Critical Issues
CRITICAL
ISSUES:
VOLUME
I,
ISSUE
1
Killing as Caring
The False Charity of Euthanasia
When Dr. Jack Kevorkian was constructing the suicide machine that would
help Janet Adkins kill herself in 1990, he gave it a name which he
thought described its function: the mercitron. It seems a
strange name for a machine which manufactures death; but Kevorkian isn't
the only one to use the name "mercy" to describe his trade. The popular
term for physicians helping terminally ill patients to commit suicide is
"mercy-killing." And there seems to be widespread consensus that when
doctors assist some patients with suicide, they are doing a
compassionate work. It's a new consensus detected by pollsters:
According to a 1991 Roper poll surveying people in California, Oregon,
and Washington, 60 percent say the law should be changed so doctors can
legally help patients with suicide. And whereas 15 years ago, 53 percent
of Americans said that suicide was always wrong, that figure now hovers
at only 41 percent.[1]
But, along with the growing acceptance, even welcoming, of euthanasia
and physician-assisted suicide, have come increasingly dire warnings
about the practice from ethicists and thinkers. Such prominent names as
former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop, the late award-winning novelist
Walker Percy, and the Jewish-Christian ethical group the Ramsey
Colloquium have all explicitly warned that the new welcoming of
euthanasia is a phenomenon fraught with danger. According to all three,
the "mercy" offered by euthanasia can only be offered by those who,
logically and emotionally, hold to a conception of the human person
radically different from that of traditional medicine: the price of
accepting euthanasia's "compassion" is denying that humans have any
inherent worth apart from their productivity or utility. As Walker Percy
says, such "tenderness" leads inevitably "to the gas chamber"-to
societies in which the scope for "mercy killings" swells to include not
only the terminally ill, but those deemed socially useless as
well.[2]
This warning was perhaps most forcefully given by the Ramsey Colloquium,
a periodic gathering of prominent Jewish and Christian ethicists and
thinkers. In the wake of a November 1991 referendum in the state of
Washington to decriminalize physician-assisted suicide-a referendum that
came within 4 percentage points of victory-the group published a
"Declaration on Euthanasia" to help fight the trend towards growing
toleration of the practice. The Declaration reads in part:
...Euthanasia is contrary to our faith as Jews
and Christians, is based upon a grave moral error, does
violence to our political tradition, and undermines the
integrity of the medical profession....In relating to the
sick, the suffering, the incompetent, the disabled and the
dying, we must learn again the wisdom that teaches us always
to care and never to kill. Though it sometimes seems
compassionate, killing is never a means of
caring.[3]
For those involved in the Ramsey Colloquium, too, the "compassion"
leading to mercy-killing is the first step towards a society in which
the integrity of all life is abandoned.
Alleviating Pain
For most Americans it may still seem a long way from supporting a right
for voluntary euthanasia for the terminally ill to a society where all
respect for life is abandoned. Advocates of euthanasia, in fact, often
argue that it is precisely their deep respect for human life that allows
them to support suicide for the terminally ill. "No decent human being
would allow an animal to suffer without putting it out of its misery,"
argues renowned author Isaac Asimov in a critic's blurb for the
bestselling suicide manual Final Exit. "It is only to human
beings that human beings are so cruel as to allow them to live on in
pain, in hopelessness, in living death, without moving a muscle to help
them."
But what is the nature of this help that only supporters of euthanasia
claim to be able to give?
All doctors are bound by their Hippocratic oath-and by the nature of
their profession itself-to strive their utmost to alleviate suffering in
their patients. Advocates of euthanasia argue that in some cases, the
only remedy that can ease pain is one only they are willing to
prescribe: death. Describing his client's most recent case of assisted
suicide, Michael Schwartz, the lawyer for Dr. Jack Kevorkian, said the
doctor was simply alleviating suffering in the only way left. "This is a
case of medicine. It is a situation where the object was to alleviate
the pain and suffering for patients who wish to have that pain and
suffering put to an end."[4]
This may have provided an argument in favor of assisted suicide ten or
fifteen years ago. But medical advances in the area of pain control now
allow doctors to so completely soothe intense suffering that this
argument for accepting euthanasia has become virtually useless. Advances
in such devices as morphine drips and treated skin patches effectively
guarantee that no terminally ill patient will suffer a painful death.
