New
Name, Same Old Euthanasia Story
WESLEY J. SMITH
What’s not in a name is the question du jour at single-issue
advocacy groups. First the venerable National Abortion Rights
Action League (or National Abortion and Reproductive Rights
Action League in recent years) officially dropped abortion from
its name and became “NARAL Pro-Choice America.”
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Now, the Hemlock Society, the premier assisted-suicide group, has
decided to recast its image with a new name.
The new name has not yet been chosen, but a new P.R.-driven motto has:
The founding slogan, “Good life, good death,” has been discarded
for the new and improved “Promoting end-of-life choice.”
Changing the group’s name is designed to put a respectable veneer over
the organization’s raison d’tre — legitimizing suicide. Yet, the word
hemlock remains entirely apt. From its inception, the Hemlock Society
has been obsessed with exercising control over death through suicide.
Indeed, Hemlockers claim that assisted suicide, which they now
euphemistically call “aid in dying,” is the “ultimate civil right.”
I became aware of the organization in 1992 when a friend killed herself
under the influence of Hemlock Society literature. Frances’ problem
wasn’t illness; it was depression over a life that had become a complete
mess. When she was diagnosed with leukemia (which was not terminal),
began to experience a painful neuropathy (while refusing to take her
pain-controlling drugs), and learned she would soon require a hip
replacement, Frances seems to have found the pretext she needed to
justify finally doing what she had wanted to do for so long. Indeed, we
found out after the fact that months before she died, Frances had
entered an appointment in her calendar — the date of her 76th birthday —
for her “final passage,” an appointment she kept, accompanied by a
distant cousin who was paid $5,000 to be with her, and perhaps, to
assist her suicide.
Ever organized, Frances kept a suicide file. It contained several
editions of the Hemlock Society’s newsletter, then called The Hemlock
Quarterly. As I read these newsletters, I was shocked out of my
shoes. Each Quarterly was filled with proselytizing stories about
so-called “good deaths” that had been facilitated by Hemlock members.
For example, in the January 1988 issue, Frances had underscored the
following words describing the suicide of “Sam,” a terminal cancer
patient:
Believe it or not, we laughed and giggled and [Sam] seemed to relish
the experience. I think for Sam it was finally taking control again
after ten years of being at the mercy of a disease and medical
protocols demanded by that disease.
Suicide promoted as uplifting and enjoyable sickened me. But what really
infuriated me was the “how to” sections of the newsletters. In one
issue, a list of drugs was provided, with their relative toxicity.
Frances had underscored the drugs that were the most poisonous.
I realized that this group, made up of people who didn’t even know
Frances, had been, figuratively speaking, whispering in her ear for
years. First, they gave her moral permission to kill herself, fostering
a romanticism about suicide that helped push her toward consummation.
Then they convinced her she would be remembered with warmth for her act
of taking “control.” Finally, they taught her how to do it. I felt then,
and do today, that while Frances was responsible for her own
self-destruction, morally, if not legally, the Hemlock Society was an
accessory before the fact.
In the years since Frances’ suicide, Hemlock has gone through some
outward changes while remaining steadfast to its dark ideology. It
changed the name of the Hemlock Quarterly to Timelines,
recently renamed again, this time to End of Life Choices. Its
leadership changed, too, as the group struggled to appear less fringe,
more mainstream and professional. But the more it tried to project a
respectable image on the outside, the more obsessed with suicide the
group seems to have become on the inside.
No longer satisfied to publish literature teaching
people like Frances how to kill themselves or assist the suicides of
others, several years ago Hemlock began to train volunteers to visit
suicidal Hemlock members to counsel and, it would seem, hasten their
deaths through its “Caring Friends” program. According to a tape
transcript from the January 2003 Hemlock Society National Convention,
the group’s medical director, Dr. Richard McDonald, is present at many
Caring Friends suicides and extols the use of helium and a plastic bag
as a “very speedy process that has never failed in our program.”
One need not be dying to qualify for Caring Friends’ services. According
to the November 1998 Timelines, access to Caring Friends is
available for Hemlock members with “an irreversible physical condition
that severely compromises quality of life,” which could include a
plethora of illnesses and disabilities that are not terminal.
