Posted on 10/18/2002, 9:37:48 PM by G. Stolyarov II
MR. EDMUND DALEFORD: The Case for Euthanasia: Opening Arguments:
This nation philosophically rests upon the principle of individual rights. Rights, in a nutshell, are negative obligations. One's right to life implies that other entities cannot intervene with one's attempts to live and to live better. It does not imply an obligation on the part of society or private individuals to keep one alive at their expense, nor does it endow society with the authority to dictate the means by which the pursuit of one's life can be undertaken. In essence this grants the individual sole ownership of his life and destiny, ownership implying the ability to dispose of it as he deems fit.
In a normal and prosperous state of things, the rational man will select to build up his material resources and intellectual prowess in order to rise to a higher plane of existence. However, circumstances may affect him which permanently bar him from such pursuits. Thomas A. Bowden, a Baltimore lawyer and senior writer for the Ayn Rand Institute, presents such an example. "But what if happiness becomes impossible to attain? What if a dread disease, or some other calamity, drains all joy from life, leaving only misery and suffering? The right to life includes and implies the right to commit suicide. To hold otherwise-- to declare that society must give you permission to kill yourself-- is to contradict the right to life at its root. If you have a duty to live, despite your better judgment, then your life does not belong to you; you live by permission, not by right." A man whom an accident permanently disables, who cannot pursue his career, who cannot live within his income, who is spiraling down toward wretched poverty, is forever confined to a miserly existence because his former cognitive and physical capacities had been deprived from him. He has lost all paths toward happiness (confined by his pain), toward liberty (confined by his ailment), and ultimately toward a life proper to man. This man should have the choice to terminate his life rather than face its horrific and irreversible extrapolation.
Derived from his right of free association is the ability to contact a willing physician for the purpose of administering into his system the swiftest and least gruesome means of alleviating his suffering. No man is obliged to perform this service, but a truly free market system should permit it by the following logic. "The customer wants it. The supplier is paid for it. It is therefore a consensual value trade, within the decision-making range of conscientious, rational adults."
The alternative to permitting physician-assisted suicide is the frequently recurring scenario of bloody and torturous individual suicides. Writes Mr. Bowden, "On August 20, 1961, a Nobel Prize-winning physicist shot himself dead, leaving behind a suicide note whose poignant message reminds us of a truth that our society, thirty-five years later, still has not squarely faced. Dr. Percy Bridgman, who was 79 years old, had been suffering through the final stages of terminal cancer. Wracked with pain and bereft of hope, he sought a way to end his life with dignity. But then, as now, it was illegal for a doctor to administer drugs intended to hasten death. So Dr. Bridgman got a gun, and somehow he found the courage to pull the trigger, conscious of the fact that he was condemning others to the agony of discovering his bloody remains." That suicide in itself is prohibited by law (as it should not be) is impertinent to the matter at hand. Just as in the case of highly injurious illegal abortions fifty years ago or the underground drug cliques resorting to violent criminal measures due to the prohibitive ban on their commodities, so will suicides continue illegally, imposing severe burdens upon not merely the concerned individual, but on his relatives and acquaintances who will be left with his remnants to dispose of while constantly watching out for the vigilance of the law, from which they are more likely to receive negligence prosecution rather than sympathy on a personal level and non-intervention on the political.
Moreover, the sole basis for the current abolition of euthanasia stems from one of two sources: religious imposition or statist collectivism. Mr. Bowden states, "Religious conservatives, by contrast, reject the whole idea of individual rights, asserting that your life is a gift from God and that you are put on earth to fulfill a divine plan. Not surprisingly, therefore, conservatives shrink in revulsion from the very idea of assisted suicide. According to them, one who decides to 'play God' by causing his own death, or assisting in the death of another, insults his Maker and invites eternal damnation." Any attempt to force a religious viewpoint upon a man through the authority of law violates the essential doctrine of freedom of religion, which separates America from the rotten Islamic theocracies of Iran, Saudi Arabia, and the recently extinguished Taliban in Afghanistan. Conservatives have the choice not to commit suicide, not to request a physician's services in that regard, and instead apply for their hospital to retain them alive for the longest possible period. They have the choice to follow their religion. Their desire to live, whatever foundations it stems from, is one that finds resonance within my conscience even, despite the fact that I am an atheist. I would never commit suicide, and I would likely attempt to dissuade others inclined toward it. But I would never dream of pointing a gun to their heads (that is essentially what the coercive authority of law implies, threatening the target to do as the government pleases, or else detrimental consequences will follow) and demanding that they refrain from killing themselves... or else. Religious conservatives must understand that their right of free religion does not imply the right to forcefully convert the "suicidal infidel".
