This month, the Dutch government
implemented a policy that permits terminally ill
children up to 12 years old to be euthanized. In other words, young
children can now be put to death without consent. Though the new policy
is only supposed to apply in exceptional cases of very serious terminal
illnesses, limits on assisted suicide never hold.
The most obvious example in the world is Canada. In 2021, 10,000
Canadians were killed by physician-assisted suicide, or one out of every
30 Canadian deaths. This explosion in medically assisted deaths led
columnist David Brooks to write in The
Atlantic that autonomy-based
liberalism, the idea that we each own ourselves and get to do whatever we
want with our lives, had gone off the rails. He demonstrated with story
after story just how quickly and easily “assisted suicide” blurs into
involuntary killing. As many have observed, the “right to die” has a
pernicious way of becoming a “duty to die.”
This deadly logic is embraced across much of Europe, on a scale few
appreciate. Back in 2017, CBS ran a
celebratory headline announcing that Iceland was
on pace to “virtually eliminate Down syndrome.” No cure had been found
for the condition, of course. Instead, Iceland had become so effective at
eliminating people with Down syndrome through selective abortion
that almost none were being born.
A study published in the European Journal of Human Genetics
found that across Europe, births of children with Down syndrome are now
about half what we’d expect. Again, this isn’t because of some miracle
cure, but because parents are aborting around half—in some countries as
many as 83%—of children diagnosed with Down syndrome in the womb.
Usually, those on the political Left cheer assisted suicide, euthanasia,
and abortion “rights.” Increasingly, the post-Christian Right is leading
the applause. Political researcher and commentator Richard Hanania, for
instance, shared this study and praised
the results: “Many of the parents go on to have a healthy child
instead, or maybe two. So you get just as many lives but more health.
There are actually people who think this is a bad thing.”
In response, David Harsanyi at The Federalist correctly identified this as the same logic behind eugenics, and asked: “If eugenics
is a social good, why stop at Down syndrome? Why not keep having
abortions until you get the perfect kid?”
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