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Whether it's pro-life philosophy, activism or legislation, whether it's about a current topic or a situation pro-lifers face in their own lives and work, this is the place where we'll talk about it! Please forward any comments to me, Judie Brown. Thank you!


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IMPOSING DEATH IN A GOVERNMENT-RUN HOSPICE?
Posted: Tuesday August 4, 2009 at 1:15 pm EST by Judie Brown
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A very dear friend of mine recently lost her husband to cancer. He and his wife had very little time to actually prepare for this event. He was diagnosed on May 18 and died only two months later. The sadness is overwhelming for his family, of course. The reality of how he was treated, however, is beyond shameful. I want to tell you this story because America is standing at the crossroads right now.

My friend’s wife explained to me, just yesterday, that a famous poem came to mind as she was reflecting on the abuse her husband suffered from nurses in a hospice run by the Veterans Health Administration. “The Hollow Men,” by T. S. Eliot is the subject of ongoing analysis, but it is the final two lines of that poem, “This is the way the world ends, not with a bang but a whimper,” that stuck in her mind. And as she related her experiences to me, it became a stark reminder that we do indeed live in a culture of death.

Can you imagine a nurse asking a man—in the final throes of cancer—what level of pain he is suffering, and then when he told her, hearing her tell him that what he described as his pain was “impossible”? Had his wife not been there, only God knows what this nurse might have done. She had obviously set herself up as an expert judge of whether someone else was actually experiencing excruciating pain.

And then there was the problem with his lungs, which kept filling up with fluid. While he was in the hospital, a tube inserted into his body to drain the lungs of fluid was cleaned frequently. But once he arrived at the hospice, the nurses explained to his wife that they do not clean those tubes and would not do so, because the doctor’s orders specified that the tube was not to be cleaned.

Again, had his wife not been at his side to intercede for him and demand that they clean that tube, he would have died earlier, suffocating due to the negligence of others.

It is always heartbreaking to be with a loved one as death approaches. But in this case, in addition to her sorrow over the death of her husband of 41 years, what she witnessed in that hospice will be indelibly imprinted on her memory as well.

My husband and I frequently spoke with her during those last heart-wrenching weeks of her husband’s life. Each time she explained that she could not leave his side and had to sleep in his room, my husband would suggest that she needed her own rest and should not sacrifice her own health. She always replied the same way: “He needs me. I must be there with him.”

Thank God she was! Having now heard her reasons, my husband clearly understands that when it comes to medical care for the elderly and those facing death, a new low has been reached on the scale of “cruel compassion.” And while it is not a unique experience, it could become a federally mandated one, if “Obamacare” becomes law. It’s all about cost cutting, after all!

This real-life account very poignantly illustrates why we at American Life League are doing all we can to sound the alarm, in cooperation with many other concerned Americans. The vultures are hovering, and we have little time to rally opposition to this assault on the vulnerable, the weak and the dying. Some may say that my words are alarmist and that no such threat exists. To them I would say, “Tell that to my friend who witnessed the preview first-hand, in a government-run facility!”

President Obama has an agenda, and sadly, it is not the one he publicly proclaims. You may recall hearing in the news, just a few days after our friend passed on, how the president discussed his grandmother’s death. He did not go into details, of course, but his words were unsettling, nonetheless. According to the Washington Post,

Polls show that senior citizens are more skeptical about health-care reform than any other age group.

One woman asked Obama about "rumors" that under the proposed legislation, every American over age 65 would be visited by a government worker and "told to decide how they wish to die."

First, Obama joked that there aren't enough government workers to undertake such a task. Then he got serious and personal, mentioning that his grandmother, who died shortly before Election Day last year, had a medical directive.

"It gave her some control ahead of time so that she could say, for example, if she had a terminal illness, did she want extraordinary measures even if, for example, her brainwaves were no longer functioning? Or did she want just to be left alone?" he said. "You know, that gives her some decision-making power over the process."

Obama’s reference to a “medical directive” and the “control” his grandmother allegedly had are not a simple aside. They represent his convictions, as evidenced when he

suggested at a town hall event Wednesday night that one way to shave medical costs is to stop expensive and ultimately futile procedures performed on people who are about to die and don't stand to gain from the extra care… He added: “Maybe you're better off not having the surgery, but taking the painkiller.”

Palliative care or painkillers, as he suggested, can be used for evil, as I have already pointed out in a previous column. Not a single one of us can control the fact that he or she will die, but it is important to remember that unprincipled “compassion” in the hands of those caring for someone at risk can cause premature death. Fiscal concerns about freeing up beds for younger patients, or saving a few dollars on medications or surgeries can have deadly results.

This is not just a problem that we might face in an Orwellian future. If you do not agree, visit the Life Tree web site and read the timeline entitled “Two Decades to an American Culture of Death.” It is all there, it is all documented and it is not a comedy. The people who espouse killing are deadly serious.

As the timeline preface states, you will learn

how a handful of progressive foundations and quasi-government agencies set out to provide equitable distribution of health care, and in the process, created a duty to die and a culture of death. And how they hope to secure their legacy . . .

Featuring the collaboration of: the Hastings Center, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF), George Soros' Project on Death in America (PDIA), Institute of Medicine (IOM), AARP, Choice in Dying, and a number of prestigious universities, to name only a few.

This is but one more reason why this fundamental question must be asked about the Obama healthcare reform initiative:

Does anyone think that a government as committed to abortion, contraception and sex instruction as this one is should be trusted to apply ethical principles to healthcare reform?

Imposed death may save money, in the view of some, but when I think about my friend’s husband, I realize even more clearly that the hollow men are in charge and, to paraphrase T. S. Eliot, many a person’s life will end not with a bang, but with a whimper.

Judie Brown

Responses


Judie, you are SO right about the silence of the Catholic Church regarding the atrocities of the proposed health "care" plan. We are encouraged to deluge our politicians - please tell me HOW CAN WE MOTIVATE OUR CATHOLIC OFFICIALS!!! WHAT A DISGRACE!!!
Marie Ferretti | August 4, 2009

Marie,
I have to disagree with you about the Church remaining silent about the Health Care Plan. The Pope didn't remain silent. Judie Brown didn't remain silent. So why accuse the Church of remaining silent? There were people who did speak out. Not everyone remained silent.
Nick | August 5, 2009



CATHOLICS AND HEALTHCARE REFORM
Posted: Monday August 3, 2009 at 2:46 pm EST by Judie Brown
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Our office’s recent media release has created quite a stir about the folks at the Society of Saint Vincent de Paul (SSVDP), Catholic Charities (CCUSA) and the Catholic Health Association (CHA). It seems that our accusation regarding their support for Obama’s healthcare proposal did not sit well. So I think it is appropriate to review the facts as we know them.

