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Mercy Killing in the Netherlands: Euthanasia or Eugenics?
by Cinnamon Stillwell
21 December 2004
It’s difficult to
imagine how a society can justify the snuffing out of human life at such
a rate, but in the Netherlands, this kind of thinking has become par for
the course.
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In the wake of Dutch
filmmaker Theo Van Gogh’s murder and the ensuing backlash against Islamic
extremism, the Netherlands has garnered an unusual amount of media attention.
But there’s another story unfolding in Holland that the media has barely
taken notice of, and its ramifications are equally monumental. It seems
that those who criticize Islam are not alone in fearing for their lives.
This past year, it was quietly announced that Holland had approved euthanasia
for children under twelve. This news alone was unsettling, but then
last month came the disturbing disclosure that not only had euthanasia been
approved for infants, but had in fact been practiced by doctors for some
time. In other words, first adults and now children and infants are
slowly being eliminated in the name of “compassion.”
The practice has been approved for terminally-ill infants, or those whose
suffering is deemed intolerable. Presumably, this includes babies that
are premature, developmentally disabled, or physically deformed.
This is in marked contrast to the United States, where such infants are kept
alive against all odds, using expensive, cutting-edge technology. But
the Dutch have apparently decided that these lives are expendable. How long
before other “undesirables” are slated for termination?
To get an idea of the scope of the problem, Wesley J. Smith, writing for The Weekly Standard, cited a 1997 study published in the British medical journal, the Lancet:
According
to the report, doctors were killing approximately 8 percent of all infants
who died each year in the Netherlands. That amounts to approximately 80-90
per year. Of these, one-third would have lived more than a month. At least
10-15 of these killings involved infants who did not require life-sustaining
treatment to stay alive. The study found that a shocking 45 percent of neo-natologists
and 31 percent of pediatricians who responded to questionnaires had killed
infants.
It’s
difficult to imagine how a society can justify the snuffing out of human
life at such a rate, but in the Netherlands, this kind of thinking has become
par for the course.
If one looks at history, it becomes clear just where the practice can lead.
In Nazi Germany euthanasia became an obsession, eventually resulting in the
belief in eugenics or the achievement of a genetically “superior” race.
Beginning with the mentally and physically disabled, 200,000 of whom were
systematically murdered between 1939 and 1945, euthanasia later became part
of the Nazis’ final solution. Jews, Gypsies, Gays, Communists, German
dissenters, and others were experimented on and finally targeted for extermination
under the rationale that they were “inferior.”
The growth of euthanasia in the Netherlands shares a similarly frightening
connotation. While the Dutch undoubtedly think of themselves as light
years away from the monsters of Nazi Germany, they may have more in common
than they think. For what does it say about a society when its weakest
members are not only unprotected, but wiped out? When human life is
so callously disregarded, human beings become nothing more than animals,
and even there they may have some competition.
Putting aside the question of whether it is possible to ascertain the wishes
of an infant or a small child, is it not a doctor’s duty, as the Hippocratic
Oath stipulates, to “do no harm?” And who decides who will live or
die? Mostly, the burden falls on the medical establishment, who instead
of doing no harm have placed themselves in the position of executioner.
With no higher authority to weigh in, doctors are playing God and this deity
is not a merciful one.
But not all of Holland’s doctors have gone along with the plan. Alarmed
by their colleagues’ growing inhumanity, dissenters among the medical establishment
formed “The World Federation of Doctors Who Respect Life” in Holland in 1974.
Seeing euthanasia as an outgrowth of Nazi ideology, fused with the United
Nations’ population control policies in the 1970’s, over 70,000 doctors chose
to adhere to the Declaration on Euthanasia:
Euthanasia,
that is the act of commission or omission with the deliberate intention of
ending the life of a patient, even at the patient's own request or at the
request of close relatives, is unethical. This does not prevent the physician
from respecting the desire of a patient to allow the natural process of death
to follow its course in the terminal phase of sickness.
Some
will argue that concern over euthanasia belongs exclusively to the realm
of religion. The Catholic Church has indeed written extensively on
the subject, because of their belief in the sanctity of all human life.
But this is an issue that should concern us all.
Those who seek to defend the mentally ill and the disabled have a serious
stake in the matter, being as they would likely be on the receiving end of
such “mercy killings.” This is why the case of Terry Schiavo in Florida
(whose husband has been trying to pull the plug on her for years against
the wishes of her family) and the so-called “right-to-die” movement in the
United States can count the disabled among their opponents. And as
we have seen with the Nazi analogy, all members of a multi-ethnic society
should be concerned with the attempts to deem certain groups “inferior” and
unworthy of life.
Many on the Left have difficulty condemning euthanasia because they see it
as part and parcel of the other “life issues” they support, such as abortion.
While the connection is undeniable, it’s possible to take a stand against
one while supporting the other. For whatever our views, we must not
let ourselves slide into the cold, calculating barbarity of euthanasia.
As it is, the Dutch are plunging headlong down that slippery slope and where
it will end, no one knows.
Cinnamon Stillwell is a contributing editor to ChronWatch.com. Her articles have also appeared at OpinionEditorials.com, FrontPageMag.com, Jewish Press, and Israel National News.
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