The Winter 2003 End of Life Choices reports proudly that 32
Hemlock members “died with Caring Friends information, support, and
presence” in 2002. Knowing that Hemlock members are fascinated by the
methods used, the article catalogues them:
“Thirty used the inhalation method and two used the ingestion
method.”
Choices also informs us that 15 of these suicides were in hospice
at the time of their deaths. If so, then the Caring Friends interfered
with proper medical treatment of these patients. When I was trained as a
hospice volunteer, I was explicitly told that suicidal ideation was a
medical issue that hospice could often address successfully in dying
patients and instructed to inform the hospice team of any expressed
desire to self-destruct. Of course, Caring Friends is not about assuring
that dying patients receive proper medical treatment.
The radical scope of Hemlock’s ideological agenda is demonstrated by its
financial and moral support of Dr. Phillip Nitschke, the Australian Jack
Kevorkian. Nitschke is an out-and-out advocate of death-on-demand, who
is infamous Down Under for his plan to purchase a passenger ship, which
he intends to steam into international waters on one-way euthanasia
death cruises. Nitschke has been paid tens of thousands of dollars by
the Hemlock Society USA to invent a suicide formula that uses common
household ingredients: a potion Nitschke calls the “peaceful pill.”
In a 2001 Q & A on National Review Online, Nitschke was asked who
would be eligible to receive his suicide concoction. His answer is
macabre, even by surrealistic Hemlock standards:
"All people qualify, not just those with the training, knowledge, or
resources to find out how to “give away” their life. And someone
needs to provide this knowledge, training, or resource necessary to
anyone who wants it, including the depressed, the elderly bereaved
[and] the troubled teen. . . . The so-called “peaceful pill” should
be available in the supermarket so that those old enough to
understand death could obtain death peacefully at the time of their
choosing."
For anyone with any moral sense, Nitschke is clearly a crackpot. But he
remains a hero to members of Hemlock. He was an honored guest at the
organization’s 2003 national convention in San Diego, where he was
invited to unveil his most recently invented suicide machine. Despite
being deprived of the chance to ooh and ah at Nitschke’s handiwork when
Australian customs authorities seized the contraption, attendees gave
him a rousing standing ovation.
Which brings us back to the pending name change. According to an article
in the latest issue of Choices, the name change is designed “to
increase membership, to accelerate name recognition and approval, and to
[facilitate] work with legislators sympathetic to our mission, who find
the name Hemlock offensive and difficult to explain.” In other words,
the name Hemlock Society must change because it is descriptive and
accurate.
Not surprisingly, the magic word “choice” is likely to be part of the
new name. Among the current contenders are: End of Life Choices America
(EOLCA), Voices of Choice at Life’s End (VOCAL), the Final Exit Society,
and the Promoting Options for a Peaceful End, which translates into the
sarcastic acronym (POPE).
But a simple name change won’t heal what really ails Hemlock. What these
death-obsessed folk just don’t get is that the word hemlock isn’t what
offends people; it is their nihilism. Hemlock can change its name to the
Mormon Tabernacle Choir if it wants to. But that won’t change the fact
that a deadly poison perfectly conveys the heart, soul, and purpose of
the organization.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Wesley J. Smith. "New Name, Same Old Euthanasia Story."
This article courtesy of Steven Ertelt and the Pro-Life Infonet email
newsletter. For more information or to subscribe go to
www.prolifeinfo.org or email
infonet@prolifeinfo.org.
THE AUTHOR
Wesley J. Smith is a senior fellow at the
Discovery Institute
and an attorney and consultant for the
International Task Force on Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide. He is
an international lecturer and public speaker, appearing frequently at
political, university, medical, legal, bioethics, and community
gatherings across the United States, Canada, Great Britain, and
Australia. Wesley J. Smith is the author or co/author of 9 books.
Most recently his revised and updated
Forced Exit: The Slippery Slope From Assisted Suicide to Legalized
Murder,
Culture of Death: The Assault of Medical Ethics in America, and
Power Over Pain.
Copyright © 2003 Wesley J. Smith
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