- "Steve Jobs, 1955-2011: Computers and Hyperbole"
Apathetic Lemming of the North (October 7, 2011) - " 'Baby Joseph' Baptised: My Take"
(March 28, 2011) - "Joseph Maraachli and a Second Chance"
(March 14, 2011) - "Joseph Maraachli, Medical Ethics, and Making Sense"
(February 28, 2011)
Steve Jobs, Today's World - - -
Most folks seem to think that Steve Jobs was worth the resources it took to feed and clothe him. Apparently even the expense of treating his cancer isn't controversial.For what it's worth, I think Steve Jobs changed the way many folks saw information technology: and arguably made the sort of global online communities we have today possible. Or helped, anyway. I'm glad that Mr. Jobs was able to live as long as he did.
- - - And Caring For Sick People
I also think that treating any sick person is:- A Good idea
- Not a waste of time
- Even if the sick person is
- Young
- Old
- Ugly
- Useless
- Even if the sick person is
Steve Jobs' life was "productive." Joseph Maraachli's life? Not so much. Not by contemporary Western standards.
Culling Inferior Stock?
Joseph Maraachli had Leigh's disease, a defect that seems to be inherited. One of his sisters died from the same condition.1From a strictly utilitarian point of view:
- Joseph should have been killed as soon as his condition was diagnosed.2
- To avoid 'wasting' resources
- Surviving members of the Maraachli family should have been sterilized
- To prevent contamination of the gene pool
Never mind what I think, though. The Catholic Church says culling inferior stock from humanity's gene pool is wrong.4 (Catechism of the Catholic Church, 2268)
Odd Health Care
I might be more sympathetic with the health care center's decision to pull the plug on Joseph Maraachli's life support, if they'd been willing to let him die elsewhere. Telling Joseph's parents that their son wouldn't be released for treatment elsewhere?5 That seems to be carrying 'doctor knows best' to an extreme.Moving on.
Euphemisms and Assumptions
Sometimes a euphemism, "an inoffensive or indirect expression that is substituted for one that is considered offensive or too harsh," can be useful. Let's say that a particularly dense dinner guest asked why you were rushing toward a lavatory. Saying "I need to use the bathroom" might be a better choice than a more direct, clinically accurate, explanation.On the other hand, euphemisms can let folks avoid thinking too much about what they're actually doing. Like "white man's burden," or "here, Granny, this'll put you to sleep."
The idea of killing other people seems to upset many folks. Particularly when the other person isn't a threat. Road rage is an example of inappropriate reaction to a threat, real or imagined: and that's yet again another topic.
I think this disinclination for unjustified violence is rooted in natural law. More topics.
Humanity Denied
Aversion to homicide often goes away when folks feel that the other person isn't really another person.6 Or not quite a person. Abuses involving that sort of 'depersonalization' aren't limited to killing other people.Examples are the old '3/5 of a person' in the Constitution, and the Dred Scott v. Sanford case. America corrected those appalling lapses in judgment: eventually.7
I hope it doesn't take us two centuries and a major war to sort out Roe v. Wade.
This may not be what you've been told, but the Catholic Church says slavery is wrong. Yet one more example of the Vatican butting into people's lives, from one point of view.8
Dred Scott v. Sandford and WWII propaganda, may seem like topics in a dusty history book. In a way, they are.
Slavery was, finally, abolished. Flushing cultural debris from that abhorrent practice is still going on: but eventually someone with African roots will be in the White House. Wait a minute - - -.9
Wholesale extermination of the 'unfit' seems to have lost some of its allure. I'm impressed at how many folks recognize that Germany's efforts at applying eugenic principles to Europe were a bad idea.
That's the good news.
The bad news is that today we have doctors practicing "reproductive health care" that involves products of conception, or "potential" people being terminated.
See how useful euphemisms can be? Put that way, killing babies seems like a nice, caring thing to do.
"Reproductive Health," Yes: "Maternal Health," No
Someone who'd been away from Earth for the last half-century might think that "reproductive health" means taking care of pregnant women and their babies. And so it does.Unhappily, a provider of "reproductive health" often takes care of youngsters the way a B-movie mob enforcer "takes care of" troublesome witnesses for the boss.
Which is why a group that cares for pregnant women and their babies won't get help from Canada. This group won't kill people who aren't up to spec, you see.