First, there is the SSVDP’s e-mailed action alert titled “Let Congress know that Health Care Reform Can’t Wait!” It states in part, 

As a reminder to help in your calls and messages, the Society of Saint Vincent de Paul supports the Catholic Health Association's Vision for U.S. Health Care which lays out principles for reforming the health care system. We call for health care reform that is:

• Available and accessible to everyone, paying special attention to the poor and vulnerable;
• Health and prevention oriented, with the goal of enhancing the health status of communities;
• Sufficiently and fairly financed;
• Transparent and consensus-driven, in allocation of resources, and organized for cost-effective care and administration;
• Patient centered, and designed to address and protect health needs at all stages of life, from conception to natural death; and
• Safe, effective and designed to deliver the greatest possible quality.

If you have questions, please contact Desmond Brown, Senior Director of Government Affairs at dbrown@catholiccharitiesusa.org, or, Kellyann McClain, Policy Analyst atkmcclain@catholiccharitieusa.org. (emphasis in original)

You will note that there is no reference in this excerpt, nor anywhere else in the alert, to the fundamental truth that principled healthcare programs begin with a respect for the dignity and innate right to life of every human being, from his beginning until his natural end. No, that message is not there.

What is there is best described as political doublespeak. For example, what does it mean to say that caring for others should be based on a “consensus-driven” allocation of costs? What if the consensus is that paying for abortion is acceptable? What if the consensus is that it is most cost-effective to deny treatment to the elderly when they are diagnosed with a life-threatening condition?

Perhaps the answer to such questions is that what is most important to these organizations is not ensuring that Catholic healthcare principles are upheld in a program like this, but simply rushing to pass “something.” If that is so, then one can readily understand the statement the SSVDP issued this past Friday, in which we learned the following:

Again, the Society of St. Vincent de Paul has not supported any particular or specific legislation; it has expressed its concern for the need for the U.S. Congress to deal with this most urgent need now.

“The Society of St. Vincent de Paul does not support nor will it support any legislation, provision or amendment that fails to uphold the sanctity and dignity of human life,” said Joe Flannigan, the National President of the U.S. Society. “Further, we will continue to work with the Catholic Health Association and the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Catholic Charities USA to ensure that any legislation will continue to support the conscience clause protection to health care workers and that the Hyde exception continues to ensure no abortion can be funded with federal funds.”

While this statement might make some happy, it does nothing to allay the concerns we expressed last week. In fact, it raises more questions than it answers, by referencing the Hyde Amendment, which is mistakenly referred to as an “exception.” The Hyde Amendment has two problems:

• It permits abortion in cases of rape, incest and the life of the mother.
• It was stricken from the healthcare reform bill that passed the U. S. House of Representatives.

In fact, all abortion restrictions were gutted at the last minute, which prompted American Life League to issue the following statement: 

"At least now we know the real agenda motivating the pro-aborts behind this bill. You want to talk about healthcare as a basic human right, you want to talk about justice in the healthcare system—where is justice for the child in the womb, where is their right to healthcare? It’s denied because an even more important human right is denied—their basic, fundamental, inalienable right to human personhood.”

Furthermore, the SSVDP appears to embrace the position of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops,which has requested that any healthcare reform measure be “abortion-neutral." The reasoning behind such a request is explained in a USCCB fact sheet and is, to put it bluntly, an egregiously misguided position.

I am not criticizing the statement because the USCCB opposes payment for abortion in a healthcare proposal; rather, I am criticizing it because it is yet another politically motivated statement that, without explicitly saying so, affirms that abortion is an accepted practice in the United States and the bishops don’t want tax dollars to pay for it! Or, to put it another way, pay for your own, which is really not a position consistent with the Catholic teaching that each human being has intrinsic value and should be respected as a child of God. Yes, we live in a world of political realities, but Catholic bishops are the modern-day apostles of Christ, Who warned us not to become part of the problem and called us instead to be His voice, regardless of political realities.

The CHA's six “core values” for moral healthcare reform, which are supported by the SSVDP, CCUSA and, apparently, USCCB, include the following, under the heading of “Justice”: “Health care is a basic human right alongside food and shelter, all of which are necessary for individuals to participate fully in society.” This is a laudable goal; however, according to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, health care is not defined as a basic human right, but rather is addressed in a much broader context:

The political community has a duty to honor the family, to assist it, and to ensure especially…

- in keeping with the country's institutions, the right to medical care, assistance for the aged, and family benefits;

- the protection of security and health, especially with respect to dangers like drugs, pornography, alcoholism, etc.;

- the freedom to form associations with other families and so to have representation before civil authority. (Section 2211)

Nowhere is there mention of a “basic human right” that must be subsidized by the state. Nor should such a position be supported, since Catholic organizations such as the Catholic Medical Association and American Life League find it problematic, if not draconian. For example, the Catholic Medical Association makes it clear not only that heavy-handed government control of medical practice could result in the American people losing their freedom to make important decisions about their life and health, but also that 

it is critical for Congress to take the time necessary to address the complex economic and ethical issues involved, and to give the American people an opportunity to review any proposed legislation. Health-care reform encompasses both individual rights and the common good, ethical issues surrounding life and death, and economic issues ranging from taxes and property to economic competitiveness. It is essential that Congress first “do [no] harm” and then enact measures that can respect all of these complex goods.

Just as we were finishing up this commentary, we noted that CCUSA issued a statement in which it  accuses those of us who have exposed this rush to approve federally mandated healthcare “reform” of being dishonest. Father Larry Snyder, president of CCUSA, said, “These attacks appear to be politically motivated by opponents of health care reform. They are distortions of the truth and disingenuous. Catholic Charities USA will continue to work to reform health care in a way that is consistent with the teachings of our faith.”

First and foremost, it is neither disingenuous nor a distortion of the truth to expose the lack of consistent principle we have seen in public statements made by certain Catholic entities. It is our responsibility to point out what the Church teaches. We understand that Catholic healthcare principles should never give way to political opportunism.

Moreover, there should be no rush to approve any program that surrenders control over one’s destiny to a government agency. A government that approves of killing the preborn is certainly not a government one can trust with health care.

Contact information for the Catholic organizations noted in this commentary follows, in case you have questions or comments for them:

Catholic Charities USA
66 Canal Center Plaza, Suite 600
Alexandria, VA 22314
Phone: (703) 549-1390
Fax: (703) 549-1656
info@catholiccharitiesusa.org

Sister Carol Keehan
President and CEO
The Catholic Health Association
1875 Eye St. NW, Suite 1000
Washington, DC 20006-5440
Phone: (202) 296-3993
ckeehan@chausa.org

Society of Saint Vincent de Paul
58 Progress Pkwy.
St. Louis, MO 63043-3706
Phone: 314-576-3993
Fax: 314-576-6755
usacouncil@svdpusa.org

Secretariat of Pro-Life Activities
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
3211 Fourth St. NE
Washington, D.C. 20017-1194
Phone: 202-541-3000
prolife@usccb.org

Judie Brown

Responses


Dear Judie:
Thank you so very much for all the Catholic group info regarding socialist medicine.
I pray the USA wakes up and turns away from sin and turns back to God!
Look forward to seeing you in October at Pro-Life Wisconsin banquet!
Thank you for all you do!
God bless you!
Love and prayers,
Jeanne Breunig
Jeanne Breunig | August 3, 2009

Judie...
Thanks for your commentary today on so-called health care bills. I am so tired of hearing ambiguous and confusing statements from usccb, st v de p, catholic health care, etc. Keep up the great work and clarity on this and related issues. God bless.
Charles OConnell | August 3, 2009

I want to get my pro life group and others to respond to these groups who seem to be wolves in sheep's clothing, again leading the sheep further from true Catholic teaching. What do you suggest?
Beverly Deville | August 4, 2009

I add my voice to supporting your efforts. "A government that approves of killing the preborn is certainly not a government one can trust with health care." Indeed, until protection is provided to the unborn, all government initiatives are suspect.
David Volk | August 4, 2009

The landing of a $100 million federal contract by Catholic Charities may present a conflict of interest. They may be finding that playing along with the federal government pays a lot better than standing up for God and Catholic principles.
David Volk | August 4, 2009

On the subject of abortions should read what would Jesus say/do.