Lastly, there are numerous liberals who will oppose assisted suicide on the grounds that the man willing to surrender his own life is a valuable resource for society, the marketplace, or the community. They will urge a "weighing of interests" to decide, essentially, whether the man's life is worth living. If they happen to arrive at the latter conclusion, then away will go all pretense at their support for free choice and individual control over the state of their organisms. The individual will be forced to live against his best judgment because someone else's need binds him here on this world.
To reject both theocracy and statism and to consistently endorse human rights this country needs to legalize assisted suicide and grant both patients and doctors the economic and ideological freedom they rightly deserve.
MR. G. STOLYAROV II: The Case Against Euthanasia: Opening Arguments:
Life is the ultimate and absolute basis for all values. It is only the condition of life that makes the concept of "value" possible. If one is deceased in a coffin, one cannot espouse an ideological standpoint, nor engage in self-ameliorating activities, nor partake in one's hobbies and pastimes. Even the depraved mystics who argue for the worthlessness of life on Earth, for a transcendent nominal universe, for the need of government protectionism, nevertheless require their existences here on Earth as a prerequisite for the ability to propagate such thoughts. Moreover, they require humanly sentience to be able to formulate their doctrines, and are unable to express any ideas whatsoever on the level of unthinking, arbitrarily pre-programmed, and oblivious animals whose conditions they so extol. The above two axiomatic propositions, the absolute value of life and the inseparably human characteristic of reason as a means for its attainment, are therefore the foundations of all morality.
To claim that suicide, or the deprivation of life, can ever be a genuine value is to contradict reality and to pursue non-existence while still existing, to pursue two irreconcilable antitheses simultaneously. Death can bring happiness, one might say? What happiness can an entity experience, what of anything can an entity experience that no longer retains its status as an entity? A lack of life implies the inability to value. A man who has committed suicide cannot hold any mental states or pursuit, nor can he claim the satisfaction which had supposedly led him to commit the act in the first place. Death is the ultimate state of non-value, which can never be justified through rational, moral means. Because a man requires reason to live (and to perform any activities whatsoever), an act on the death premise is the ultimate repudiation of rationality within the particular suicidal individual.
Not merely does the suicidist seek to eat his cake and have it too, but, by becoming a pursuer of euthanasia, he perverts the integrity of the free market by introducing a coercive element into it. What is the initiation of force, one may ask? It is an arbitrary, subjective, coercive imposition in defiance of reality, effectively barring rational pursuits by inflicting pain upon those who undertake them while leaving inherently destructive irrational pursuits as the only alternative for the victim. It is a double bind of death, and it is instituted via the defiance of objective reality, by temporarily rewarding the aggressor with some manner of service from the victim in return for the inexorable eventual demise of both for having deviated from rationality, which is the sole means of consistently maintaining life. The physician who assists in suicide participates in such a coercive imposition, for the reason that he is rewarded with the suicidist's money for having performed an act contrary to all value and, hence, to the only pathway to reality having been available to the individual thus destroyed. This is identical to the plunderer who robs an industrialist and then briefly flourishes from the automobiles that he did not manufacture, effectively defying reality by an arbitrary and subjective confiscation. Neither of the two trade value for value. Instead, they receive value for non-value, a supplement to their lives in exchange for another's death, and could thus rightly be dubbed parasites.
