July 22, 2009
Does Ted Kennedy deserve his extended cancer care?
By James Lewis
Senator Ted Kennedy, who is now 76 years old and was diagnosed with brain cancer
in May of last year, is telling the world that nationalized medical care is "the
cause of his life." He wants to see it pass as soon as possible, before he
departs this vale of tears.
The prospect of Kennedy's passing is viewed by the liberal press with
anticipatory tears and mourning. But they are not asking the proper question by
their own lights: That question -- which will be asked for you and me when we
reach his age and state in life --- is this:
Is Senator Kennedy's life valuable enough to dedicate millions of dollars to
extending it another month, another day, another year?
Because Barack Obama and Ted Kennedy agree with each other that they of all
people are entitled to make that decision. Your decision to live or die will now
be in their hands.
Ted Kennedy is now 76. Average life expectancy in the United States is 78.06.
For a man who has already reached 76, life expectancy is somewhat longer than
average (since people who die younger lower the national average); for a wealthy
white man it may be somewhat longer statistically; but for a man with diagnosed
brain cancer it is correspondingly less. As far as the actuarial tables of the
Nanny State are concerned, Kennedy is due to leave this life some time soon. The
socialist State is not sentimental, at least when it comes to the lives of
ordinary people like you and me.
The socialist question -- and yes, it is being asked very openly in socialist
countries all around the world, like Britain and Sweden -- must be whether
extending Senator Kennedy's life by another day, another month or year is
socially valuable enough to pay for what is no doubt a gigantic and growing
medical bill. Kennedy is a US Senator, and all that money has been coughed up
without complaint by the US taxpayer. Kennedy is already entitled to Federal
health care, and it is no doubt the best available to anyone in the world.
Before he dies, Senator Kennedy wants to feel sure that you and I and our loved
ones can put that personal decision about life or death safely in the hands of a
Federal bureaucrat. It is "the cause of his life," we are told.
Now there are many people in this country who believe that Ted Kennedy has not
spent his life very constructively. Mary Jo Kopechne's family might still want
to trade his life for hers, if she could be brought back. Senator Kennedy has
exercised more power over our immigration chaos than any other person in the
last half century. 9/11 was committed by illegal entrants who slipped through
our deliberately full-of-holes borders, using all manner of Kennedy-authored
loopholes and enforcement gaps.
Others might point to the socialist habit of importing vast numbers of voters
from Pakistan and Somalia into Western Europe, to make for cheap socialist votes
in order to defeat and scapegoat native Europeans. Socialism by immigrant vote
buying is happening in every single socialist country in Europe. It is what
keeps socialist parties there in power. Kennedy has opened our borders for
precisely that kind of takeover by masses of illegal immigrants.
So there might be a rational debate over the social utility of Senator Kennedy's
life. We could all have a great national debate about it. Maybe we should do
exactly that, to face the consequences of what the Left sees as so humane, so
obviously benevolent, and so enlightened.
Consider what happens in the Netherlands to elderly people. The Netherlands
legalized "assisted suicide" in 2002, no doubt in part for compassionate
reasons. But also to save money. There is only one money kitty for medical care
in the socialist Netherlands. When you get old, the question is asked, either
explicitly or by implication:
Do you deserve to live another year compared to young refugees from Somalia, who
can use the same euros to have many years of life?
There's only so much money available. The Netherlands radio service had a quiz
show at one time, designed to "raise public awareness" about precisely that
question. Who deserves to live, and who to die?
But nobody debates any more about who has the power to make that decision. In
socialist Europe the State does. It's a done deal.
The Netherlands legally recognizes four categories of euthanasia. One of them
is:
Passive euthanasia: A physician may choose not to treat an recurrent disease or
event in a patient with a terminal progressive disease.
I don't know enough about Senator Kennedy's condition, but I would suppose that
he has "a recurrent disease or ... a terminal progressive disease." That would
be the case if his brain cancer is not curable. In the socialist Netherlands
Kennedy would be a perfect candidate for passive euthanasia.
Has anyone raised this question with Senator Kennedy? I know it seems to be in
bad taste to even mention it. But if ObamaCare passes in the coming weeks, you
can be sure that that question will be raised for you and me, and our loved
ones. And no, we will not have a choice.
Page Printed from: http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/07/does_ted_kennedy_deserve_his_e.html
at July 22, 2009
As a believer in a just God who renders judgment on all of us when we leave this world and taught us "judge not, lest ye be judged", I have no opinion on Teddy Kennedy. It seems like he has lived a life of crime, debauchery and corruption that will doom him to eternal hell, but we don't know that. Maybe somewhere in his sad little life he did something good that will save him. (or not.)
P.S. Teddy, Say Hi to Jack and Bobby and Big Joe and Honey Fitz when you get there.