According to Professor Robert Spitzer, a philosopher and authority on
medical ethics: "Such significant advances have been made in the last
two or three years by pain control experts that now it can be said with
assurance that you will almost certainly not die an agonizing death. It
can be said with assurance that total pain control may be had in the
vast majority of the diseases leading to death."[5] Dr. Cecily Saunders,
the founder of the modern hospice movement, argues that advances in pain
control management have made the euthanasia option completely
unnecessary.
Strangely enough, even advocates of physician-assisted suicide admit
that traditional medicine can eliminate virtually all pain. Derek
Humphry, author of Final Exit, amazingly concedes that doctors
can eliminate virtually all pain for those who are terminally ill:
"Certainly, modern pharmaceutical developments have provided us with
wonderful analgesics, which, with shrewd management, control terminal
pain in about 90 percent of the cases."[6] Even the most ardent
supporters of a right to physician-assisted suicide admit their campaign
is about far more than the relief of physical suffering.
If traditional medicine can now soothe the frayed nerves of the
terminally ill and calm their broken bodies, what then is the appeal of
euthanasia? Humphry gives the answer, one that should give pause to all
who hold that euthanasia is solely about the relief of physical
suffering:
[I]t is not just pain, or fear of pain, that
drives people into the arms of the euthanasia movement. It
is the symptoms of an illness, and often the side effects of
medication, that damage the quality of people's lives...[A]
person may not wish to live with throat cancer after the
tongue has been removed and the face disfigured; or...if
reading or watching television is the great comfort of life,
loss of sight is a tremendous blow if added to the knowledge
that death is impending.[7]
According to Humphry, doctors assisting in suicide are not just
relieving unbearable physical agony. More importantly, they are claiming
to end the psychic pains that often attend illness: the pain that can
beset those who lose their beauty, their hobbies, their ability to be
productive in the world.
Sources of Human Worth
In the traditional schema in which Western medicine was practiced,
doctors did not have to worry about "curing," via euthanasia or anything
else, a patient's diminishing value or worth-and that for the simple
reason that the patient's value did not diminish, no matter how ravaged
by illness or disease he or she might be. Human value, human worth, was
not a product of some utilitarian calculus, which could be measured
according to how active or talented or useful a person was. The
intrinsic worth of each person was seen to be a simple given, a fact,
inhering in that person for no other reason than that he or she was a
creature made in the image and likeness of God.
Again and again in the foundation documents of Western society, we are
brought face to face with the insistent doctrine that a person's worth
is divinely given rather than socially conferred. It is a doctrine found
both at the very beginning of the Christian and Jewish scriptures-
God created man in His image; In the divine
image He created him; male and female He created
them;
(Genesis 1:27)
-and in the document marking the establishment of what would later
become the United States of America, our Declaration of Independence:
We hold these truths to be self-evident. That
all men are created equal, endowed by their Creator with
certain unalienable rights...
It is a concept that takes on special significance for Christians. For
the follower of Christ, not only do all people have value apart from
their social function or usefulness: It is precisely those who are least
esteemed in the human community with whom Jesus identifies Himself:
For I was hungry and you gave Me food, thirsty
and you gave Me drink. I was a stranger and you welcomed Me,
naked and you clothed Me, in prison and you came to visit
Me.
(Matthew 25: 35-36)
But this valuing of persons in themselves is not exclusive to
Christians. In a speech on euthanasia, Professor Spitzer points out that
even classical philosophy recognizes that a person' s worth is not
defined by his function, but simply by his loving of the good:
For a moment we might think that we ought to
produce, that by producing our lives have meaning. "Nay!"
say the philosophers. By loving, by sensing the good, by
being good as best we can, by trying to lead others to the
good, trying to help others through the muck of life, and
above all by sensing the good in the other and bonding them
to ourselves-there we will find life's
meaning.[8]
The literature of virtually all the peoples of the world echoes the
sentiment more humbly. It rings out with exhortations at least for
hospitality, for welcoming the stranger in one's midst. Since the
stranger is one who by definition has no value within the new community,
this near-universally acknowledged precept reveals that human value is
seen as having another source.
