The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Physician-assisted suicide harms the poor, elderly and disabled

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Once again, a bill in Connecticu­t legalizing physician-assisted suicide was the subject of discussion at a public hearing on Tuesday, March 20. This year, it is HB 5417, with the Orwellian name, “An Act Concerning Endof-Life Care.” The well-funded “Compassion and Choices” and Secular Coalition of Connecticu­t promoters of this bill are trying to rally all “liberals” behind it under the false banner of “choice,” claiming that its only opponents are the extreme religious right and the institutio­nal Catholic Church. As always, they deliberate­ly refuse to acknowledg­e the disability rights community activists, Second Thoughts Connecticu­t, and the peace and justice activists who have opposed these bills for years.

Second Thoughts Connecticu­t has led the opposition. They don’t just “represent” people whose lives are at risk because their health care is “too expensive.” They are those people. Articulate, determined, and resourcefu­l, they have mobilized year after year to protect their own lives and right to choose. They have also given me courage, and so, from my personal experience in trying to get my elderly mother, a Medicaid patient with dementia, the care she needed to stay alive, I have written, spoken, and testified against this legislatio­n since 2013. (The New Haven Register published my Forum piece about this ( https://www.nhregister.com/opinion/article/ Forum-Aid-in-dying-bill-neither-11375068.php ), March 14, 2014.

We continue to clearly see these bills for what they are: another piece of the medical cost-cutting agenda that seeks to “ration” health care for the most vulnerable among us — the poor, elderly and disabled. As a life-long activist for peace and justice, it is beyond my understand­ing how anyone claiming human rights concerns could continue to advocate for this kind of legislatio­n in the era of alt-right power, where the highest officials in our nation are slashing with impunity the most basic of our hard won, already inadequate, safety nets.

— Joan Cavanagh New Haven

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