Saturday, July 30, 2011

Compassion and Caring Got It Wrong

Compassion and Caring is the new name of the old Hemlock Society. They advocate and lobby for laws permitting assisted suicide.

Dustin Hankinson recently wrote:

The Death with Dignity law sets out a detailed process under which only terminally ill patients, meaning those with a diagnosis of less than six months to live, qualify. Furthermore, those individuals must be deemed mentally and psychologically competent by two separate physicians.
There is no room for error or slope-slipping, as it is the patient who has to pursue this option for themselves.

I posted a response to this article suggesting that Mr. Hankinson check the recent history of the Netherlands and Oregon. Supposed safeguards in the law have not prevented involuntary euthanasia from happening. Perfectly healthy people who were depressed were given the medical means to murder themselves.

The slippery slope is very much a real danger.  

Thursday, July 28, 2011

God Bless the Bishop

Bischop von Galen
I would like to honor Catholic Bishop Clemens August Graf von Galen.  The good bishop had the courage to speak out against the Nazi's murder of the handicapped and disabled through the Akton T-4 program. May God raise up more men and women like him.

Deadly Down Syndrome

At the conclusion of World War II a serious of legal trials were held in Germany. Certain members of the Nazi party were charged with crimes against humanity. The defendants were active participants in government sanctioned genocide of Jews, the mentally ill, and other humans the Nazi's deemed as undeserving of life. Part of Nazi society included a program referred to as Akton T-4. Under this program the mentally disabled, and handicapped were systematically rounded up and murdered. People at the time were aghast to learn of this sanctioned program.

Today there is a new genocide that may be eagerly recommended to expecting parents. This genocide is against unborn children diagnosed with Down Syndrome. Doctors are able to run tests that are supposed to predict the likelihood of babies being born with Down Syndrome. According to the website Disaboom.com it is estimated that 80% of mothers who are told of the strong possibility of delivering a Down Syndrome baby will opt to kill the child through abortion.

The rationale for all of this is apparently a desire to not raise a less than perfect child who may require more than normal care. A study conducted in 2000 found that 25% of doctors who explained prenatal test results indicating the possiblity of Down Syndrome delivered the news with a negative spin or actively encouraged parents to murder the child through abortion. This is ethnic cleansing at its finest. It is also evidence that the eugenic movement did not end with the defeat of the Nazis. This eugenic mindset is not found behind the banner of a swastika. Rather, it is more subtle and as a result dangerous.

America has quickly joined Cambodia with killing fields of our own. Our killing fields are not managed by Khmer Rouge cadres, but rather medical professionals who most of us look to as the protectors of life.

Friday, July 1, 2011

Compassionate Murder

Slogans are Not Logical Arguments!

The longer I live the more convinced I become that pro-death advocates are incapable of making or following a logical argument. These advocates, among others, have taken to using sloganeering in place of marshaling arguments. Buzzwords have now replaced the syllogism. The benefits of buzzword sloganeering is that it requires little to no thought to produce a response in most readers.

The most misused buzzword by euthanasia advocates is compassion. Compassion conjures up images of care, love, and sympathy. The rub is when it is used to describe the act of murdering someone and ending his/her life prematurely. I can't recall a time when the concept of murder has ever been considered compassionate. Our laws require that murders be punished, but not lauded as loving or kind.

People may grow tired of reading me call euthanasia murder, but that is exactly what it is. Compassion, mercy, and care have little to do with the rightness or wrongness of this practice. It has always been and always will be a immoral action regardless of the volume of slogans used to justify it.

HHH