martes, 19 de abril de 2016

MercatorNet: ‘What we’re talking about is killing people’

MercatorNet: ‘What we’re talking about is killing people’







‘What we’re talking about is killing people’

Former Prime Minister weighs into euthanasia debate.
Paul Russell | Apr 19 2016 | comment 
Bob Hawke was Australian Prime Minister from 1983 to 1991 and remains the longest-serving Labor Prime Minister since Federation. His achievements are either overshadowed - or perhaps contextualized - by his “knockabout Ocker” persona epitomised in his world-record downing of a yard of beer in 11 seconds while at university in Oxford.
Hawke was always a supporter of euthanasia, but never a campaigner. That changed this last week when he announced a 'newfound passion' for the issue; most likely related to his interviews with the ubiquitous Andrew Denton.
Hawke left parliament shortly after he lost the leadership to Paul Keating in 1991. He was therefore not in the parliament when the Andrews Bill was debated in 1996 that squashed the Northern Territory's 1995 euthanasia law. Even so, any Australian with any access to the media at that time would have been aware of the intensity of the debate in the parliament where he had presided for nearly 8 years.
And yet Hawke's main thesis as to why Australia has no euthanasia laws is the facile argument that says that politicians are gutless to act for fear of losing their seats; a shibboleth dragged out from time-to-time by euthanasia supporters ostensibly to avoid scrutiny of the real reasons why their initiatives continue to fail.
Anyone who has read the Hansard from euthanasia debates across Australia over many years now will understand just how false this claim is. Politicians may not be the most highly respected class of persons, but to say they are “gutless” and vote only according to self-preservation instincts is not evident in any debate.
Hawke postulates that MPs "...first concern is saving their seat and they don't want to do anything that's going to lose them votes." That principle is well-understood. But while the Sydney Morning Herald notes polling support for euthanasia at “75 to 85 percent”, Hawke seems to contradict that by adding that "...you've got a significant number who don't like...enough for a lot of politicians to say, 'I don't want to get involved’." 15 per cent is a significant number, but, on balance, surely not a vote changing percentage. If the polls are right, then there's more votes to be had in saying Yes.
It seems perverse to argue on the one hand that polling majorities should dictate policy while, at the same time, laying the claim that MPs think that offending this notional “75 to 85 percent” majority by voting against a proposition is a vote winner. There must be something else at play here. The assertion is simply not true.
One significant concern is the subtle pressure that may be experienced by people with failing health, or people living with disability should there become available an “alternative” to living with their condition. Hawke provided a prime example:
Mr Hawke also reflected on his personal circumstances, saying he had an "understanding" with his wife Blanche d'Alpuget that "something" would be done if he ever lost his presence of mind. "Something I could not stand would be to lose my marbles. If that were in fact to happen, then something is done about it," he said.
He is clearly referring here to Alzheimer's. “To lose my marbles” may be a common colloquial expression, but in this context it is demeaning a large and growing section of our community experiencing the loss of cognitive function. He is saying, in a shorthand way, that he doesn't want to be like them. It is a pejorative; an unwelcome slight that reinforces discrimination.
But this stands against the oracle-like proclamation by the Sydney Morning Herald in the same article that, "Any proposed model for legal euthanasia would only apply to terminally ill patients who are deemed to be of sound enough mind to make an informed decision." So, unless the “silverhaired bodgie” as Hawke is affectionately known, has a terminal illness, that “something” he wants done won't happen legally.
Hawke's entry into this debate has, as one would expect, captured the attention of a significant section of the media. Some of the most balanced commentary came from a discussion on the ABC Network's The Drum program.
Guest commentator, The Australian newspaper's Caroline Overington entered the fray by making the straightforward observation that, “what we are talking about is killing people.” She went on to describe her fears that any law would be abused, which elicited the admission of the pro-euthanasia commentator, Quentin Dempster that, “of course any law can be abused.”
This is not just “any law”. There is no remedy for a euthanasia death that constitutes an abuse of that law. Such an abuse constitutes the offence of homicide; but we know that in Belgium, for example, in the many thousands of cases over more than a decade, only one has ever been referred to justice. Even there, the penalty is likely only ever to be noted as a breach of procedure. The law protects doctors. To admit that a euthanasia law can be abused is to admit that people will be wrongfully killed. That's a very callous admission in the context of supporting such a change.
But the most interesting and salient comments in the program came from GetUp Senior Campaigner, Miriam Lyons. GetUp is an online activism network that has solid credentials on the progressive side of politics. Miriam's comments reinforce the understanding that euthanasia is an issue that finds opponents across the full width of the political spectrum.
Lyons identified some similarities between euthanasia and another significant social issue, summarising that:
"It's very hard to call a choice truly free and truly dignified unless it is made from a position of equality. So that means you have to have the best aged care, the best palliative care that a civilised country can afford, that the quality of pain relief is not going to depend on your level of income and that's not the case in Australia right now. We need to make sure we do a lot more to make sure that is the case so that people aren't making this choice in a situation where perhaps what they really need is better mental health treatment..."
Quentin Dempster closed the segment, by interjection, endorsing Denton. Apparently, according to Dempster, Denton has done his research and has been overseas. How those factoids change the debate he did not say; many have done likewise and come to the opposite conclusion. Denton's works are not sacred writ and the polls really tell us very little. Lyons and Overington, at the very least, have told us that there's much more to this debate. 
Paul Russell is director of HOPE: preventing euthanasia & assisted suicide, which is based in Australia. This article has been republished from his blog with permission
- See more at: http://www.mercatornet.com/careful/view/what-were-talking-about-is-killing-people/17929#sthash.Tn15vhll.dpuf