The parasite does not survive for a significantly protracted period of time beyond the life of his prey. As soon as he finishes pillaging his victim, he possesses no other means of sustenance and must search for fresh deaths to cause and fresh non-values to foster. Thus, a euthanasia doctor (a Death Doctor), instead of earning money by ameliorating or curing his clients, will earn it by killing them, and the amount he earns will be in proportion to the clients he robs of their lives. In a coercion-free, laissez-faire capitalist system, the blending of force with economics is barred, and money is therefore earned by physicians through the rendering of services beneficial to doctors and patients alike. Doctors tend to maximize the swiftness of their cures, the civility of their relationships, and the technological finesse of their facilities in order to maximize profit in a scheme purely compatible with reality. In a laissez-faire system, the sole purpose of government is to prevent or punish the imposition of force, i.e. to counter parasitism and thereby foster a purely rational economic system. However, should reality be defied through the legalization of euthanasia, of money-making murder, then certain doctors will employ it to, in their irrationality, earn something for nothing, to earn life for death (as the sole purpose of such legalization will be to permit them to do so). In order to maximize profit, those depraved creatures will seek to kill their patients in the most efficient way possible, and because they earn money for the killing, they will frequently persuade their patients to commit suicide even absent the case of a terminal illness or irreversible disability. Death rates will soar, as will the inpouring of cash for Death Doctors, which will result in ever more dramatic escalations of hospitalized killing for ever more trivial purposes. Only when the amount of patients available for killing, i.e. all of humanity, will expire, will the parasites perish themselves. Additionally, it is a fundamentally flawed conception that there exist lives which are "not worth living". No matter what the degree of a person's disability, he is still capable of performing certain elementary as well as complex actions (depending on the nature of the particular disability). A man who had been blinded can still sing in a choir. A man who is mute can still write treatises. A man who is both can still perform athletic feats such as sit-ups or push-ups which do not require extensive spatial orientation. Or he can specialize in the reading of Braille texts. Every human being possesses certain limitations of ability due to the choices he had earlier devised as well as certain both advantageous and unfortunate circumstances that had affected him during his life. This does not in any manner bar him from accessing all categories of life, nor does it stifle all aspirations for greatness and extraordinariness. Even a terminally ill man still, until the time of his death, has values open to him. He is able to engage in discourse, spend valuable time with friends and family, pursue his milder hobbies, and even create lasting intellectual products, such as essays, poems, musical compositions, or even his own will. Because he is aware of the fact that his pursuit of values is temporally limited by his physical condition, instead of committing suicide he should on the contrary live his last days to the fullest, furnishing an inextinguishable legacy and self-amelioration to the maximum extend of his capacities. Moreover, he should strive to prolong his existence, and, thus, his pursuit of values, for as great a time as possible. He should pay for the most advanced life support systems and containment drugs, for money outside his own life needs possess no value to him. (Money is but a means to self-amelioration.) He should, with all the efforts of his mind and body, combat the menace within and aim toward a cure to his ailment. Values are still open to him, even when he lies unconscious, his lungs' functionality maintained by a respirator. He lives, after all, and he has chosen with his rational faculty to uphold the essential health of his organs and thus paid his hospital to imbue his lungs with life. The value he receives is the consequence of such a decision, his existence.
The calculus that one would wish to die in order to "not burden his loved ones" is but another example of the sacrificial altruism/collectivism of the death premise. A rational man will prioritize his values in the following manner: his own life, then that of the people from whom he derives friendship, comfort, assistance, and pleasure. Therefore, all of the financial resources that are legitimately his should rationally be devoted to prolonging his own life and pursuit of values. To love one's family is a virtue; both parties receive material and emotional commodities from the relationship. To sacrifice to one's family is a vice; one surrenders one's own existence, prosperity, and integrity to receive nothing in return from those one supposedly "loves". One transforms his family into parasites, who, in one's eyes, require one's death to achieve a transitory financial alleviation. It is a service to the death premise on both sides. If, say, one of my parents or grandparents had chosen to apply to a physician for their destruction, I would condemn them for warping me into a plunderer of man's most precious commodity against my consent. Moreover, I would feel gravely insulted at their thoughts that my sole possible means of survival entail the consumption of the corpses of my family.
