Since Christmas is a holiday celebrating birth, I thought I would say a few words about the opposite current in our culture: that celebration of death known to the world under the antiseptic name of “euthanasia.”
Smith recalled that he had predicted in his very first column on the subject way back in 1993 that what was then called “assisted suicide” would promptly lead to a burgeoning business in organ harvesting.
He was widely dismissed as alarmist.
But here we are.
In Canada, you don’t have to be at death’s door in order to be killed by the state. Anyone can play.
The ironically named “Trillium Gift of Life Network” in Ontario, Smith reports, doesn’t offer suicide prevention.
On the contrary, it reaches out to “the soon-to-be-killed ... to ask for their heart, liver, and kidneys.”
It’s not only Canada, of course.
The Netherlands might be the world capital of euthanasia (though China probably holds the world record for organ harvesting).
“Euthanasia” is Greek for “good death.”
Many doctors have long colluded with death by silently upping the dosage of morphine or some other sedative for terminally ill patients who no longer wish to live.
But by legalizing euthanasia, one sets foot on the road to normalizing it.
I believe that the Netherlands was the first country, in the West anyway, to officially legalize the practice.
What should we think of that decision?
I believe we should think badly of it.
It’s easy, of course, to imagine plenty of circumstances in which we would rather die than be allowed to linger.
And it’s because we can easily imagine ourselves or someone we love in a hopeless condition of unbearable pain or degeneration that we—most of us, anyway—are reluctant to be too severe about the “unofficial” euthanasia that has always been practiced.
But granting euthanasia the patent of legality is very different from tolerating a practice we know to be ethically questionable.
In the one case, we make due allowance for human frailty and the weakness of the flesh.
In the other, we arrogate to ourselves—or to a medical bureaucracy—the right to end life when it’s deemed to be inconvenient.
Almost everyone has at least an intuitive grasp of this distinction.
Even the Dutch appeared to have some qualms about the step they took in voting to legalize euthanasia.
Consider the vague and somewhat tortuous language in which they set forth the conditions under which it would be legal for a doctor to kill a patient.
Anyone can see that this list begs as many questions as it answers.
Who is to say what is “unbearable” suffering?
What counts as a “well-considered request to die?”
How can we tell if doctor and patient are “convinced” that there is “no other solution”? (Ominous word, “solution.”)
What is a “medically appropriate” way to end life, Hippocrates? (Presumably the patient would not be shot with a gun, but with a hypodermic.)
The fuzzy language surrounding the law does tell us something.
In part, perhaps, it’s simply a way of insulating the medical establishment from legal redress by aggrieved family members.
But I also suspect that the tortuous language points to a recognition, however partial, that when we talk about power over life and death we are talking about a morally fraught issue.
Whenever the topic of euthanasia is broached, someone is sure to bring in the Nazis and their practice of killing the old, the mentally ill, the disabled.
That abuse was indeed horrific.
But there’s an important sense in which the whole question of the “abuse” of euthanasia is a red herring.
It’s a red herring because it distracts us from the deeper issue, namely, that the problem with euthanasia is not its abuse but its use.
What I mean is this: By legally sanctioning euthanasia we at the same time sanction a view of human life that is superficial at best and morally repugnant at worst.
At bottom, it’s a view of life that reduces the good to a calculus of pain and pleasure.
Life is held to be worth living to the extent that its pleasures outweigh its pains.
One problem with this philosophy of life is that it erases the claims of everything whose reality isn’t susceptible to the pleasure-pain calculus.
Considerations of honor, of virtue, of patriotism, of the sanctity of life: such values are what make us human.
And all such things are either ruled irrelevant or are redefined in such a way that they no longer exhibit their original weight and density. (If we try to define honor in terms of pleasure and pain, as some philosophers have done, we wind up with someone that has precious little to do with honor as traditionally conceived.)
I would hesitate to prosecute a doctor who, with the collusion of a dying patient, prescribed somewhat generous doses of morphine.
But by legalizing euthanasia we have taken a step down the road toward moral nihilism.
We have given aid and comfort to those for whom “the sanctity of life” is an empty phrase and who regard questions of honor and virtue as negotiable conventions, without intrinsic worth.
There’s much in our culture that conspires to encourage this dark and superficial view of humanity.
It behooves us to resist the inroads of nihilism by withholding the sanction of the law from practices that, however exigent, are never less than morally problematic.
By voting to legalize euthanasia, we have given a hostage to the very force we had hoped to placate: death.