Noble-Sounding Motive
What the Canadian government is doing, and their motive, isn't as crazy as it looks.In their language, "reproductive health care" is killing babies that don't meet some standard. There are many establishment-approved reasons for terminating a product of conception, including:
- The mother
- Is too poor
- Might not send the child to Vassar or Yale
- Doesn't look like an ideal parent
- The child
- Is deformed
- Won't grow up in the right neighborhood
- Belongs to a group with too many people
- Doesn't fit into the mother's career plans
- Might be ugly
- Was conceived during rape
- Sounds noble
- Except it's killing a child because of a crime the father committed
- Sounds noble
Euphemisms: So Convenient!
Doctors who are into that sort of "reproductive health care" may believe that they aren't killing people. Not 'real' people. From what I hear, they may think they're only killing "potential people."10Canada's Got Company
America's establishment is at least as determined as Canada's, when it comes to supporting lethal "reproductive health care." This time, though, it's the Canadian government that doesn't want to get involved in saving people's lives:"Maternal health group denied funding over Catholic beliefs"As I said, there are some noble-sounding reasons for killing people. Some of the reasons are personal, often involving careers or income.
Marianne Medlin, CNA (Catholic News Agency) (October 6, 2011)
"A Catholic maternal health group has been denied Canadian government funding for the eleventh time in nearly a decade, while organizations such as Planned Parenthood receive millions from the country.
" 'We were told that we would never get funding simply because we wouldn't provide reproductive health—that we were 'too Catholic' and too close to the Pope,' Dr. Robert Walley, president of Matercare International, told CNA.
"Walley's organization, a group of worldwide Catholic gynecologists and obstetricians, works to reduce the over 330,000 preventable maternal deaths that occur each year in developing countries...."
Some of the reasons may be the 21st century's version of old, unpleasant, assumptions.
Dealing with 'Inferior Races'
Apart from 19th and 20th century histories, I haven't run into the phrase "inferior races" in a long time. For which I'm duly grateful.And for a short time after Germany's efforts at 'cleaning' the European gene pool, it looked like Western civilization had gotten eugenics out if its system.
Good news: Genocide is Still Gauche
I take some solace in genocide's continuing unpopularity. There's even a law against it.11 I'm quite certain that Canada's Parliament would reject a program that had elimination of an 'inferior race' as its stated goal.Bad news: "Maternal Health Care" Kills
I'm quite certain that the Canadian government has no intention of entirely wiping out the entire black population in Africa. At some point, dark-skinned Africans would merit 'endangered species' status, and that might be an embarrassment for folks who put them there.That said, I've been impressed at how fervently melanin-deficient folks strive to keep dark-skinned people from having 'too many babies.' All for the most noble of motives, of course: saving the environment; ending poverty12, and all that.
Sounds noble, doesn't it?
Related posts:
- "New Hungarian Constitution: Good News from a Former Workers' Paradise"
(August 22, 2011) - "Sex Selection, Newspeak, and Getting a Grip"
(August 11, 2011) - " 'Baby Joseph' Baptised: My Take "
(March 28, 2011) - "Sudan, Darfur: My Take"
(January 8, 2011) - "Sustainable African Development: And Swift's Modest Proposal"
(May 6, 2010)
- "Maternal health group denied funding over Catholic beliefs"
Marianne Medlin, CNA (Catholic News Agency) (October 6, 2011)
1 Joseph Maraachli's diagnosis:
"...Doctors at the SSM Cardinal Glennon Children's Medical Center diagnosed Joseph with Leigh's disease, a rare neurometabolic disorder which causes the degeneration of the central nervous system. The disease is usually inherited, but no genetic link for Joseph was found after his parents were tested.[20] The Maraachlis lost an 18-month old child to the same condition eight years before Joseph was diagnosed.[23] The doctors at the SSM hospital said the tracheotomy they performed gives Joseph a more stable airway, extra mobility and comfort, and protects his lungs.[23]..."2 Much to the credit of the Canadian health care facility which had possession of Joseph, he was permitted to live. I even think their decision to pull the plug on his life support system may have been justified. (Catechism of the Catholic Church, 2276-2279)
("Joseph Maraachli Case," Wikipedia)
3 This hero of both eugenics and birth control is, I think, worth remembering:
- "Margaret Sanger," Wikipedia
4 The Catholic Church is opposed to treating people as if we're livestock. Human beings are people, cattle aren't. Even so, moral law applies to our treatment of animals, too. Which is another topic. (Deuteronomy 25:4, for example, and Catechism, 2415-2418) On the other hand, human beings are animals. And people. (Catechism, 1951, 1700, 1730) I'm a human being. The design for my sort of creature means that I can't be an angel, except maybe in a metaphorical sense. Like any other human, I'm an animal that's also a person. I don't have a problem with the way God set things up, which is yet another topic: and one I've discussed before. Angels are people, too, but they're not human. Not even close:
- Humans
- Angels
- Intelligent
- People
- Pure spirit
(Catechism, 330)
- "Humans are Animals: But Not Just Animals"
(August 31, 2011) - "Hummingbirds, Deuteronomy, Morality, and Getting a Grip"
(August 13, 2011) - "Angels: Wings, Violins, and Swords"
(February 20, 2011)
"The baby who was hours from being pulled off life support at his Canadian hospital has been rescued by the national director of Priests for Life and taken to the U.S. for treatment.6 'Depersonalizing the enemy' is fairly common:
"Thirteen-month-old Joseph Maraachli, who is currently kept alive by a respirator and was recently denied a transfer to a Michigan hospital to undergo a tracheotomy, arrived in the U.S. early Monday morning with Fr. Frank Pavone and other Priests for Life staff...."
