Posted by
Dr. Brian Melton on Tuesday, March 29, 2005 2:14:00 PM
“Why does this prospect so unnerve
[the pull the tube people]? Again, if you think Terri Schiavo is a precious
human gift of God, your passion is explicable. The passion of the pull-the-tube
people is not.”
--Peggy Noonan in “In Love
With Death”
Peggy Noonan recently made this interesting observation and
a number of other conservative commentators have echoed it. I think I can answer her question, though I
realize that my scribble will likely never reach Ms. Noonan’s screen. There is logic that undergirds the passion of
many (but not all) of the “pull the tube” people. It is the dogmatic belief that human beings
are the measure of all things, and the pseudo-religious crusading that results
from it.
In their Sauron-like quest to dominate the universe, humans
have already laid claim to the prerogative to design and modify life. They thus view life as merely a commodity to
be experimented upon by god-like humanity.
Human cloning, stem cell research, eugenics, and other attempts to
control human destiny all testify to our “triumphs” in this respect.
With life theoretically tucked under our belt, the next logical
step is to take control of death.
American secular humanism has not neglected this. Abortion on demand is, of course, an
important step in this direction. In a
very real sense, humans exercise a twisted imitation of ultimate authority when
they arbitrarily decide which babies are “worthy” of life, and which are not. For our current purposes, it is important to
note that the humanity of the “fetus,” if it is considered at all, is
automatically a secondary consideration to the wants, whims, and fears of the
mother.
Euthanasia is a similar concept, but, until Terri Schiavo, in
America
it generally involved only the practical recognition of a death that had
already occurred. With a few fringe
exceptions, these “pull the plug
people” (as distinguished from tube) did not actually advocate, cause, or allow
the willful death of another human being still capable of living; they only
allowed the rest of a person’s body to catch up with an already dead mind by
removing extraordinary means of artificial support from it.
These two facts—humanity’s desire to occupy the throne of
God and the relatively undeveloped state of American euthanasia—explain both
the passion of the “pull the tube people” and also their callous disregard to
calls for further testing for Terri.
First, to kill Terri Schiavo, whether she is in a PVS or
not, takes euthanasia in America
to the next level. Terri’s case does not
involve respirators or heart machines; until her starvation began, she was in
no overt pain. This is a new style of “mercy”
killing, and it will be used to further a real precedent. As a result, Americans, like their European
brethren, will have more fully laid claim to the prerogative of death. I say “more fully” because there is still
ground to be taken. If we follow the
European example, as we have thus far, infanticide comes next (and is indeed
already on its way). Beyond that, there
are changing definitions of what the slippery terminology “sufficient quality
of life” exactly means.
So, Terri’s death represents a leap forward towards a long
established, desperately desired goal: humankind
making themselves the measure of all things.
For anyone to oppose this holy writ seems to one of the priests or
priestesses of the new humanity like questioning the virginity of Mary during
the Inquisition.
If we understand this, it shouldn’t be shocking to see why
the “pull the tube” people are so desperate that Terri die without delay, and
why they aren’t interested in having her re-examined. Her
real medical condition is extraneous to their point. They want a new, more powerful, sort of
“mercy” killing, and whether or not Terri is aware of what is happening (or
even human at all) is not an issue. For
the United States’
government and its people to agree to kill her because she allegedly would have
wanted it, despite the fact that she suffers from a non-terminal condition, is to
implicitly recognize euthanasia on demand.
In that goal, they have unquestionably succeeded. They have tacitly made euthanasia the philosophical
equal of abortion. This is a battle in
the culture wars, and at its heart, it is a question of whether or not America
will redefine the meaning of life to allow attacks on “imperfect” adults, as it
has on unborn children.
Now, as I noted earlier, there are probably many Americans
out there who are in favor of Terri’s death simply because they are
unacquainted with the facts, but Ms. Noonan’s article speculated about the
passionate ones. And with the help of
the courts, these “pull the tube people” are already celebrating a resounding
“victory” for humankind. And while the
Hemlock Society pours its celebratory toasts to Judge Greer (and makes
donations to his campaign), Terri starves.