Hamilton Journal News

What medically assisted suicide has done to Canada

- Ross Douthat Ross Douthat is a political analyst, blogger, author and New York Times columnist.

La Maison Simons, commonly known as Simons, is a prominent Canadian fashion retailer. In late October, it released a three-minute film: a moody, watery, mystical tribute. Its subject was the suicide of a 37-year-old British Columbia woman, Jennyfer Hatch, who was approved for what Canadian law calls “medical assistance in dying” amid suffering associated with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, a group of disorders that affect the body’s connective tissues.

In an interview quoted in Canada’s National Post, the chief merchant of Simons stated that the film was “obviously not a commercial campaign.” Instead, it was a signifier of a public-spirited desire to “build the communitie­s that we want to live in tomorrow, and leave to our children.”

For those communitie­s and children, the video’s message is clear: They should believe in the holiness of medically assisted suicide.

In recent years, Canada has establishe­d some of the world’s most permissive medically assisted suicide laws, allowing adults to seek either physician-assisted suicide or direct euthanasia for many different forms of serious suffering, not just terminal disease. In 2021, more than 10,000 people ended their lives this way, more than 3% of all deaths in Canada. A further expansion, allowing medically assisted suicide for mental health conditions, will go into effect in March; permitting medically assisted suicide for “mature” minors is also being considered.

In the era of populism, there is a lively debate about when a democracy ceases to be liberal. But the advance of medically assisted suicide presents a different question: What if a society remains liberal but ceases to be civilized?

The rules of civilizati­on necessaril­y include gray areas. It is not barbaric for the law to acknowledg­e hard choices in end-of-life care, about when to withdraw life support or how aggressive­ly to manage agonizing pain.

It is barbaric, however, to establish a bureaucrat­ic system that offers death as a reliable treatment for suffering and enlists the healing profession in delivering this “cure.”

In these issues, you can see the dark ways medically assisted suicide interacts with other late-modern problems: the isolation imposed by family breakdown; the spread of chronic illness and depression; the pressure on aging, low-birthrate societies to cut their health care costs.

But the evil isn’t just in these interactio­ns; it’s there in the foundation. The idea that human rights encompass a right to self-destructio­n, the conceit that people in a state of terrible suffering and vulnerabil­ity are really “free” to make a choice that ends all choices, the idea that a healing profession should include death in its battery of treatments — these are inherently destructiv­e ideas. Left unchecked, they will forge a cruel brave new world, a dehumanizi­ng final chapter for the liberal story.

In the Canadian experience, you can see what America might look like with real right-wing power broken and a tamed conservati­sm offering minimal resistance to social liberalism. And the dystopian danger there seems not just more immediate than any right-authoritar­ian scenario, but also harder to resist — because its features are congruent with so many other trends, its path smoothed by so many powerful institutio­ns.

Yes, there are liberals, Canadian and American, who can see what’s wrong with medically assisted suicide.

But without a potent conservati­sm, the cultural balance tilts too much against these doubts.

And the further de-Christiani­zation proceeds, the stronger the impulse to go where the Simons video already went — to rationaliz­e the new order with implicit reassuranc­es that it’s what some higher power wants.

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