George krafcik | August 4, 2009

Thank you for the thorough explanation. After your initial post, I contacted SSVDP and received a quick, though apparently incomplete, response. This context is VERY helpful, and will help guide where my donation dollars go.
Ray | August 4, 2009

Judie,
Thank you for your commnets on these so called Catholic organizations. I have been involved locally with my SVdP conference here in Pa. The president of the conference is still in denial and can't understand what we are saying. Her only excuse is that SVdP never said it support this Health care Reform. They basically did! I content that they never said they opposed it as well! As A catholic organization they should have. The sheeple don't want to think out of the box! They have very little moral courage in saying these organizations are wrong. I salute you for your stand and leadership!
" CONSENSUS NEGATES LEADERSHIP!"

The beat just goes on and one.



Leo | August 4, 2009

Dear Beverly

I recommend bombarding these groups with letters and statements designed to advise them that further donations will be withheld until they get the message: a government that condones the direct murder of millions of innocent preborn babies cannot under any circumstance be trusted to address health care! It is an oxymoron and totally at odds with Catholic teaching.

Judie Brown
Judie Brown | August 5, 2009



BREAKING UP IS HARD TO DO
Posted: Friday July 31, 2009 at 9:04 pm EST by Judie Brown
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Back in the days when I was a teen, one of the greatest Neil Sedaka songs, “Breaking Up is Hard to Do,” was a favorite of mine. Perhaps it was the atmosphere during my senior year of high school—or maybe just the pressures of being senior class president and a gal without a beau—but I liked the song. It seemed to fit the mood in 1962, and it is again on my mind. There are all kinds of breakups, and to my mind, it is the pro-death movement that is beginning to show signs of disarray, dysfunction and even discouragement.

I was just perusing the ramblings and ranting of abortion supporters, and was struck by how troubled these women are by various pro-life efforts nowadays. Their one hope, as distant as it is, would be that in the Obama era, pro-life organizations and activists, as well as the faithful, would throw up their hands and toss in the towel. But quite the opposite has occurred, and they are rather upset about it.

As a matter of fact, their comments run the full gamut of testiness. We’ve got the Alan Guttmacher Institute’s Rachel Gold and Elizabeth Nash telling readers that

 abortion opponents are already looking beyond 2009. In Colorado and Montana, they have announced plans for a ballot initiative in 2010. In Mississippi and Oregon, they have been given the green light by the secretary of state to begin collecting signatures for a 2010 ballot initiative. All four of these proposals are similar to the Colorado 2008 initiative and would establish personhood at the moment of conception in the state constitution.

Actually, it is probably disheartening for them to realize that after their dire predictions following the Colorado initiative’s failure, we didn’t all move on and just forget about personhood. But as obvious as it is to me that now is the time and this is the hour for personhood, apparently they don’t agree. Moreover, they cannot even get their facts right about where personhood is being pursued and why.
 
If they could, Gold and Nash would recognize the obvious: All four of the initiatives they mention, plus at least 15 more, contain language that makes it clear that each human being’s life is to be recognized and protected legally from the instant their life begins. The word “conception” is not used in these initiatives, because it has been so inaccurately redefined and misused by the pro-deathers. Instead, the initiatives in a number of states contain the far more accurate phrase “from the beginning of their biological development,” which means that even babies created through in vitro fertilization will be protected by law and not a single one will ever face death or a freezer again. Gold and Nash need to get with the times.

Cristina Page, a well-known abortion advocate and commentator/blogger, chooses to describe the pro-life movement as “splintering” because she is silly enough to think that there are genuine pro-life organizations that support the dreadful Ryan-DeLauro bill that I discussed earlier this week. She opines with her usual bravado, “The vast majority of pro-life Americans, 80%, support contraception. Even among Catholics, followers of the only religion to oppose artificial contraception, 90% support contraception.”

What Page cannot admit is that while polls tell one sort of tale based upon the wording of the question that is asked, we have found that many of those who describe themselves as pro-life not only favor birth control, but favor some—if not all but a few—abortions as well. On the other hand, the solidly pro-personhood, pro-life Americans are gaining in number, and are rarely polled or written about with total honesty. A good reporter has to be specific about polling to get at the root of why the personhood movement is growing, but such investigation does not serve the agenda of those who place their faith in death rather than life.

Page goes on:

The anti-contraception minority, which represents just 20% of pro-lifers, has disproportionate influence and, with it, hopes to derail common ground efforts the public has longed for. It's time for the disagreement over contraception to be addressed by the pro-life community at large. We will have no chance of making a real impact on unintended pregnancy and abortion rates without dramatic informed strategies on prevention. The pro-life public must demand accountability and representation for their pro-contraception values. Considering that 80% of pro-life Americans support contraception, isn't it time to establish at least one pro-life organization in support of it too?

Once again, we read that the American public is supposedly longing for “common ground,” even though, among my own personal group of friends and neighbors, most have no clue what the term means. I am not suggesting, of course, that this includes the media, which is constantly attempting to drive the “common ground” wedge deep into pro-life efforts, but polling them is about the same as polling Eskimos to find out who likes cold weather.

The “dramatic strategies on prevention” to which Page refers have been failing for more than 40 years. It’s time to use a new formula, one that will actually curtail the spread of sexually transmitted diseases, cancers and heart problems caused by birth control pills and promiscuous behavior. Birth control will not resolve the deep-seated moral problems underlying such behavior; only confidence in self-esteem, respect for the dignity of the human person and love for God will do that for this nation.

Finally, I saw where the Dutch abortion boat was, at long last, grounded, which, of course, according to the death peddlers, has a silver lining. What is it, you might ask? Well, according to abortionist Rebecca Gomperts, “The single-most important achievement has been the founding of Women on Web, a pro-choice website which describes itself as ‘supported by a loose growing network of independent organizations and individuals that have no legal affiliation.’”

The web site reveals that visitors can acquire chemical abortion pills online, if a consulting physician approves. We haven’t investigated this thoroughly as of this writing, but it gives new meaning to “murder online.”

