Sunday, November 12, 2023

"Completed Life" debate in the Netherlands. Assisted suicide based on being 75

This article was published by National Review online on November 10, 2023.

Wesley Smith
By Wesley J Smith

Once a society embraces killing as an answer to suffering, the “suffering” that qualifies for termination never stops expanding.

The Dutch have decades of experience with this. Since lethal-injection euthanasia became decriminalized — and then, formally legalized — the killable caste has expanded from the terminally ill, to the chronically ill, to people with disabilities, to babies born with serious medical conditions, to the mentally ill, etc., etc., etc. And, as a plum to society — and an inducement to be killed — euthanasia is sometimes conjoined with organ harvesting.

The normalization of medical homicide corrupts people’s thinking, which explains why huge majorities in a Dutch poll now support allowing euthanasia for a “completed life.” From the NL Times story:
Voters are much more progressive about the D66 bill to allow assisted suicide for people who feel their life is complete than the political parties themselves. A massive 80 percent of voters believe that people should be able to get help in dying when they feel they’ve come to the end of their life, Trouw reports based on a Kieskompas poll of almost 200,000 people.

Only 10 percent of respondents disagreed with the statement that people who consider their lives complete should be able to end their lives with professional help. The other 10 percent of voters had no opinion on the matter.
The first focus of this idea are the elderly:
The bill would allow people over 75 to decide when to die with professional help if they feel they’ve reached the end of a completed life. Added to the bill is a six-month process in which they have to meet with an “end-of-life counselor” at least three times.
Note well that the concept of the “completed life” need not involve any physical illness, disabling condition, or psychiatric malady at all. It could include loneliness, boredom, fear of future widowhood — joint-euthanasia killings of ill spouses are allowed in the Netherlands (also Belgium and Canada), death of an adult child, you name it. In other words, “completed life” euthanasia would allow the healthy elderly to be terminated.

And why should eligibility be age-directed? Once the concept of the “completed life” is accepted, why not open the death option to younger people? Indeed, doesn’t every suicidal person believe their life is completed? In theory, there is no limiting principle.

Euthanasia corrupts public morality and the human conscience. The same progression into the culture of death will happen here if we don’t resist the siren song of “death with dignity.” It’s only logical.

Those with eyes to see, let them see.

4 comments:

  1. In Canada people who contemplate a ‘completed life’ need not go for three, or any sessions of counselling.
    Doctors who agree to administer MAID can offer it to anyone, even if they have not requested it.
    I know of two such instances, where the persons turned down the offer. I was told by a doctor in the small town in BC where I live, that we are the euthanasia capital of BC.
    St. Augustine said, “Without God, what are we but a guide to our own destruction.”

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  2. I actually feel like I’m going to vomit! This is a disgusting way to treat our senior citizens. What happened to the belief that life is precious ? What happened to valuing those with life experience and listening and learning from them? We should be doing everything we can to make their lives good. We are a doomed society if we don’t change course immediately. Will this then lead to forced euthanasia just because we have reached the age of 75? It both disgusts and terrifies me.

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  3. I fear that this is the prelude to "encouraging " and then mandating death of seniors as an answer to the rising costs of pensions/Social Security and
    the medical costs that come with age. A full on dystopian society is near. Once we think of humans as merely "smart meat" - meat is what we will become.

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  4. These words of St. Augustine are most relevant for today. May God our Creator, give us the courage and strenght we need to say No, to what we believe, is morally wrong.

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