If we accept the contrary premise, that "some lives are not worth living", then so-called "voluntary euthanasia" (as I had explained, no such concept exists in reality, because any form of assisted suicide is an inherently coercive practice), the murder of a patient with the latter's consent, will not be the extent of Death Doctors' practices. Every statistical figure within boundaries that have legalized euthanasia testifies in support of such a conclusion. Wesley J. Smith, anti-euthanasia activist, attorney for the Task Force on Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide, and author of the book, Culture of Death: The Assault on Medical Ethics in America, reveals a frightening scenario currently in place within the very borders of the United States. "Oregon has legalized assisted suicide where studies show that most who swallow prescribed poison do so in order not to 'burden' their families. Meanwhile, beneath the media's radar, 'futile care' protocols are being quietly implemented in hospitals across the country that arrogantly give doctors and ethics committees the right to refuse unwanted life-extending treatment unilaterally if the doctor believes the patient's quality of life is insufficient to justify the cost of care. At the same time, cognitively disabled patients-- both conscious and unconscious-- are made to die slow deaths by dehydration in all 50 states by having their tube-supplied food and water withheld or withdrawn on the basis that their lives are no longer worth living. In such a cultural milieu, is it really surprising that some medical professionals would take the extra step of 'mercy' killing dying, elderly, and disabled patients or that a few evil psychopaths would use 'compassion' as a front for the fulfillment of their homicidal obsessions?" Any time a man acquires the perception that his own life is not worth living, he commits the immoral deed of destroying himself. However, the more destructive mindset is within the healthy, middle-aged, fully capacitated man who assumes such a mindset in regard to the lives of "some others". This creates an inherent distinction between his standing and that of another man, it places him, whose life is "worth living" in the position to dispose of the lives of others and impose destructive force upon them. Such a mentality subverts the doctrine that man must place no authority above his own rational mind, that the disabled or the terminally ill ultimately have only the fruits of their own syntheses and deliberations to rely upon. It places those people in subjugation to the entrenched elites of leftist academia who scoff at the notion of equal human rights and an inherent distinction between a human being (who cannot be assailed or violated unless he is the initiator of force) and an animal (whose exploitation as a resource is acceptable, as he is not a being of volitional consciousness). This new breed of bioethicists ultimately seeks to bring about a scheme for social engineering, coupled with government-controlled managed care and medical resources. The patients who can afford in a laissez-faire environment to sustain themselves from their own pocketbooks, but whose lives are too costly under a rationing environment will be euthanized to "alleviate financial burdens" the State. It is not collectivism which holds a man back from suicide, as Mr. Daleford claims. It is collectivism, instead, which fuels the assisted suicide movement by having regulated health care in the first place, now seeking a rationale for rationing which they do not possess under a calculus which recognizes the absolutism of individual life. Let us examine another instance of legalized euthanasia so extensively lauded by its proponents. Mr. Smith writes on the matter, "We need only look to the Netherlands for proof that widespread acceptance of the culture of death leads inexorably to non-voluntary euthanasia. The Netherlands has permitted doctors to kill patients who volunteer to die since a court decision essentially decriminalized the practice in 1973. Since then, Dutch doctors have skied down the steepest of slippery slopes, normalizing medicalized killing in the process. Today, Dutch doctors lethally inject dying people who ask for it; chronically ill people who ask for it; disabled people who ask for it; depressed people who ask for it; and disabled babies whose parents ask for it." Early advocates of "death with dignity" had merely asserted that a terminally ill patient should possess the ability to hasten his already inevitable demise via a physician. While this is a horrendous suggestion, what occurs in the status quo is far more disturbing. With the legalization of any assisted suicide, the scope of eligible victims shall