Oregonians Speak Out on Assisted Suicide
By None, The Oregonian, Jan. 22, 2006
TO THE EDITOR
Sunday, January 22, 2006
Scrutinize those who would undo Death With Dignity
As a mostly stoic, if unwilling, host to cancer -- one of life's greatest character builders or cruelest jokes, depending on your point of view and religious affliction -- I applaud the U.S. Supreme Court majority on its decision to uphold Oregon's so-called "Death With Dignity" law.
I also observe that the dissenting court view was expressed by three males whom supporters had praised as dogged advocates of states' rights, personal liberty, minimal governmental interference and anything else they thought you wanted to hear.
Additionally, I urge everyone to remember those advocates' names while perusing sample ballots in the coming months. A politely worded reminder to your senator as he or she deliberates the future of yet another well-coached question-dodger and judicial defender of the faith couldn't hurt either.
GLENN ELFMAN, Pistol River
______________________________
Oregon has long been recognized as a leading practitioner of the benefit of the federal system that it allows for experimentation.
But by the same token, experimentation can have adverse outcomes, and Oregon's Death With Dignity Act, which is an anomaly not just in the United States but [nearly] worldwide, is such an example. The notion that one can legislate a "dignified" death by suicide smacks of overzealous salesmanship.
Before reform-minded states follow Oregon, they should ask what is Oregon's record on treatment of common problems related to end of life, such as problems of elder abuse, neglect and exploitation. More specifically, one should ask how does Oregon's congressional delegation stand on the Elder Justice Act of 2005, now pending in the U.S. Senate?
The answer is disquieting to those who equate Oregon with progressive reform.
At last count, only two of Oregon's seven-member congressional delegation have supported the Elder Justice Act, which places Oregon on a par with a few of the most socially backward states.
Oregon's Death With Dignity Act helps people die. The Elder Justice Act of 2005 helps people live. Oregon has made its choice. Now let us make ours.
LAWRENCE CRANBERG, Founder, Elder Justice Coalition of Texas Austin, Texas
______________________________
Back in 2000, The Oregonian printed an essay I'd written ("Relief or regret: views on death by suicide," Feb. 7, 2000) expressing my concern that assisted suicide might contribute to increased suicides by the depressed.
Contrary to what I had feared, my experience as a civil commitment investigator is that this slippery slope has not occurred. Of course, my evidence is only anecdotal, not research-based.
I now tend to agree with the Jan. 19 New York Times editorial that "Oregon has acted with exquisite care by requiring that two doctors agree that a patient is likely to die within six months, and is well informed and acting voluntarily, before lethal drugs can be prescribed. Congress would be wise not to meddle in a sensitive issue that Oregon has clearly studied far more closely."
GREG MONACO, Northeast Portland
______________________________
I must disagree with The Oregonian and all those letter writers who think that, somehow, Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts betrayed us or let us down or deceived the Senate Judiciary Committee by voting as he did in the Oregon assisted-suicide-law case.
Neither Roberts nor Antonin Scalia nor Clarence Thomas determined that the Oregon law was unjust, unconstitutional or just plain bad. On the contrary, Scalia, in his dissenting opinion, wrote that those who favor the Oregon law are "perhaps driven by a feeling that the subject of assisted suicide is none of the federal government's business. It is easy to sympathize with that position."
As the Los Angeles Times points out, the issue before the court "was narrow -- focused on whether former U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft had the authority under the Controlled Substances Act to forbid physicians to prescribe drugs to terminally ill patients who wanted to use the medications to end their lives. . . ."
Strictly on the basis of what they thought the controlled substances law meant, Roberts, Thomas and Scalia voted that Ashcroft had that right. The other justices, interpreting the law differently, voted that he did not. The verdict was that simple.
FRANK CADY, Wilsonville
______________________________
Be careful what you wish for. The basic subtext for the favorable ruling on Oregon's assisted suicide law is a reversal of the usual federal vs. states' rights alignment of the Supreme Court.
Imagine that the states' version of abortion on demand carried the day vs. the federal one. You would not be so glee-filled.
ROBERT D. VAUGHN, Southwest Portland
______________________________
How to avert planned suicide: If you're opposed to a relative or friend desiring to use assisted suicide, simply suggest that the person request the drug through Medicare/Medicaid Part D coverage. (S)he'll be dead long before even getting an answer, much less the drug!
DAVE DOCKHAM, Hood River
______________________________
The Supreme Court's 6-3 ruling in favor of Oregon's Death With Dignity Act underscored the importance of having an independent court. Samuel Alito Jr.'s presence would have made it 5-4. Although he would have been in the minority, it would have made the decision even tighter.
LEE EISENBERG, Southwest Portland
Defend dignity. Take action.
For more than 14 years, the Death with Dignity National Center (DDNC), a 501(c)(3), non-partisan, non-profit organization, has been the leading advocate in the death with dignity movement. Leaders in our organization originally wrote and have continued advocating for the Oregon Death with Dignity Law. DDNC has met these challenges through extensive legal defense of the Oregon law, education and outreach programs, and by developing and nurturing diverse financial resources with one goal in mind: to ensure DDNC's financial vitality and its position as a leader in the death with dignity movement.
Your donation today will enable us to continue to advocate for the right of the terminally ill to die with dignity. Please click here to give a secure, online donation. Thank you.
Get Email Updates
Sign up for the latest news, blogs, and action alerts in the fight for Death with Dignity.
Political Action Fund
The Death with Dignity National Center partners with the Oregon Death with Dignity Political Action Fund (the Fund) to conduct lobbying and political activities in order to achieve the enactment of Death with Dignity laws in other states. The partnership resulted in tremendous success with the resounding win in the 2008 Washington Death with Dignity campaign.
Learn more about the Fund's efforts to bring dignity to people around the nation.
About Death with Dignity
The greatest human freedom is to live, and die, according to one's own desires and beliefs. The most common desire among those with a terminal illness is to die with some measure of dignity. From advance directives to physician-assisted dying, death with dignity is a movement to provide options for the dying to control their own end-of-life care.
Death with Dignity National Center (DDNC) is the leader in this movement, successfully establishing, advancing and defending the landmark Oregon Death with Dignity Act -- a national catalyst for openly discussing and actively reforming end-of-life care for those who are terminally ill.
Learn more about the National Center and our family of organizations.
Patients & Families
The Death with Dignity National Center was formed out of a profound commitment to the idea that personal end-of-life decisions should be made solely between a patient and a physician. Based on this commitment, we are pleased to provide you with support and information as you face the difficult challenges ahead.
Research Center
We have compiled a comprehensive collection of legal briefs, journal articles, and newspaper clippings. We invite you to explore the wide array of information we have collected throughout our history.
In our Research Center you will find frequently asked questions, the history of the death with dignity movement, state monitoring statistics, and a copy of this groundbreaking statute.

RSS