Gomperts also bows to the pro-life movement in Europe and the United States:

Gomperts does feel that the anti-abortion lobby is becoming stronger in Holland. "They copy tactics from the US, they do things like distributing little fetus dolls. They're always putting up posters and they're very active in schools," she noted. "They have more money to influence public opinion than we do. That's worrying. The other day I was giving a lecture at a school in the Bijlmer (a heavily immigrant part of Amsterdam) and I was shocked by the anti-abortion sentiment among the young immigrant girls there. And the youth activities of the Evangelical broadcasting corporation draw tens of thousands of visitors. These are signs that lots of things are changing in our society. Opposition to abortion is growing.

Well, Ms. Gomperts, please continue to behold the rejuvenation in respect for life that is sweeping the world. Gather ‘round a campfire with your American counterparts, sit back and shiver as you observe the public gradually becoming disillusioned with your philosophy, your tactics and your deadly solutions for every human problem.

The new, vibrant, young and enthusiastic pro-life leadership of today, of which I am very proud to be at least partially instrumental in training, is slowly eroding your confreres’ stranglehold on the way average people view abortion, contraception and, I might add, euthanasia.

While we’re not ready to break out the champagne, we’ve already got it on ice. Just watch those personhood campaigns grow, for the truth will, at the end of the day, be victorious!

There’s one more thing we’d like to add. As the pro-death movement slowly begins to fray at the seams, we pro-lifers—young and old—will all join hands, celebrate your movement’s downward trend and sing a tribute to your future:

Down dooby doo down down,
Down dooby doo down down,
Down dooby doo down down,
Breaking up is hard to do!

Judie Brown



PALLIATIVE CARE’S MERCILESS TWIST
Posted: Thursday July 30, 2009 at 4:59 pm EST by Judie Brown
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There’s never been an idea that couldn’t become a millstone around someone’s neck. That’s just the way it works due to man’s condition as a mere mortal who has, admitted or not, many flaws in his character. We all have the condition; some simply use it in inhumane ways.

Such is the case with the push to incorporate palliative care into national healthcare reform. What is palliative care? To get a correct response, given the current anti-life climate, we visited the Life Tree web site for an accurate explanation: 

Originally billed as "symptom management at the end of life," palliative care is now aggressively marketed as everything from pain relief for the public, to a cost-saving tool for hospitals, nursing homes and insurance companies.

Many pro-life advocates had hoped that palliative care would prove to be the ultimate antidote to the assisted suicide movement. The theory was sound: if patients are offered adequate pain and symptom relief, they will not request assisted suicide as a means to alleviate discomfort. Traditional palliative care—symptom relief when death is imminent—might have accomplished that mission.

However, over the past ten years, palliative care training and certification has been gradually co-opted by the very same right-to-die advocates that palliative care was meant to counter.

A good example would be Diane Meier, M.D., director of the Center to Advance Palliative Care (CAPC), who was invited to the Obama White House on June 18 for a healthcare reform stakeholder meeting. The meeting was focused on healthcare reform in the context of prevention and costs. According to the CAPC, “Meier told the panel that preventing the wrong care can help save the health system money that can be used to pay for wellness and prevention.”

The CAPC sent out an action alert out yesterday, telling its constituents,

What is important for health care reform and for the ninety million Americans living with serious illness is that care is focused on quality of life, management of the symptoms that accompany serious and chronic disease and facilitation of care that reflects patient goals and values.

The problem with the terms in this single paragraph, taken from a much longer e-mail alert, is that elasticity and subjectivity set the parameters for phrases such as “quality of life,” “patient goals and values” and the ever-evolving meaning of “management of the symptoms.” Such terms can mean one thing if money is not a problem for the healthcare provider and another if value judgments defining who lives and who dies are in play.

As a matter of fact, in the CAPC-supported Senate Bill 1150, entitled Advance Planning and Compassionate Care Act of 2009, we find this definition of palliative care:

The term ‘palliative care' means interdisciplinary care for individuals with a life-threatening illness or injury relating to pain and symptom management and psychological, social, and spiritual needs and that seeks to improve the quality of life for the individual and the individual's family.

A government that condones killing preborn children really should not be using a word like “compassion” in the first place. Moving on past the fluffy, feel-good terms, it is important to have a clear understanding of the goals of people in government and in the death industry. Such knowledge is of great urgency as this nation faces the possibility of dramatic changes in the way health care is addressed, particularly for those who are ill, disabled or dying. As we have come to learn recently, far too many in policy-making positions are increasingly committed to saving money by shortening lives. One of their favorite mantras is their supposed concern for a patient’s “quality of life.”

Quality of life is a term representing a utilitarian evaluation of who should live and who should die. It’s a sliding scale of values based on opinions and personal value judgments. When decisions about one’s QOL are being made by the wrong people, comparing the estimated life expectancy of someone who is ill with the cost involved in caring for that person can become the final arbiter. This can have the same effect as directly killing a patient through an overt act of euthanasia.

But ethicist Louise Mitchell exposes this brand of specious thinking:

Some people are too old, some are handicapped. Where do we draw the line? How do we decide that you should be euthanized but not your neighbor? Who is to decide that a person seventy-five years old is too old but someone sixty-five years old is not? That Down's syndrome is okay but cerebral palsy is not? Every human being has imperfections of varying degrees and severities. That is why we have doctors and dentists and even medical insurance. These imperfections are overcome every day. We naturally expect them: we naturally believe we can overcome them: and we do overcome them. The choice we make here is not between death and a handicap or old age. Yet, euthanasia makes a choice in quality of life, saying this quality deserves continuance and this does not.

There is deception in this choice. Death does not improve life or the quality of life: it ends life completely and irrevocably. Euthanasia is not making a choice between suffering, handicaps, and age, or death. The choice is between life and death, between a lower quality of life and the killing of an innocent person, between a good that is always good no matter the circumstances and an evil that is evil no matter what the circumstances.

The CAPC’s use of the term “patient goals and values” is another example of the application of subjective opinions that could be employed to hasten death, rather than relieve the patient who is suffering but certainly not dying. At the end of the day, such terms are easily twisted when the wrong decision makers are empowered. This is what has become so troubling about the healthcare discussions on Capitol Hill.

Who should be making these decisions? Does it really make sense to rely on the United States Congress to tell us, through legislative fiat, what type of treatment can be provided and/or who can be treated and at what age treatment should be denied? 

Margaret Sommerville, director of the Centre for Medicine, Ethics and Law at McGill University, makes a salient point in this regard: 

The proper goal of medicine and physicians is to kill the pain. It is explicitly not their role to kill the patient with the pain—to become society's executioners—which is what euthanasia entails, no matter how merciful or compassionate our reasons.

While Sommerville is absolutely correct, the problem with state or federal mandates regulating such treatment is that physicians will not be making the final judgment; federal guidelines will.

When Dame Cicely Saunders founded the hospice movement in 1959, it is safe to assume she had no idea how her vision to aid the dying would encounter so many twists and deadly turns. In her early years, she once wrote,

  You matter because you are you.
You matter to the last moment of your life,
and we will do all we can,
not only to help you die peacefully,
but also to live until you die.

Hopefully, many Americans will wrestle with the idea of government programs determining who will live or die. Hopefully, each American will let his or her elected officials know that it is never the proper role of government to sanction killing at any time during a human being’s life. No matter how the words are parsed, nuanced or twisted,

[a] man, even if seriously sick or prevented in the exercise of its higher functions, is and will be always a man ... [he] will never become a "vegetable" or an "animal." The intrinsic value and personal dignity of every human being does not change depending on their circumstances.