MercatorNet



Only two years after celebrating the 450th birthday of William Shakespeare, the celebration of his death is upon us. The precise date of the Bard's demise, like that of his birth, is unknown, but, just as baptismal records attest to one, so the record of his burial on April 25th, 1616, bears witness to the other. On the 26th he would have turned 53.
It is awesome to think of the tally of plays and poetry he had written (with or without collaborators) by then: around 38 plays, 154 sonnets and two long narrative poems.
Even more remarkable, as Robert White points out in a very interesting article, is his continuing popularity as a literary figure whose works are still regularly performed or made into films - despite efforts at one stage to bury the Bard for good. Says White:
But even if the unthinkable were somehow to happen and all traces of Shakespeare’s names and works were eradicated from the modern world, his influence would remain around us. He has made, and changed, history.
For instance, we would still have the almost 2,000 new words Shakespeare either coined or imported into the English language – words like “bedroom”, “excite”, “blood-stained” and “zany”.
And there's much more. A good read.


Carolyn Moynihan
Deputy Editor,
MERCATORNET

Marx, Freud, Hitler, Mandela, Greer… Shakespeare influenced them all
Robert White | FEATURES | 19 April 2016
400 years after his death, there seems no sign of Shakespeare going away again any day soon.
Read more...
 
A crisis of humanity, calling for a response of solidarity
Pope Francis | ABOVE | 19 April 2016
‘We will do our part towards giving migrants, refugees and asylum-seekers a humane reception in Europe’
Read more...
 
‘What we’re talking about is killing people’
Paul Russell | CAREFUL! | 19 April 2016
Former Prime Minister weighs into euthanasia debate.
Read more...
 
Mindfulness is not a product or service
Denyse O'Leary | ABOVE | 19 April 2016
But McMindfulness is big business.
Read more...
MERCATORNET | New Media Foundation
Suite 12A, Level 2, 5 George Street, North Strathfied NSW 2137, Australia

Designed by elleston

New Media Foundation | Suite 12A, Level 2, 5 George St | North Strathfield NSW 2137 | AUSTRALIA | +61 2 8005 8605

No hay comentarios: