U.S. falling toward a culture of deathBy DAN SERNOFFSKY
Updated: 10/21/2009 10:00:39 AM EDT
Scientists once determined the worth of a human to be 98 cents, a figure derived by calculating the value of the various chemicals - things like copper and zinc - that were contained in the body.
Inflation alone has added considerably to that determination, as has the advancement of scientific knowledge that now has ascertained that the body includes considerably more of value than just some trace elements. Of course, in making their original evaluation, scientists were quick to note their measurement was based entirely on what was contained in the body, not what the body was capable of doing.
Somehow, however, it appears that determining the worth of a human has now passed beyond the esoteric calculation of the value of chemicals into the realm of political reality. Worth, it appears, will be determined by arbitrary parameters and cost, which is to say 98 cents pretty much covers it.
Nowhere has that become more evident than in the push by progressives to enact government-controlled "health reform."
Long ago, the progressive movement abandoned what had been a unique American culture founded in the principles of life and liberty. Instead, the movement aligned itself with a culture of death, now so ingrained that it has become inarguable. It is that premise that has resulted in the precise nonsequitor that allowed the Democratic elites in Congress and the White House to rail against the use of the term "death panels" while at the same time espousing them.
Consider, after all, that fully a quarter of a century ago Colorado Gov. Richard Lamm, a Democrat, in speaking to a group of elderly citizens, noted that the terminally ill "have got a duty to die and get out of the way. Let the other society, our kids, build a reasonable life."
Two years ago, in a speech in Berkeley, Calif., Robert Reich, a member of the Clinton administration and a noted Democrat, said that a viable candidate could not speak the truth about the kind of health-care reform that progressives were seeking. That truth being, "If you're very old, we're not going to give you all that technology and all those drugs for the last couple of years of your life to keep you going for another couple of months. It's too expensive, so we're going to let you die."
Even President Barack Obama, in talking about the cost of procedures for the elderly, noted, "Maybe you're better off not having the surgery, but taking the painkiller."
Within the culture of death, sacrificing the elderly is entirely logical. They are, after all, long past their prime, and any further contributions they might make are negligible at best. And, of course, end-of-life care generally incurs the most expense. That logic, however, does not take into account how, and for what, dollars might be spent.
Joint-replacement surgery for an otherwise healthy septuagenarian might be costly, but it may add considerable comfort to the remaining years of his life. There are a variety of other surgical procedures that have become rather commonplace that may not only extend but enrich lives.
There is, additionally, another uncomfortable variable involved in asses sing the value of life. What about the various ailments that attack those who are of a younger age?
Cystic fibrosis is usually diagnosed in childhood. It is terminal, except that those diagnosed who would have died before reaching puberty now live into their 30s and longer.
But at what expense?
What about various neuromuscular diseases? What is the cost of kidney dialysis? Why should a septuagenarian be told to "take the painkiller" and a 40-year old on dialysis be afforded the funds to continue the procedure?
Or will he?
The acceptance of the culture of death makes any such decisions easy. The progressive movement counts among its founders Margaret Sanger, the woman who founded Planned Parenthood, the largest abortion provider in the United States.
It was Sanger who spoke of "human weeds," of "human beings who never should have been born." And it is Sanger's philosophy which has been embraced by a man who, while campaigning for the presidency of the United States, suggested that he would not want his daughters to be "punished with a baby."
What is the value of a human? De spite the 98-cent calculation, value re mains entirely within the individual, and the individual ability to pursue the unique American culture of life and liberty.
The progressive movement has rejected that culture. Individual liberty is an anathema to the progressive movement, which seeks to control society. The "health reform" now being espoused by the progressives who dominate the Democrat Party is nothing more than an effort to establish a new American culture, a culture in which it will be the government that decides whose lives are of value, to determine "Lebensunwerten Lebens." History tells us those kind of determinations have been made before. If the progressive culture of death becomes law, the first victim will be the Republic.
Sernoffsky can be reached at danser noffsky@ldnewslcom.
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