Pope John Paul II, 2004 

Judie Brown

Responses


Hi Judy,

Help me be a better person. I try to express, in as gentle terms as possible, that I want my Dad's 'Cremains' to be treated with dignity by simply following the Church's guidlines on burial, and my Mom and siblings would proffit spiritually by allowing this to happen?

. The first response I get, whether from the faithful Catholic Funeral Director, or from my kind Pastor, is fear and caution; meaning, while they agree nominally with the guidelines, it is more important to not be 'Dogmatic' or, in the funeral director's advice, "people do what they want and I can't force them". How can I possibly be kinder so they don't fear solidarity with the one who wants to do the right thing rather than the criticism of the world? It's not that I anticipate a strong opposition from family, I just want some minimal, kindly support.
Timothy Brophy | July 31, 2009

Hi Judy,

Help me be a better person. I try to express, in as gentle terms as possible, that I want my Dad's 'Cremains' to be treated with dignity by simply following the Church's guidlines on burial, and my Mom and siblings would proffit spiritually by allowing this to happen?

. The first response I get, whether from the faithful Catholic Funeral Director, or from my kind Pastor, is fear and caution; meaning, while they agree nominally with the guidelines, it is more important to not be 'Dogmatic' or, in the funeral director's advice, "people do what they want and I can't force them". How can I possibly be kinder so they don't fear solidarity with the one who wants to do the right thing rather than the criticism of the world? It's not that I anticipate a strong opposition from family, I just want some minimal, kindly support.
Timothy Brophy | July 31, 2009

Hi Judy,

My mother, thankfully, asked me to help her get a "living Will", since I have been promoting the Loving Will for several years now. My object is to protect her, and others from the death Culture, while hers is to protect her from unnecessary and extroardinary means to prolong her life. Bottom line, I could perhaps more easily 'sell' this to her if I could insert a phrase or two to reassure her. Can you either suggest a phrase or help to emphasis an existing one to accomplish this?

Public or Private answer is Okay
Timothy Brophy | July 31, 2009

I am appalled at the Catholic Health Assoc. & St. Vincent de Paul for taking part in trying to pass the "Obama health care." They, along w/the college of Notre Dame should be stripped from the official Catholic Directory since they do not believe in the commandments of God that govern our Roman Catholic faith!
espe marie villasenor | July 31, 2009

Thank you for reminding us of the dignity of life which is a gift from our Creator. We must honor and care for each other with the deepest love, understanding the wonder of life, seeing in each other's eyes, the life that mirrors our own.

Our daily work is to love, and to keep on loving, and never to stop caring for each other, till a natural death occurs in its own timing.

The imposition of death, the intending of death, is the complete opposite of caring. It entails assuming that the patient's life is no longer worth living, that there is no value at all in it. What an arrogant coldness this is! contrasted with what an overriding, all-embracing love.

Can one doubt which way our Lord would guide us to act? Hospice was intended to be a mission of that love, never to hasten death. Now, in many cases, it is hastening death for a majority of patients who come in.

What I know is that to love is to care, and to care impels one to act with care. Acting with care, means to do the things that the arrogant and cold would never do: to feed, to quench the thirst, to bathe, to convey to the patient that he or she is wanted, appreciated, loved.

The push for so-called reform is really a push to ration care and to make a quantum leap downward into the depths of the culture of death, where patients are told they are not going to be treated and therefore, that they are going to die because it is too expensive to care.

However, these same elite decision-makers have no problem with the massive amounts of Medicare fraud bilking the US treasury every year. They have no problem with huge sums of money disappearing into unknown hands.

The role of physicians, nurses and other health care workers must always be to care, never to kill. Forcing health care workers to kill, and that is what this is about, is the same as poisoning a tree, the fruit will never bring health, only illness and death. When patients can not trust their own health care providers, they have no one at all who can save them.
Ron Panzer, President Hospice Patients Alliance | July 31, 2009

Dear Timothy

I am not certain why you are experiencing resistance to your request that the simple Catholic guidelines for respecting the remains of a loved one be abided by but it is perhaps the case that these people have never reallly read what the Church teaches. Sometimes when people are unfamiliar with something as basic as what you are asking, they resist be of service.

I suggest you sit down with them and have a conversation about how THEY would wish to be respected at the time when the Lord calls them home, and then suggest that you want nothing less for your Dad.

Judie Brown
Judie Brown | August 1, 2009

Dear Timothy

It is at times like these that we have to smile, stand our ground and remind those with whom we are dealing that our first obligation is to God. Following Christ, with love and charity, is not always easy as He told us in the scriptures, but at the end of the day, He will be the judge, not the funeral director.

Judie Brown
Judie Brown | August 5, 2009

Timothy

The phrase you are looking for is right out of Catholic teaching:

Nothing need be done if it is causing the patient undue discomfort or if the body is rejecting the recommended treatment.

For a reference in Catholic documents, I suggest the Vatican Declaration on Euthanasia which is on line at http://www.wf-f.org/declarationoneuthanasia.html

Please read SECTION IV, and share it with your mother.

Judie Brown
Judie Brown | August 5, 2009



BLOOD-DRENCHED ‘COMMON GROUND’
Posted: Wednesday July 29, 2009 at 4:43 pm EST by Judie Brown
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Common ground: a basis of mutual interest or agreement

The current talk about “common ground” continues to concern me. These days, it pertains to several events that are separate and yet quite similar. The first is a piece of Capitol Hill legislation known as the Ryan-DeLauro bill, titled Preventing Unintended Pregnancies, Reducing the Need for Abortion, and Supporting Parents Act (HR 3312). What first caught my eye about this piece of legislation is that it is being celebrated by abortion supporters as a milestone, with commentator Sarah Posner reporting, 

These two legislators [Ryan and DeLauro], who disagree on the question of whether abortion should be legal, worked with the centrist think tank Third Way’s culture program to find common ground among supporters of reproductive rights and opponents of legal abortion. The result, though, is pretty much what NARAL Pro-Choice America, Planned Parenthood, and other reproductive health advocates have been arguing for years: prevent unintended pregnancies through comprehensive sex education and birth control, and support economically struggling women and their families.

It is clear that this legislative proposal is somewhat appealing to those who might claim they are pro-life for political purposes, but are not truly dedicated to protecting preborn children as persons. I suggest that this is so because Third Way is an organization that describes itself as “the leading think tank of the moderate wing of the progressive movement” and says, “We work with elected officials, candidates, and advocates to develop and advance the next generation of moderate policy ideas.”

While I am not sure exactly what it means to be in the “moderate wing of the progressive movement,” my gut reaction is not favorable. The good news about Ryan-DeLauro is that the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops is opposing it. In a well-articulated statement, the USCCB pro-life office’s Susan Wills aptly labeled Ryan-DeLauro as “the Planned Parenthood Economic Stimulus Package of 2009.” At least on this bit of “common ground,” the bishops have chosen to remove their shovels.

