Tags
Care Deficit Society, Is this the people we are becoming?, Is this the society we want?, Living in a care deficit society, MAiD, PAD, Physician-assisted Suicide, Suicide, Tell me to stay, The Mystery of our Worth, The real problem: not knowing the enigma of our worth, Tough questions we must ask ourselves
Those living with mental illness don’t need someone to tell them how to die; they need someone to tell them to stay.
When I have written about Medical Assistance in Dying, or Physician-Assisted Suicide, I have wanted to have us question if this is really what we want our society to become: a dementing and euthanizing culture.
With the recent Senate amendments to Bill C7, it can be soon possible for people suffering mental illness such as depression to be medically euthanized rather than medically cared for.
If you’ve read my posts over the years, you will know that I am strictly non-partisan, so I am cautious as I quote Conservative MP Garnett Genuis (I quote him cautiously not because he is Conservative, but because he is a politician). Genuis states:
“Legal and medical experts are deeply concerned that permitting Canadians suffering from depression and other mental illnesses to access euthanasia would undermine suicide prevention efforts…
Instead of investing in treatment and recovery for those struggling with mental illness, the Government is seeking to expand assisted suicide to them.
On February 23rd the… Government endorsed a Senate amendment to Bill C-7 that would allow Canadians with mental illness as their sole medical condition to access euthanasia. This expansion would automatically come into effect two years after Bill C-7 becomes law.
The Canadian Mental Health Association (CMHA) stated, ‘As a recovery-oriented organization, CMHA does not believe that mental illnesses are irremediable’.
Suicide is the second leading cause of death for Canadians between the age of 10 and 19. What message are we sending, particularly to the young and the elderly, struggling with suicidal ideation if we allow assisted suicide to be normalized as a way out?”
While there are some who actually advocate for the mentally ill to be included in medically assisted death (Graeme Bayliss), there are survivors of depression and attempted suicide who are begging politicians to reject this amendment and ensure that those with mental illness are protected from assisted suicide such as depression/suicide survivor Garifalia (Lia) Milousis:
I’m the future version of myself who survived to tell you this
Is this the Society we want?
Is this the people we are becoming as we settle for assisted suicide instead of authentic healthcare?
Those living with mental illness don’t need someone to tell them how to die; they need someone to tell them to stay.
We are increasingly living in a care deficit society, and while no one wants to “suffer” it does not mean that we should be so quick to kill off, or let be killed off those who are mentally ill and aged (note: “The Sunset Clause“, or “Is Age a Terminal Condition“).
For more see: “Physician Assisted Suicide“.
See Gabrielle Peter’s article: “Taking MAiD too far.”
The Enigma of our Worth
This topic speaks more to the enigma of our worth than to the current dogma of transactional value and living a self-referenced life. As you suffer (for we all do and we all will), may you suffer in community surrounded by loved ones who care for you till the last breath – rather than to be so diminished as to think your dying will merely relieve pain.
If you don’t know your worth to the One who made you for Himself… then you have sited on the real problem.
As one who got to the end of his personal dock in 1992, and has lived another 28 fairly useful and certainly very enjoyable years, I fully endorse your article. Thanks for addressing this very critical issue of our day, Rusty.
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Erroll, you’re “the future version of yourself who survived to tell us this.” So glad you are [still] here to tell the story and represent the grace of God in your life. Unfortunately like much of the West, we live in an age all too quick to quit. May the Lord show you favour as you live – really live – to the glory of God.
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You raise very good question, Rusty, and I think that education for service is one part of the solution: we also need to build a world in which love and empathy are actually valued.
stay safe,
-Shira
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I agree; what we have lost in an erstwhile “cultural transmission” of care will likely take a cultural revolution to regain. I think the cultural critical mass has shifted so far that these new laws (in Canada and else where in the western world) seem to be accepted as the price we pay for not wanting pain in any measure. What comes with this price, unfortunately, is profound loneliness and isolation. Thanks for your comments and grace to you.
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Ah, yes, you are right that in the past four decades people do seem to have gotten use to avoiding any sort of pain for themselves and for ‘their own’ so to speak, but it simply isn’t going to keep, and you’d think that that would be obvious, looking at history.
Oh, right, that takes learning history…
Thank you for being concerned about our fellow human beings,
Stay safe,
-Shira
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