Los Angeles Times
November 23,
2001
COMMENTARY
Assisted Suicide Is
Bootleg Suicide
By THOMAS SZASZ,
Dr. Thomas Szasz, an emeritus professor of psychiatry, is
the author of
"Fatal Freedom: The Ethics and Politics of Suicide" (Praeger
Trade,
1999)
Atty. Gen. John Ashcroft has said that his office won't
recognize Oregon's
Death With Dignity Act, which allows doctors to prescribe
lethal drugs for
certain patients. Declaring that physician-assisted suicide
"was not a
'legitimate medical purpose' for prescribing drugs," Ashcroft
warned: "Any
doctor who prescribes such drugs, even one acting under all
terms of the
Oregon law, can face revocation of his or her
license."
On Tuesday, a federal judge in Oregon extended a court order
that stops
Ashcroft from dismantling the law until the state can prepare
arguments
defending it. Liberals, who revere medical paternalism, condemn
Ashcroft's
move. Yet classic liberals and libertarians who respect the rule
of law
should applaud it. "Decisions about when and how to die are best left
to
patients ... not legislators," wrote Jerome Groopman of Harvard.
I
agree and wish it were so. The truth is that psychiatrists
routinely
prescribe involuntary "treatment" for patients whom they consider
dangerous
to themselves. Physician-assisted suicide laws permit doctors to
write
prescriptions for lethal drugs under certain circumstances. Supporters
of
such laws misrepresent them as permitting patients to decide when they
want
to die.
A so-called self-regarding act--such as self-medication
and self-killing--is
either a right or not a right, legal or illegal. If it
is not a right, then,
in our society, it will be treated as a crime or a
mental illness or both.
Prior to 1914, self-medication was a right; now,
it is both a disease and a
crime. Prior to the 18th century, suicide was both
a sin and a crime; now,
suicide and wanting or planning to commit suicide are
considered diseases
and quasi-crimes. Mental health laws and the "standard of
psychiatric care"
require psychiatrists to restrain and prevent the
"patient-offender" from
killing himself, and other parties are prohibited by
law from "assisting" in
the act.
Suicide ought to be a basic human
right. I believe that killing oneself with
illegal drugs prescribed
specifically for that purpose is not legitimate
medical practice. It is
bootlegging suicide.
Bootlegging is likely to occur whenever a law
prohibits a human need strong
enough to incite people to satisfy it, even at
considerable economic cost
and personal risk. Bootlegging carries the
connotation that the law being
violated deserves disrespect because it
frustrates the satisfaction of a
human need so basic and peaceful that it
ought to be recognized as a right.
Hiding Jews from the Nazis is an example
of a morally praiseworthy violation
of criminal law.
Instead of
acknowledging that drug use, the death penalty and suicide are
moral issues,
some people seek to achieve their particular goals by turning
each issue into
a legal battle between states' rights and federal law. The
medical marijuana
issue has been litigated all the way to the Supreme Court,
which ruled in May
that federal drug laws did not provide an exception for
the medical use of
marijuana, despite voter initiatives allowing it in
several states. Now,
advocates of "medical suicide" contend that Ashcroft
"has grossly exceeded
the terms of the federal controlled-substances law."
Physician-assisted
suicide--the "solution" as well as the "problem"--is but
one of the
consequences of our drug laws. Like every product of nature and
human
invention, drugs may be abused. Against that hazard, self-control is
the only
effective remedy.
The American people are ceaselessly propagandized about
the real dangers
from which drug prohibitions are intended to protect us. The
damage the
prohibitions cause are glossed over in silence or, more often,
are
unrecognized. We avoid confronting problems of living as moral problems
and
choose instead to treat them as medical problems. It is not a good
choice.
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