But on other “common-ground” fronts, the news about the Catholic response is not as pleasing. For example, the USCCB is supporting the Pregnant Women Support Act (HR 2035). This bill, which some say could be supported by the White House, is described as a measure that would “reduce the abortion rate.” Cardinal Justin Rigali, chairman of the USCCB’s Committee on Pro-Life Activities, has appealed to Congress to support the bill, which he claims “will provide many kinds of life-affirming support for pregnant women and their unborn children.” In a letter sent to every member of Congress, Cardinal Rigali states,

First, the fact that over a million abortions take place every year in this country is a tragedy, and we should at least take steps to reduce abortions. Second, no woman should ever have to undergo an abortion because she feels she has no other choice, or because alternatives were unavailable or not made known to her. An abortion performed under such social and economic duress meets no one's standard for “freedom of choice."

In his letter, Cardinal Rigali said that the bill “provides an authentic common ground, an approach that people can embrace regardless of their position on other issues.” While this sounds reasonable, we decided to see what the actual legislation states in relation to abortion, its availability and its identity as a surgical option for expectant mothers. What we found was not exactly compatible with Catholic teaching.

Among other things, the Pregnant Women Support Act sets out to make sure that any woman who is seeking an abortion is first provided with adequate information about her pregnancy. If she proceeds to abort her child, that is her choice.

Section 501 (“Disclosure of information on abortion services”) stipulates that “health facilities that perform abortions… shall obtain informed consent from the pregnant woman seeking to have the abortion. Informed consent shall exist only after a woman has voluntarily completed or opted not to complete pre-abortion counseling sessions.”

This legislation accepts as a fait accompli the Supreme Court decisions on abortion. It implicitly tolerates the idea of aborting a child because this action is protected by law. This is what common ground has always been about when applied to a thorny matter such as murdering a child prior to birth. So why is the USCCB applauding and supporting such a measure?

Bear in mind that the very same USCCB will not endorse political initiatives for protecting the personhood of the preborn child. Many bishops have done little or nothing to educate their flocks on the Catholic Church’s bedrock teaching on the humanity of the preborn and the fact that abortion is an act of murder. Perhaps it is more comfortable to be publicly accepted as reasonable than it is to demand an end to the slaughter.

The Catholic common-ground game appears to reach all the way to the Vatican. Robert Moynihan, founder and editor of Inside the Vatican magazine, recently wrote an opinion piece in which he made a few troubling statements. For example, in writing about his good friend Gian Maria Vian, the controversial editor of the Vatican newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano, Moynihan tells us,

A month before President Obama's scheduled visit to see the Pope on July 10, Vian published an editorial that took a positive view of Obama's first 100 days.

Conservative Catholics in the United States and elsewhere were appalled that, despite Obama's moves to provide greater access to abortion and stem-cell research, the paper was not denouncing Obama. There were calls for Vian to resign.

When I spoke with Vian a few days ago, I asked him about this controversy. He told me that he still has the "full support" of the Vatican's Secretariat of State. (In fact, Vian is a personal friend of Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the Pope's secretary of state.)

What can explain Vian's position -- and, by implication, the position of the Secretariat of State, and, perhaps, of the Pope himself?

Vian told me that the "big picture" needs to be kept in mind, that the Holy See's agenda, while always and unswervingly pro-life, nevertheless includes many other issues, such as social justice, disarmament, the Middle East and Cuba.

Vian's position illustrates the considerable differences between the European and American viewpoints on many critical issues of our time. The Europeans (like Vian) focus on points of agreement, and the Americans (like Vian's critics) focus on points of disagreement.

I do think Vian -- and even the Secretariat of State -- may be "naïve" about Obama and his intentions.

But I also believe that Americans can become so intent on one grave moral injustice (abortion and the manipulation of human embryos, both of which are always profoundly wrong) that they can ignore other areas of possible agreement.

What in the world is this man thinking? The “big picture” has a fundamental principle, and that is that each human being has innate dignity bestowed on him by God Himself. Therefore, putting an end to abortion is the “big picture”!

Moynihan discusses the meeting between Pope Benedict XVI and President Obama, opining that because the Holy Father handed Obama a copy of Dignitas Personae, there is that one hopeful “possibility of reaching Obama with a reasoned argument in defense of life.”

When one can relegate the act of abortion to being “one grave moral injustice” among other matters where agreement is possible, the Machiavellian nature of any common-ground proposal becomes obvious. The very idea of seeking "common ground" on which the forces of evil can agree with the forces of good is counterfeit to the core. The pro-life movement does not exist to be all-inclusive on many “issues” and “points of agreement.” It exists to end the murder.

Moynihan knows as well as I do that Obama is not backing down on abortion. Regardless of the global issues on which two heads of state can agree, the pope is the Vicar of Christ on earth. His teaching authority comes from Christ, not from political strategists and certainly not from accommodating evil. The same can be said for each of those men ordained into the priesthood of the Catholic Church, including every single Catholic bishop.

Abortion is not merely one among many so-called issues; it is a human tragedy that is being ignored, accepted and otherwise minimized for the sake of political opportunism. In my many years as a Catholic, I have never heard a sermon on my obligation to placate the world and appease elected officials. What I have heard is that crimes against humanity, such as the horror of abortion, are atrocities before God that can never, ever be condoned, accepted or otherwise embraced.

Perhaps it is time for Catholics, including the bureaucrats at the USCCB, to individually reflect on what is going on and stop hoeing so-called common ground—a ground that is seeping with the blood of dead preborn babies.

Judie Brown

Responses


And so, what does it buy the bishops to "be publicly accepted as reasonable than it is to demand an end to the slaughter.", with the Culture of Death defining 'reasonable'? It would seem imperative of the bishops to convert the status quo to it being reasonable to allow human beings to live.
David Volk | July 30, 2009



SYNCHRONIZED STEALTH: OBAMA’S ‘DEPARTMENT OF DEATH WITH DIGNITY’!
Posted: Tuesday July 28, 2009 at 2:25 pm EST by Judie Brown
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The current debate over health care is one of those scenarios that might play well in a science-fiction thriller, but must not be allowed to play out on the backs and over the dead bodies of the uninformed. The intent to create a nationalized health-care system appears more and more like a behind-the-scenes project based on government control over who lives and who dies. I might even suggest that nationalized health care’s real purpose is to keep feeding the vultures who prey off the culture of death, instead of keeping Americans healthy.

The problem is what is not occurring right now in the public debate. In other words, what remains unstated has many of us extremely concerned. Obama’s so-called health-care plan, if implemented, could be the most egregious assault on the dignity of the human person since the Supreme Court’s dreadful Roe v. Wade and Doe v. Bolton decisions of 1973. Here are a few specifics.

Betsy McCaughey, former lieutenant governor of New York, is an adjunct senior fellow at the Hudson Institute. Dr. McCaughey has written extensively on the dangers of the Obama health-care proposal and its many ramifications. What she has found in the draft now circulating in the House of Representatives is alarming, but apparently interests only a few of those who should be warning the public about it. And their target audience should be those who are approaching age 65 and, of course, those who are elderly and needing care. This target audience is going to become the walking target of Obama’s health-care “reform.”

