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Jewish World Review / June 11,1998 / 15 Sivan, 5758
 
Cal Thomas
 
 
 
 
 
  
 WHAT'S WRONG WITH THIS PICTURE? Residents along Virginia's
 beaches are prohibited by the Endangered Species Act from
 removing dead and rotting sea turtles without a government
 permit. Meanwhile, Attorney General Janet Reno last week
 announced that the Justice Department will not interfere with
 Oregon's new doctor-assisted suicide law. 
    
 The Justice Department said Reno's decision should not be
 taken as a signal that she and the president are dropping their
 "long-standing opposition" to physician-assisted suicide.
 Well, what kind of signal is it, then? If this were a civil rights
 case involving racial minorities instead of an equal dying
 opportunity case that potentially could touch every life in this
 nation, you can bet the administration would find some
 authority somewhere to do what it wanted done. 
 
 Those who believed 25 years ago that abortion would never
 lead to threats to life this side of the womb were wrong. Once
 a new right is granted by government, it is difficult to take it
 away, whether it was formed in bad law or in bad medicine.
 It starts with the "hard cases," the ones that appeal to
 emotions over reason. In the case of abortion, it was
 pre-teens impregnated by drunken stepfathers. At the other
 end of life a seemingly rational elderly person who claims to
 be in excruciating pain with an advanced malady is put
 before the cameras as the poster adult for the euthanasia
 movement. Trouble is, it never stops at the extremes. 
 
 Now some Oregonians are petitioning state government for
 tax subsidies to help underwrite this newly created "right to
 die" for those who can't "afford" to kill themselves or who
 need special help doing it. Doesn't anyone in Washington --
 or anywhere else -- see where this is leading? Won't anyone
 shout "stop before it's too late?" Don't people study
 philosophy anymore (the study of theology is too much to
 expect in a nation that now regards what God says about
 anything as unconstitutional)? 
 
 Writing in the June issue of Crisis magazine, Boston College
 philosophy professor Peter Kreeft recalls a recent Time
 magazine cover story devoted to the questions: Why is
 everything getting better? Why is life so good today? Why
 does everybody feel so satisfied about the quality of life?
 "Time never questioned the assumption," notes Professor
 Kreeft, "it just wondered why the music on the Titanic
 sounded so nice." 
   
 But the cultural indicators clearly show things are getting
 worse. Prosperity blinds us to the storm. And, as anyone who
 is unprepared for a tornado will tell you, failing to anticipate
 disaster enhances the likelihood of casualties. 
 
 The federal government's first obligation is to protect life. That
 also used to be the first obligation of physicians. Because the
 Supreme Court in 1973 removed a right to life for the unborn
 it neither endowed nor had the authority to take away, we
 are now faced with physician-assisted suicide in Oregon. And
 then what? Why, obligatory killing, of course. Just as soon as
 the authorities say it is in our best interest if we want to keep
 those economic numbers high, another step or two will be
 taken toward the abyss. Doctors, politicians, judges and
 certain clergy will assure us that everything is just fine and that
 it's time to take our overdose of barbiturates as a patriotic act
 and a favor to the Dow Jones Industrial Averages in which we
 now trust. 
 
 Death itself is undignified. But assisted suicide is demeaning
 to life. It isn't death that needs assistance. It's life, which is now
 under attack at both ends in the killing fields of
    Oregon: the new killing fields 
 In a new twist on the meaningless claim, "I'm personally
 opposed to abortion, but I don't want to impose my morals
 on others,'' Reno said she and President Clinton still oppose
 the Oregon law, but she said the Drug Enforcement
 Administration does not have authority under the federal
 Controlled Substances Act to take action against Oregon
 doctors who prescribe lethal doses of drugs for the terminally
 ill. 

Janet Reno  
 
 The article, he notes, judged the health of America by its
 economic indicators and ignored all other signposts that
 might have pointed in a different direction. "Perhaps Time is
 just Playboy with clothes on," he says. "For one kind of
 playboy, the world is one big whorehouse. For another kind,
 it's one great piggy bank. For both, things are getting better
 and better." 
