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Dutch Move Toward Family-Assisted Suicide

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Any media story about Dutch euthanasia is generally accompanied by the blithe and false assurance of medicalized killing being governed by “strict guidelines.” What a joke, given that doctors kill disabled babies in their cribs, the elderly “tired of life,” and the mentally ill, along with the dying and disabled.

One of the guidelines that has actually been enforced is the requirement that doctors do the deed and be present for the homicide/suicide.

But euthanasia activists always want more. In recent years, there has been political agitation to allow families to help kill their relatives. And now a court has apparently approved the practice. From the New York Times story:

A Dutch appeals court has cleared a man of any criminal responsibility for helping his 99-year-old mother take her own life — a case that aimed to create precedents for assisting suicide in a country where euthanasia already is legal under certain circumstances.

Judges in Arnhem said Albert Heringa should not be prosecuted for helping his mother die in 2008. They said Wednesday he had to make a decision between obeying the law against assisting suicide and his “unwritten moral duty” to help his mother achieve her wish for “a painless, peaceful and dignified death.”

Here’s the mandatory baloney media assurance about strict guidelines:

While euthanasia has been legal in the Netherlands for years if carried out under strict conditions by a physician, assisted suicide by a friend or relative of the person who wants to die remains illegal.

Media malpractice aside, this is precisely how doctor-administered death started in the Netherlands — with a court ruling allowing a doctor to disobey the law.

Once again we see: The culture of death is never satiated, it never says “enough.”

Image: Flag of Netherlands, by Wouter Engler (Own work) [CC BY-SA 4.0 ], via Wikimedia Commons.

Cross-posted at Human Exceptionalism.

Wesley J. Smith

Chair and Senior Fellow, Center on Human Exceptionalism
Wesley J. Smith is Chair and Senior Fellow at the Discovery Institute’s Center on Human Exceptionalism. Wesley is a contributor to National Review and is the author of 14 books, in recent years focusing on human dignity, liberty, and equality. Wesley has been recognized as one of America’s premier public intellectuals on bioethics by National Journal and has been honored by the Human Life Foundation as a “Great Defender of Life” for his work against suicide and euthanasia. Wesley’s most recent book is Culture of Death: The Age of “Do Harm” Medicine, a warning about the dangers to patients of the modern bioethics movement.

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