Dr. McCaughey’s detailed research is available on the Defend Your Health Care web site. There you will find explanations of several chilling aspects of the various Obama health-care proposals floating around, including the following excerpt from “Assault on Seniors,” published in the Wall Street Journal

The House bill shifts resources from specialty medicine to primary care based on the misconception that Americans overuse specialist care and drive up costs in the process (pp. 660-686). In fact, heart-disease patients treated by generalists instead of specialists are often misdiagnosed and treated incorrectly. They are readmitted to the hospital more frequently, and die sooner.
 
“Study after study shows that cardiologists adhere to guidelines better than primary care doctors,” according to Jeffrey Moses, a heart specialist at New York Presbyterian Hospital. Adds Jeffrey Borer, chairman of medicine at SUNY Downstate Medical Center: “Seldom do generalists have the knowledge to identify the symptoms of aortic valve disease, even though more than 10% of people over 75 have it. After valve surgery, patients who were too short of breath to walk can resume a normal life into their 80s or 90s.”
 
While the House bill being pushed by the president reduces access to such cures and specialists, it ensures that seniors are counseled on end-of-life options, including refusing nutrition where state law allows it (pp. 425-446). In Oregon, the state is denying some cancer patients care that could extend their lives and is offering them physician-assisted suicide instead.

What is perhaps most interesting about Dr. McCaughey, who earned her doctorate in constitutional history, is that those who favor Obama’s health-care reform are vilifying her right and left. Though we know that this is how advocates of death and disrespect for human dignity operate, it is nevertheless disturbing. She has been called a liar, a spinner of tall tales and other terms of endearment, but the information she is providing is readily available from unbiased sources, such as the text of the health-care “reform” bill itself.

Though many claim Obama's massive bill is needed, few have actually read it. National Review  blogger Jack Fowler actually took the time to present a portion of it in a post titled “Doctor Kevorkian, Call Your Office.” In the bill’s “Advance Care Planning Consultation” section, we read the following:

Such consultation shall include the following:
`(A) An explanation by the practitioner of advance care planning, including key questions and considerations, important steps, and suggested people to talk to.
`(B) An explanation by the practitioner of advance directives, including living wills and durable powers of attorney, and their uses.
`(C) An explanation by the practitioner of the role and responsibilities of a health care proxy.
`(D) The provision by the practitioner of a list of national and State-specific resources to assist consumers and their families with advance care planning, including the national toll-free hotline, the advance care planning clearinghouses, and State legal service organizations (including those funded through the Older Americans Act of 1965).
`(E) An explanation by the practitioner of the continuum of end-of-life services and supports available, including palliative care and hospice, and benefits for such services and supports that are available under this title.

I could quote much more of this very lengthy section, but the gist is already quite obvious. Why would the government’s health-“CARE” bill include such detailed guidelines for discussion of end-of-life matters, unless it aims to ensure that the elderly and infirm are ready to bite the bullet, even if God is not ready to call them home? It does not take a rocket scientist to question why a “health-care” plan should include such a strong emphasis on not preserving their lives.  

The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and the National Committee for a Human Life Amendment, which works closely with the USCCB, have addressed health-care “reform” proposals without noting the gruesome specter of euthanasia that pervades the legislative proposals currently on the table. For example, a recent NCHLA alert makes the following statement:

On July 17, Bishop William Murphy, Chairman of the Bishops’ Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development, sent a letter to Congress saying: “The USCCB looks forward to working with you to reform health care successfully in a manner that offers accessible, affordable and quality health care that protects and respects the life and dignity of all people from conception until natural death.” Abortion must not be included as part of a national health care benefit.

While it is laudable that the U.S. bishops and their collaborators are crying out for an elimination of abortion funding from the so-called health-care reform proposals, why are they not pointing out the potential for euthanasia as well? Is the plan’s emphasis on ending the lives of the elderly not just as abhorrent as its intent to require Americans to pay for an ever increasing number of abortions? If the answer is yes, then why aren’t the bishops educating Catholics nationwide on the threat these bills pose for people of all ages, from creation until death?

The USCCB stated the following in a document entitled “Making Health Care Reform ‘Abortion Neutral’: What is the Legal Status Quo on Abortion?”: 

Health care reform whose goal is to advance health coverage, not advance an agenda on abortion, will take care to be abortion neutral. It will preserve current policies that bar use of taxpayer funds, respect conscience rights, and generally encourage childbirth over abortion; it will not mandate abortion as part of any “basic” or minimum benefit package.

This statement alone is mind-boggling! The USCCB sounds complacent about the fact that the nation is going to have abortion on demand, but by golly, it is upset about health-care “reform” requiring us to pay for it!

In addition, we have found that various diocesan “respect life” offices across America are taking their lead from the July 17 letter issued by Bishop William Murphy, chairman of the USCCB’s Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development, which advocates four principles for health-care reform:  

• a truly universal health policy with respect for human life and dignity;

• access for all with a special concern for the poor and inclusion of legal Immigrants;

• pursuing the common good and preserving pluralism including freedom of conscience and variety of options; and

• restraining costs and applying them equitably across the spectrum of payers.

Once again, there is no mention of the encouragement of euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide that the Obama plan entails.

I find it laudable beyond words that the USCCB, the participants in the recent  Stop the Abortion Mandate webcast and commentators such as Star Parker have articulated a huge number of Americans’ absolute disdain for considering the aborting of a child as “health care.” However, there must be equally strong opposition to prevent Obama’s “Department of Death with Dignity” from becoming a reality.  Let’s restore respect for human dignity across the full spectrum of a person’s life!

You can encourage the USCCB, NCHLA, similar organizations, national news commentators and media outlets to focus on respect for human dignity at all stages of life, by expressing absolute rejection of all forms of euthanasia—and abortion—in any health-care bills.

News commentators and media outlets are easily located via the internet. The information below is provided to assist you in contacting pro-life organizations.

National Committee for a Human Life Amendment
1500 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Suite 24
Washington, D.C. 20005
202-393-0703
www.nchla.org

USCCB Secretariat of Pro-Life Activities
3211 4th St. NE
Washington, D.C. 20017
202-541-3000
www.usccb.org/prolife
prolife@usccb.org

Family Research Council
801 G St. NW
Washington, D.C. 20001
800-225-4008 (toll-free)
www.frc.org

National Right to Life Committee
512 10th St. NW
Washington, DC 20004
(202) 626-8800
www.nrlc.org
NRLC@nrlc.org

Priests for Life
P.O. Box 141172
Staten Island, NY 10314
888-735-3448 (toll-free) Box 141172 • Staten Island, NY 10314ox
www.priestsforlife.org
mail@priestsforlife.org

Judie Brown

Responses


God Bless you Judy!
The USCCB fail us AGAIN.
Thank you for this article. I am forwarding to my confused Catholic friends and to the Catholics who know it so they can forward.
Thank you,
Liz

Elizabeth Daly Sato | July 28, 2009

I heard an AARP spokesperson being interviewed on NPR, reassuring the elderly that the proposed every-five-year consult for Medicare recipients was benign, rather than the consult-to-die sessions that we suspect. If AARP does not concern itself with the beginning of life, then they could convince themselves that the folks at the other end of the spectrum are not at risk. This absolute trust in the health care profession and our present administration seems naive, since both include active killing of human beings (abortion) as a part of health care.
David Volk | July 30, 2009

David

AARP has been in the hip pocket of the pro-euthanasia movement for years and years. They are publicly deceptive; always have been.