(FoxNews.com (March 14, 2011))
"...anti-Semitic visual propaganda depersonalized the Jews by reducing them to the archetypes of 'the Jew.'...."And see
"The Jewish enemy: Nazi propaganda during World War II and the Holocaust
Jeffrey Herf (2006) via Google Books
- "The enemy reviewed: German popular literature through British eyes between the Two World Wars
Ariela Halkin (1995) via Google Books
- "The Threat of People Who Aren't Just Like Us?"
(July 23, 2011) - " 'Towelhead,' 'Retard,' and Talking Sense in a Global Society"
Another War-on-Terror Blog (February 24, 2009)
- "Dred Scott v. Sandford"
Primary Documents in American History, Library of Congress
Today, October 7, 2011, this page links to
"...Representatives and direct Taxes shall be apportioned among the several States which may be included within this Union, according to their respective Numbers, which shall be determined by adding to the whole Number of free Persons, including those bound to Service for a Term of Years, and excluding Indians not taxed, three fifths of all other Persons..."The 14th Amendment (1868) corrected that injustice.
(Article I, Section 2, The Constitution of the United States: A Transcription, archives.gov)
Notable events since 1787 and the slavery compromise:
- The Dred Scott v. Sanford (1857) (the "Dred Scott decision")
- The War Between the States
- Ratification of Amendment XIII: Prohibition of Slavery
- Passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964
- Changing what needs changing
- Teaching succeeding generations what happened
- In hopes that they won't repeat the same blunders
- "Huckleberry Finn, [redacted] Jim, and Making Sense"
(June 24, 2011) - "Guatemala, Dr. John Cutler, Tuskegee, Nürnberg, and Learning"
Another War-on-Terror Blog (October 2, 2010) - "Victims of Human Trafficking in Minnesota: How to Help"
(June 30, 2010) - "Dred Scott, the Slavery Compromise, and Who to Trust"
(February 2, 2009)
Particularly - "Japanese Court, Okinawa, Kenzaburo Oe: There's a Lesson Here"
Another War-on-Terror Blog (April 5, 2008)
- "Elections, Abortion, Voting, Conscience, and Other Troublesome Topics"
(November 1, 2008)
Particularly
- "Barack Obama's Birth Certificate, and Getting a Grip"
Another War-on-Terror Blog (April 27, 2011) - " 'I Take No Interest in Politics' isn't an Option"
(March 29, 2010)
Particularly - "The Sign Says "Obama Half-Breed Muslin" - Freedom of Speech, Politics, Spelling, and Race"
Another War-on-Terror Blog (October 1, 2008)
- "Sex Selection, Newspeak, and Getting a Grip"
(August 11, 2011)
- "Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide"
Adopted by Resolution 260 (III) A of the United Nations General Assembly on 9 December 1948, via Human Rights Web (August 16, 1994)
- "Troy Davis: American Courts are Never Wrong, Right?"
(September 25, 2011) - "New Hungarian Constitution: Good News from a Former Workers' Paradise"
(August 22, 2011) - "A Bishop, the Governor of Illinois, a Culture of Life, and Me"
(March 4, 2011) - "Pedophobia? The Doctor has a Point"
(September 4, 2010) - "Life: It's a Single Issue, and an Important One"
(November 2, 2008) - "Capital Punishment: Killing Those Who Deserve to Die"
(October 2, 2008)
2 comments:
Missing a word: "killing babies seems a nice, caring thing to do."
Extra contraction: "Canadian government that's doesn't want"
Grammatically correct, but awkward sounding: "I take some solace in a genocide's unpopularity among America's establishment."
Which church? "Church is opposed to treating people as if"
The Friendly Neighborhood Proofreader
Brigid,
Fixed, and thanks!
I changed the "missing a word" thing sentence, although it actually is a construction that's occasionally used: not often, though. As you said elsewhere: "awkward sounding."
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