inevitably broaden. The most alarming of these instances is the murder of already born infants with nothing but their parents' consent as the sanction. Now, my stance concerning the illegitimacy of abortion is known, due to considerations of futuristic certainty in the development of the fetus's volitional consciousness. Here, however, not mere futuristic certainty, but consciousness already existent from the moment of birth, is being eradicated from the caprice of parents who, only in the most primeval of societies, hold the power of life or death over their progeny. The legalistic positivist will argue that children are yet incompetent to fully manage their lives, and therefore the law assures parental guardianship and supremacy over them until a certain age. While this is true and proper, such guardianship is strictly limited in scope and must prescribe to the same Hippocratic Counsel that Death Doctors have systematically violated, "First, do no harm". The parents, entering into a value-exchange with their children, are obliged to exercise rationality to ensure life, not death for young ones who may yet not have fully developed to assure such conditions through full independence, but for whom the latter is a necessary goal. Any interpretation to the contrary would legitimize the termination of sixteen-year-olds, still technically susceptible to parental guardianship, on grounds no less fallible than are the arbitrary whims of their custodians.Let us examine another instance of legalized euthanasia so extensively lauded by its proponents. Mr. Smith writes on the matter, "We need only look to the Netherlands for proof that widespread acceptance of the culture of death leads inexorably to non-voluntary euthanasia. The Netherlands has permitted doctors to kill patients who volunteer to die since a court decision essentially decriminalized the practice in 1973. Since then, Dutch doctors have skied down the steepest of slippery slopes, normalizing medicalized killing in the process. Today, Dutch doctors lethally inject dying people who ask for it; chronically ill people who ask for it; disabled people who ask for it; depressed people who ask for it; and disabled babies whose parents ask for it." Early advocates of "death with dignity" had merely asserted that a terminally ill patient should possess the ability to hasten his already inevitable demise via a physician. While this is a horrendous suggestion, what occurs in the status quo is far more disturbing. With the legalization of any assisted suicide, the scope of eligible victims shall inevitably broaden. The most alarming of these instances is the murder of already born infants with nothing but their parents' consent as the sanction. Now, my stance concerning the illegitimacy of abortion is known, due to considerations of futuristic certainty in the development of the fetus's volitional consciousness. Here, however, not mere futuristic certainty, but consciousness already existent from the moment of birth, is being eradicated from the caprice of parents who, only in the most primeval of societies, hold the power of life or death over their progeny. The legalistic positivist will argue that children are yet incompetent to fully manage their lives, and therefore the law assures parental guardianship and supremacy over them until a certain age. While this is true and proper, such guardianship is strictly limited in scope and must prescribe to the same Hippocratic Counsel that Death Doctors have systematically violated, "First, do no harm". The parents, entering into a value-exchange with their children, are obliged to exercise rationality to ensure life, not death for young ones who may yet not have fully developed to assure such conditions through full independence, but for whom the latter is a necessary goal. Any interpretation to the contrary would legitimize the termination of sixteen-year-olds, still technically susceptible to parental guardianship, on grounds no less fallible than are the arbitrary whims of their custodians.
Moreover, physicians have taken the dreadful next step in the Netherlands to euthanize fully conscious adults against their consent. According to Terence Monmaney, Medical Writer for the Los Angeles Times, "Chris Rutenfrans, a criminologist in the Department of Justice in The Hague, said that their analysis shows that nearly half of all doctor-assisted deaths in the Netherlands in 1995 (2844 out of 6368) were not voluntary. 'In too many cases,' he said, 'it is the physician who decides.'" So much for "do no harm" and the purely consensual relations of laissez-faire capitalism. Both go down the drain along with the blood of euthanized corpses in any society which sanctions murder and protects the murderers.
