Thursday, March 24, 2005

Gen X’s Roe vs. Wade

by Pete Vere, JCL

Other Articles by Pete Vere, JCL
Gen X’s Roe vs. Wade
03/24/05


As we commit this reflection to writing,
Terri Schindler-Schiavo has spent the
past five days without food and water.
A federal judge refuses to grant the
injunction requested by Terri’s parents.
This injunction would see the handicapped
woman’s feeding tube reinserted as the
federal courts review her case.

Terri’s survival is now a matter of Divine providence. For even if her
feeding tube was restored, only a miracle could prevent Terri’s
organs from suffering irreversible damage after five days without
nutrition and hydration.


All of the undersigned are Catholics in full communion with Rome.
We denounce this slow and painful execution of Terri Schindler-Schiavo.
We denounce this execution as gravely immoral, fundamentally unjust,
and a gross violation of the Natural Law.


Pope John Paul II stated a little over a year ago that nutrition
and hydration, even when administered through medical assistance,
remain “a natural means of preserving life, not a medical act.”
In short, eating and drinking are common to every living human.
“Death by starvation or dehydration is, in fact, the only possible
outcome as a result of their withdrawal,” the Holy Father continued.
“In this sense it ends up becoming, if done knowingly and willingly,
true and proper euthanasia by omission.” Thus we denounce the
starvation and dehydration of Terri Schindler-Schiavo as the
deliberate euthanasia of a disabled woman.


Moreover, we denounce this execution as gravely immoral.
The culture of death alleges that Terri is in a persistently
vegetative state. We respond with the following proclaimed
by the Holy Father: “Even our brothers and sisters who find
themselves in the clinical condition of a 'vegetative state' retain
their human dignity in all its fullness.” In other words, Terri is a
human person. She is part of God’s creation and she enjoys the
dignity common to every human person. No human power possesses
the moral authority to pass judgment upon Terri’s life. For as the
Holy Father reminds us, “The value of a man's life cannot be made
subordinate to any judgment of its quality expressed by other men.”


Euthanasia is neither a matter of personal choice nor a matter
of private morality. “Whatever its motives and means,”
article 2277 of the
Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches,
“direct euthanasia consists is putting an end to the lives of handicapped,
sick, or dying persons. It is morally unacceptable.” To this teaching,
the Holy Father adds: “The evaluation of probabilities, founded on
waning hopes for recovery when the vegetative state is prolonged
beyond a year, cannot ethically justify the cessation or interruption
of minimal care for the patient, including nutrition and hydration.”
In short, Terri’s disability and medical condition do not negate
her essential dignity as a human
person. Nor do Terri’s disability
and medical condition limit her fundamental right to life.


Inside the Passion of the ChristEach of the undersigned was born during the 1970's. As members of Generation-X, each of us survived the abortion holocaust ensuing from Roe vs. Wade. A quarter of our generation did not. In the name of medical privacy and personal choice, a quarter of our generation found itself butchered from the womb. Abortion has claimed more lives among our generation than the combined effort of AIDS, drugs, and gang violence.

Yet our blood has not satiated the culture of death. In the name
of medical privacy and personal choice, the culture of death now
seeks the blood of our elderly, our disabled, and our terminally ill.
Like Roe vs. Wade, the execution of Terri Schindler-Schiavo is a
defining moment in the culture war. It sets a precedent whereby
our society no longer judges our elderly, our disabled, and our
terminally ill as fully human.


Terri represents every North American with special needs. In allowing
an estranged husband to insist upon the execution of his disabled wife,
and in allowing an activist judiciary to sanction such an execution
because of the woman’s medical condition, we allow society to redefine
the essence of our humanity. For society now judges each of us by our
perceived productivity; our potential contribution to society must now
meet some external quantitative standard. Otherwise society judges our
quality of life as unworthy of quantity of life.


An old adage comes to mind: Those who fail to understand history
are doomed to repeat its mistakes
. This mistake is all too reminiscent
of German eugenics in 1933, as well as the politics of abortion initiated
by
Roe vs. Wade in 1973. In our collective arrogance, we as a society
refuse to learn from these mistakes. Thus we endanger the ten percent
of our population with special needs. And if we may draw a lesson from
modern history, what begins as reckless endangerment will soon entrench
itself as social obligation. For as Fr. Richard John Neuhaus reminds us,
“Where orthodoxy is optional it will soon be prohibited.” Conversely, we
have learned from the culture war over abortion and the homosexual
agenda that the opposite is also true: Where immorality is tolerated it
will soon be imposed.


“First you kill those who want to die,” forewarns the American Catholic
ecumenist Dr. Bill Cork. “Then you kill those whose family wants them to die,
then those where one family member wants them to die, and then those
whose families want them to live. Finally, you kill those who want to live
but who get in the way of the state.”


The starvation and dehydration of Terri Schindler-Schiavo is nothing
short of a diabolical attack upon the delicate wonder and beauty inherent
in human life. This includes the lives of the elderly, the disabled, and the
terminally ill. It is a moral catastrophe of which the consequences will
equal or exceed
Roe vs. Wade. For in as much as we starve Terri of food
and water, we starve our society of all that makes us civilized.


Pete Vere, JCL
Catholic Author and Canonist

Matt Abbott
Catholic Social and Political Commentator

John Pacheco
Catholic Author and Activist

Michael Trueman, JCL, MDiv
Catholic Author and Canonist

Shawn Tribe
Catholic Author and Social Commentator

Aiden Reid
Canadian Pro-Life Political Lobbyist

I. Shawn McElhinney
Catholic Social and Political Commentator

Paul Tuns
Editor, the Interim Newspaper

John-Henry Westen
Editor, LifeSiteNews.com


© Copyright 2005 Catholic Exchange


Pete Vere is a doctoral student with the
Faculty of Canon Law at Saint Paul University.
He recently co-authored

Surprised by Canon Law: 150 Questions Catholics Ask About Canon Law
(Servant Books) with Michael Trueman and
More Catholic Than the Pope
(Our Sunday Visitor) with Patrick Madrid.
He lives with his wife and two daughters in Ottawa, Canada.

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