Judie
Judie Brown | July 31, 2009

So, what is the motivation for AARP to support euthanasia? It would seem diametrically opposed for an organization representing older people to support killing off those older people.
David Volk | August 3, 2009

David

I have been aware of the AARP's role in supporting so-called Death with Dignity or "compassion in dying" since the early 1980s. What is their motivation: it's the "loving" thing to allow people to control how they die! That is their argument, not mine!

Judie
Judie Brown | August 5, 2009



‘OBAMACARE’: FAST TRACK TO ECONOMIC SUICIDE
Posted: Monday July 27, 2009 at 3:28 pm EST by Judie Brown
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By Dennis M. Howard
 

Economic conservatives are worried about the runaway tax-and-spend potential of President Obama’s health-care initiative. They are worried that “before this thing is through, it could cost us $1.6 trillion and still not solve the health-care problem.”

But that’s not even half of the real story.

What they’re overlooking is the hidden cost of federal funding of abortion as part of an “essential benefits package” that will be imposed on everyone unless it is explicitly excluded from the legislation. Right now, the Democrats are opposed to such an exclusion.

If the health-care bill passes without this exclusion, taxpayers will be forced to pay for other people’s abortions whether they like it or not. And the $1.6 trillion the eco-conservatives are worried about will only be the tip of a very large iceberg.

That’s because abortion has a huge hidden economic cost. It’s the loss in gross domestic product (GDP) represented by all those babies who never had a chance to grow up to become the future workers, consumers, taxpayers and parents the nation needs to sustain future economic growth.

This is something the younger generation better start worrying about. People under 40 will still be paying taxes 30 to 50 years from now, so they will take the biggest hit from this phenomenon. And because their numbers have already been depleted by abortion, that means even fewer shoulders on which to rest a much bigger burden.

We’ve already had more than 51.7 million abortions since 1970. That’s a whopping 30.6 percent of our current under-40 population. If we had a war that took that kind of toll, we would have run up the white flag decades ago. The pro-aborts just don’t give up that easily.

What they don’t want to admit is that people are our country’s most important renewable resource. Ever since Roe v. Wade, we’ve been depleting that resource with abandon.

The hidden cost of those 51.5 million abortions has already reached an estimated $35 trillion in lost GDP. Assuming a 33-percent tax rate, that’s enough to pay off our entire current national debt with enough left over to fund a vibrant economy.

If all those kids had lived, we wouldn’t be in the mess we’re in.

Looking forward, the picture isn’t any brighter ... especially if we keep subsidizing abortion. That’s exactly what the Democrats propose to do by sending you the bill for other people’s abortions.

GDP per capita is now about $45,000 per year, and – until the current slump – it was compounding at a rate of four percent per year. It is a measure that includes everyone from the cradle to the grave. But every baby we abort is one less contributor to GDP – not just for today, but for a lifetime.

Every child we abort today will cost us about $23 million in future GDP over a lifetime. And the bonus is that babies don’t compete for jobs with the rest of us for their first 20 years. But they create jobs for everybody else – doctors, nurses, teachers, homebuilders, toymakers, retailers – you name it.

If there ever was a major job killer, it is the baby-killing industry.

Yet all those nuts we send to Congress continue to subsidize Planned Parenthood to the tune of  $326 million a year. That’s about $1,000 for every abortion Planned Parenthood performs. Now Congress want to compound that by making you pay again ... and again ... and again.

So, unless abortion is explicitly excluded from Obama’s health-care plan, get ready for even higher taxes. Whether it’s your abortion or someone else’s, you’re going to get the bill.

Planned Parenthood estimates that the number of abortions will rise by 20–35 percent if the Obama health-care bill passes. That will take abortions back to levels not seen since the mid-1980s. And that means even bigger losses in future GDP.

Thanks to the magic of compounding, by 2040 to 2050, we’re already looking at cumulative GDP losses of $335–500 trillion dollars just from abortion. Add another 20–35 percent to that, and we’re talking about really big money.

That’s why I call “Obamacare” a fast track to national suicide. It is far more significant than anything else that threatens us this side of eternal damnation.

In his book Obamanomics, John Talbott lists "25 Greatest Threats to our Prosperity” and their potential costs. (Abortion oddly is not one of them!) High on his list are “World Poverty" ($100 trillion), "Global Warming" ($60 trillion), "Globalization’s Nasty Side Effects" ($60 trillion) ... all the way down to “Terrorism" ($5 trillion).

His terrorism tab is laughable. We’ve already exceeded it. And nearly all of the others are based on numbers conjured up in someone’s imagination.

My estimates, on the other hand, are based on hard-rock numbers. GDP per capita is a measure that is used universally throughout the world. Indeed, my estimates are more conservative than those employed by government agencies in the cost/benefit analyses they use to plan their spending.

But try telling that to some politician who firmly believes that abortion is some kind of free lunch. Sure, it looks “free” to a guy who wants to avoid the responsibility of paying 21 years of child support, but the baby’s only crime is wanting to call him “Daddy” for the rest of his life.

For the rest of us, it adds up to more of what we have been experiencing for the last 35 years: declining personal incomes, a shrinking economy, lost jobs, rising taxes, and less freedom as the Nanny State takes over more and more of our personal lives.

In short, abortion is the biggest fraud ever perpetrated on the American people.

But you have a choice. If you want bigger tax bills, a grimmer future for your children and grandchildren, and more government encroachment on your right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, just go back to sleep and forget you ever read this.

But if you are ready to fight this, come join us at We the People Speak, our new non-partisan educational campaign to restore common sense to American politics. Or join us on Facebook. Contact your representatives by calling the U.S. Capitol switchboard: 202.224.3121. And urge them to explicitly exclude funding for abortion from any health-care bill.

 

Dennis Howard is president of the Movement for a Better America, an ALL Associate group dedicated to pro-life marketing communications and education. This commentary was originally published on http://www.movementforabetteramerica.org and is reprinted here with his kind permission. Dennis is a veteran journalist and market researcher who began researching abortion's economic impact in 1992. In 1994, based on long-term demographic trends, he began forecasting the current economic crisis. His forecasts have proven correct, starting in 2000 and continuing until 2010 and beyond.  Dennis frequently speaks and gives interviews on this topic. Contact information:  http://www.movementforabetteramerica.org mbaforlife@gmail.com; Media calls – 973-895-7367/ 973-796-8338 (cell) 

Judie Brown




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  Pro-Life Story: Abortion is the worst thing you can do
Posted By gabby on Jun, 22 2007
     I was thinking on getting one but when I realize what it really was tears rolled down my eyes. Now I have a sweet baby girl, she's the love of my life. She's 2 years old and ... Read

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