats that live on their own in the community.
Shelton has been working to try to reduce euthanasia rates at the Effingham shelter. She said she hopes people will read about the two groups on the web and come to the meeting.
This is the time for citizens to educate themselves and ask questions, Shelton said.
Target Zero helps shelters by assessing their needs and giving advice on how to decrease intake and increase live-release rates.
Organizational and fundraising assistance is included.
We serve as the business strategy consultant in all areas of shelter management, with the number one goal being to keep animals out of shelters, the groups website says.
Efforts are made to help pet owners either keep their pets or place them outside the shelter system with foster volunteers. Shelter space should be reserved for those animals with no alternative placement, cruelty/neglect cases, dangerous dogs and injured animals with no identified owner, the group says.
Target Zero helps shelters maintain accurate data. Progress is analyzed monthly.
We define a community as being at zero if it demonstrates the ability to save 90 percent or more of cats and dogs that enter its shelters, the website says.
The remaining 10 percent or less are accounted for by animals which, regardless of medical treatment, will die from illness and/or large dogs with non-rehabilitative aggression issues.
Target Zero operates on donations; no taxpayer money is involved.
For more information go to: http://www.target-zero.org and https://fixgeorgiapets.org.
Link:
Animal shelter holds town hall to reduce euthanasia - Savannah Morning News
Posted in Euthanasia
Comments Off on Animal shelter holds town hall to reduce euthanasia – Savannah Morning News