So, as a result, not merely is suicide objectively and metaphysically immoral, but a decision to seek assistance in the commission thereof will inevitably reflect upon other others in the form of imposed suicide, murder, as death becomes profitable and life no longer remains so. This is the hallmark of a feudal, statist, collectivist society, not an individualist one in which coercion is banned and only free mutually beneficial economic exchanges are "let alone". I must emphasize that, like Mr. Daleford, I am an atheist and I do not believe in the imposition of religious beliefs upon men living in a free, Constitutional country. However, I dare say Mr. Daleford is mistaken in assuming that the only pro-lifers are religionists or need-calculus liberals. I am a secular Objectivist conservative, and I condemn suicide as incompatible with the fundamental individual right to life. A "right to die" implies a right to have someone kill you, which that someone can easily and logically (under such a premise) transform into their right to kill you, whether or not you choose to allow it them. Again, this is because any suicidal inclination holds within it the delusion that the victim is undeserving of life. This automatically subordinates him to society or to any tainted creature who profanes the good name of "doctor", and such entities may do with him as they please.
In order to defend the sanctity of human life and the individual rights therefrom derived, it is essential that the law retain its rightful purpose of enforcing only peaceful value-trading and prosecuting the initiation of force that is euthanasia.
Interactive Discourse: MR. DALEFORD: I shall begin with a question to you, Mr. Stolyarov. You may recall my example of Dr. Bridgman's gruesome suicide as the consequence of the law's prohibition of euthanasia. What disgusting sights that must have yielded the man's relatives and friends! What trauma they must have undergone in transforming his condition from that of a bloodied corpse to that of a properly buried man! Is that not a coercive imposition on their welfares and a source of suffering for them due to the fact that the law did not allow Dr. Bridgman the ability to die tranquilly?
MR. STOLYAROV: You are correct in stating that this act was a coercive imposition upon his loved ones. Any suicide is. Only here they were forced to clean up his remnants and experience mind-wrecking distress, and in the event that Dr. Bridgman were euthanized, they would be branded with the status of parasites, thriving from his death. Both cases are a result of Dr. Bridgman's deviation from the facts of reality, which prescribe for every man not merely a course of action (reason), but also its purpose (life). You may recall my essay, "An Objectivist Condemnation of Abortion", in which a similar double bind of death was demonstrated. Either the mothers who sought to murder the children within them performed underground pregnancy terminations which rendered them susceptible to infection, puncture, and loss of blood, or the law did it for them, neatly, cleanly, tidily, but still murdering an innocent human being. Any time that the absolutism of life is denied (as is the case in terms of suicide by definition), death and force are the only logical consequences.
MR. DALEFORD: But in asserting that you are essentially dictating that men must abide by your preference that they live. Do you not by that rob them of mastery over their own lives?
MR. STOLYAROV: By no means. Life does not belong to God or to society. It belongs to the individual. However, the individual possesses no right to violate the rights of others. In committing suicide within a home that one shares with his relatives, one is violating the relatives' right of free association. (No one honestly would wish to clean up blown-out brains or a pool of blood, and in this case, the suicidist is no longer capable of paying for the "service".) In the case of euthanasia, the doctor is violating the patient's right to life (by defying the Hippocratic Counsel), and so is the patient's family forced to violate his rights (by parasitically thriving on his death). Moreover, the family's right to liberty is being violated, since each individual relative of the suicidist no longer possesses the authority to preclude the breach of integrity which has transformed him into a parasite. Suicide is not a demonstration of self-ownership, but rather one of anti-selfish destruction.
MR. DALEFORD: But by that sam
G. Stolyarov II is a science fiction novelist, independent philosophical Right, writer for Objective Medicine, and Editor-in-Chief of The Rational Argumentator. He can be contacted at gennadystolyarovii@yahoo.com.
Jane Curtain - No you idiot. That is euthanaisa - mercy killing
Gilda Radner - Never mind.
(or something to that effect)
Anyone want to argue with this statement?
I'm not sure I understand you. The author I quoted said that making euthanasia illegal stems from either religious idiocy or statist nonsense. I agree wholeheartedly with your sentiment; I as well am profoundly selfish when it comes to avoiding lengthy and unnecessary pain. However, arguments against voluntary euthanasia invariably fall into one of the above traps. Either the magic man in the sky disapproves of it, or the magic man on the ground with the cops and the guns does. In fact, neither of those magic man should have sh*t to say about it. My life, my death, my decision.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.