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Sunday, June 21, 2009, 1:39 AM
Wesley J. Smith

It’s about time: Other than the disability rights movement and Nat Hentoff, it seems to me that the Left has been not only supine in the face of the oncoming “duty to die,” but its enablers.  Maybe the worm is beginning to turn. Mickey Kaus at Slate believes–silly man—that he should have a right to live.  From his blog:

I want to make the decision to cut off treatment, not have it made by a cost-watching health board. Choice! The resonance with the abortion debate seems obvious. … Both are life/death decisions. Are they both best handled by individuals and their families in consultation with their doctors? You’d think the case for “choice” at the end of life might be stronger, since the life at stake is likely to be able to participate in making that choice. …

Update: Prof. Althouse distinguishes this kind of choice from “right to die” cases. “It’s one thing to deny the choice to die, quite another to deny the choice to live.”

Health care rationing and Futile Care Theory about taking away that very choice. As the post points out if someone doesn’t want life-sustaining treatment, more power to them. But utilitarian bioethics boards shouldn’t be able to force that “choice” upon us.

I have always believed the medical futility debate is extremely winnable because for once the “choice” soundbite cuts against the culture of death.

2 Comments

    SafePres
    June 21st, 2009 | 3:04 am

    “Mickey Kaus at Slate believes–silly man—that he should have a right to live.” Well, whatever gave him an idea like that? :D

    Ralph Davis
    June 21st, 2009 | 9:59 pm

    Consent? No problem. The technique is century’s old.

    MD: You’re costing your family $1000 a day in pain and suffering and there’s no hope of recovery. You will slowly degrade into a nonhuman and your family will watch each step of the way. They can’t move on until you move on. I’m telling you this in private because you love your family, you would not want to burden them, and you still have your dignity. But it’s your choice. As your MD, the new euthanasia law requires me to give you this choice and provide you with a quick and painless for everyone way out.

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