This, then, is the political tradition to which the Ramsey Colloquium
refers, the one which euthanasia does "violence" to by its very nature.
Euthanasia depends for its very raison d'etre on the assertion
that our value can be diminished by an impairing of our ability to be
active or productive. It's an assertion that flies in the face of
thousands of years of Western tradition.
Lethal Consequences
What are the consequences of bucking the long-standing tradition that
human value is inherent in the person, not a product of functionality?
Ethicists are unanimous in predicting such a shift in values will extend
the scope of cases in which euthanasia will be seen as legitimate:
Former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop has this to say:
I am convinced that in the 1930s the German
medical sentiment favoring euthanasia (even before Hitler
came to power) made it easier for the Nazi government to
move society along the slippery slope that led to the
Holocaust. The German euthanasia movement started with
defective babies, then reached out to eliminate the insane,
then to those suffering from senile dementia, then to
patients with advanced tuberculosis, to amputees deemed of
no further service to the Reich, to gypsies, to Poles, and
finally to Jews. The Holocaust was upon us.[9]
Walker Percy similarly draws an analogy between the culture of
euthanasia and the culture that spawned Nazism:
In a word, certain consequences, perhaps
unforeseen, follow upon the acceptance of the principle of
the destruction of human life for what may appear to be the
most admirable social reasons.
One does not have to look back very far in history for an example of
such consequences. Take democratic Germany in the 1920s. Perhaps the
most influential book published in German in the first quarter of this
century was entitled The Justification of the Destruction of Life
Devoid of Value. Its co-authors were the distinguished jurist Karl
Binding and the prominent psychiatrist Alfred Hoche. Neither Binding nor
Hoche had ever heard of Hitler or the Nazis.
Nor, in all likelihood, did Hitler ever read the book. He didn't have
to. The point is that the ideas expressed in the book were the product
not of Nazi ideology but rather of the best minds of the pre-Nazi Weimar
Republic-physicians, social scientists, jurists, and the like, who with
the best secular intentions wished to improve the lot, socially and
genetically, of the German people-by getting rid of the unfit and the
unwanted....[O]nce the line is crossed, once the principle is accepted-
juridically, medically, socially-innocent human life can be destroyed
for whatever reason...[I]t is not difficult to imagine an electorate or
a court ten years, fifty years from now, who would favor getting rid of
useless old people, retarded children, antisocial blacks, illegal
Hispanics, gypsies, Jews...[10]
The language of Koop and Percy, and their analogy, are dramatic: they
see a philosophical continuum between the culture that allows euthanasia
and the culture that ultimately produced Nazi Germany. But the analogy
is not far-fetched. Even doctors and ethicists who are not vehemently
opposed to physician-assisted suicide in all cases worry that its
legalization will lead to mounting pressure on the poor or crippled to
choose it as an option-even if, left to themselves, they'd prefer life.
Nancy Dubler and David Nimmons wonder: "If a patient were poor, would
caregivers struggle so hard to control disease and pain if they had the
option to end it all [through euthanasia]?[11] And Dr. Timothy Johnson,
a medical editor for ABC News and a limited supporter of physician-
assisted suicide, states that a clear danger of increased acceptance of
euthanasia is "inappropriate pressure to terminate life for financial,
family, or societal reasons that are not consonant with the best
interest of the person..."[12]
Real World Scenarios
Those who are reluctant to accept the historical or logical arguments
for euthanasia expanding its scope need only look at current events,
particularly as they play out in the Netherlands, where euthanasia,
though technically illegal, is officially tolerated.
Right now in Holland 3 percent of all deaths are directly caused by
doctors. If that same percentage applied in the United States, deaths
caused by doctors would amount to 64,860 a year.[13] What is more,
according to a poll conducted by the Dutch government and released
September 10, 1991, Dutch physicians now are performing two-and-one-half
times more involuntary euthanasia than voluntary.[14] Involuntary
euthanasia-murder-is still illegal in Holland, and the Dutch doctors
register these deaths on death certificates as heart attacks or some
other ailment. But according to a study by the Dutch government itself,
the physicians are performing them-at two-and-a-half times the rate they
perform the tolerated voluntary euthanasia.
Were euthanasia to be tolerated in other countries as it is in Holland,
we could look for similar results. Already, pollsters have found that 90
percent of economics students support compulsory euthanasia for
unspecified groups of people to "streamline the economy."[15] And even
if such students fail in enacting laws actually mandating euthanasia, we
have seen how the pressure already exists for the weak and unwanted to
succumb. Some have already detected that pressure in action: of the
first six people Dr. Jack Kevorkian helped to commit suicide, all were
middle-aged women. Some ethicists explain this by saying that
contemporary society makes women in particular feel unwanted and
useless, subtly encouraging them to choose death. "The wording that is
used very often by these women is that they don't want to be a burden,"
says Rachel MacNair, president of Feminists for Life of America.[16]
Such reports are leading more and more ethicists to remark that the
slide down the slippery slope of assisted-suicide to active euthanasia
in Holland is just a few years away from taking place here in America.
As Professor Spitzer writes:
If this progression of events can occur in
Holland, why couldn't such a progression of events occur in
the U.S? Once physicians suddenly see there is this easy way
out, once they see there is no necessity of moving through
the unpleasantness of telling somebody that they have to
die, then why shouldn't they work to make euthanasia
mandatory?[17]
This logic is leading even now to a culture that, in its zeal to erase
suffering, will eradicate our humanity, our value, and ultimately our
capacity to love. For Professor Spitzer and for others, the prognosis is
not good:
This last scenario represents the total decline
of culture. It is the epitome of a culture that no longer
recognizes love or goodness to be the value of life. It is a
culture that values only one thing: convenience, function,
some kind of production beyond consumption. That is a crass
utilitarian culture. And that is the culture we are trying
to prevent.
Notes
[1] As reported in Ethics On Call, by Nancy Dubler and David
Nimmons. Crown Publishing, 1992, p.l67.
[2] This is the theme of Percy's last novel, The Thanatos
Syndrome, Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 1987. See especially
pp.358-362.
[3] Taken from the February, 1992 issue of Crisis magazine.
[4] "'Dr. Death' aids cancer patient with her suicide," Associated
Press, Nov. 24, 1992.
[5] "A Reason to Die: Euthanasia comes to Washington State,"
Crisis magazine, October 1991, p.21.
[6] Final Exit, Derek Humphry. Dell, 1992, p.134.
[7] Ibid., pp. 21-22.
[8] "A Reason To Die: Euthanasia Comes To Washington State," op.cit.,
p.22.
[9] Let's Talk: An Honest Conversation On Critical Issues, C.
Everett Koop and Timothy Johnson. Zondervan, 1992, p.46.
[10] Signposts in a Strange Land, Walker Percy, ed. Patrick
Samway. Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 1991. "An Unpublished Letter to the
Times," pp.350-1.
[11] Ethics On Call, op. cit., p.172.
[12] Let's Talk, op. cit., p.44.
[13] Let's Talk, op.cit., p.54.
[14] "A Reason to Die: Euthanasia Comes to Washington State," op.cit.,
p.45.
[15] "Three Choices For Death," E. Catherine Moroney. America,
November 21, 1992, p. 402.
[16] "Kevorkian draws criticism from medical ethicists," The
Washington Times, Nov. 28, 1992.
[17] "A Reason To Die," p.45.
Critical Issues provides a forum for Christians to offer social
analysis and commentary on the unfolding issues and events which face
opinion leaders. The publisher is committed to timely distribution of
thoughtful commentary to leaders in education, government, the media,
and religion. Critical Issues is a publication of Christian
Leadership Ministries, a division of Campus Crusade for Christ.
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