An Idea Whose Time Has Come
Sometimes a movement’s opposition is its best friend. And an opposition commentator is the first to tell the world transformative social change is underway.
A recent National Review cover story warns of a dangerously potent cultural shift. It seems Americans are moving out of frank denial and blind fear of death into a position of empowerment and choice in our end-of-life experiences. This is a bad thing, from National Review’s perspective.
The article bemoans a “creeping culture” of suicide and euthanasia. Of course those are their inflammatory words to describe the emerging culture. Our words would be that a culture of dignity, human liberty and personal choice is finally gaining ground.
On the way to arguing against us, the National Review makes some keenly perceptive observations. First, the author acknowledges our movement has “come a long way” in twenty years, and credits Compassion & Choices as the “premier advocacy group” to make that happen. He deplores that today members of “the social and political elite” readily voice their support. And he opines that when they do this “as openly as they would with charities like the United Way, we have reached a new cultural moment.”
Hooray for that! I, too, sense that human mortality is no longer the political third rail it used to be. For all the “death panel” hysteria this August and September, those charges never did really get any traction. And the fear monger politicians peddling “kill granny” hyperbole have joined those who embarrassed themselves a few years ago by elbowing their way into the Schiavo family tragedy. They just look silly, opportunistic and mean.
The author also acknowledges our movement’s recent successes and calls 2008 a “banner year.” Finally, he writes that as individuals, we are “passionately committed, work hard, and feel time is on [our] side.” All true, and we are truly grateful for the praise!
As one might expect, the writer opposes personal choice in most important life decisions. A believer in intelligent design, he opposes contraception, stem cell research and choice in dying. The vigor of his opposition highlights the power of end-of-life choice to move society to a new level of respect for personal autonomy and human dignity. His intense focus tags our movement, with Compassion & Choices in the lead, as an especially potent force for liberty.
Social progress takes concerted, sustained effort. For fifty years individuals and foundations concentrated on the key issues of civil rights, equality for women and reproductive choice, to promote human dignity and liberty. Equal opportunity for women and minorities, together with reproductive freedom, were the dominant fields of battle for twentieth century struggles around human dignity, individual autonomy and self determination. Now, at the dawn of the twenty-first century, new battle lines are drawn between patients who struggle for control over unnecessary suffering at the end of life and authoritarians who would keep control elsewhere.
The opposing forces remain essentially unchanged from last century to this. Individuals asserting their own values and beliefs seek control over important decisions in their lives, especially healthcare decisions. Dogmatic churches, autocratic institutions and authoritarian politicians fight to limit individual authority over self.
Who decides if a couple can purchase birth control devices? The most powerful church in the world wants to decide, and, until 1965, enlisted states to enforce bans on contraceptives.
Who decides whether people may opt for treatments developed through stem cell research? Right-to-life organizations decide and enlist Congress to keep federal money away from scientific breakthroughs.
Who decides whether dying patients may ask their doctors to help them experience a humane and peaceful death? The American Medical Association decides, and uses its formidable political power to pressure lawmakers into ignoring the will of the people.
End of life choice is the human liberty movement of the twenty-first century. This is the arena where dignity and liberty stride forward today. People who care about core principles of justice and human dignity feel drawn to this movement. The struggle for end-of-life choices is a movement whose time has come.
“ No army can withstand the strength of an idea whose time has come..”
- Victor Hugo.


Those who oppose personal choice in something as important as dying share the irrational pronouncements of the Taliban and, in past centuries, institutions which insisted that the earth was flat….
I certainly hope that humans will, over time, move toward acceptance of the inevitable process of death and dying.
Comment by Paul Holmgren — October 31, 2009 @ 8:37 am
A “New Awakening” is long overdue. I have become so disgusted with the interference of so-called orthodox religions, and fundamentalism, grabbing for the helm to steer our country away from religious tolerance and separation of church and state, which are some of the basic founding features of this country, that I have decided to drop out of the church I was raised in, and seek a new path. In checking the internet, I see that there are many, many others who are also tired of “the righteous sector” making decisions for all of us. There is much material available, at the bookstore and on the internet, to help a person find his way in this regard.
(That “his”, by the way, is a “gender collective” pronoun, which is how the masculine collective pronoun is MEANT in the bible and other older written material. It, as well as the other masculine pronouns, refers not to “men only”, but to “human-kind”.)
I like Thomas Jefferson’s attitude. He said that another person’s religion or activity is not his worry or his business, if it “neither robs my purse nor breaks my leg”. This is where “Right-to-life” has no leg to stand on - if someone didn’t tell them that their neighbor had had an abortion, they would be totally unaware of it - it would neither rob their purses, nor break their legs. Right?
Comment by Gail Rendle — October 31, 2009 @ 10:58 am
Your words very eloquently capture the death with dignity movement along with my feelings towards my personal choices and liberties. If I may, I will use your words at out next chapter meeting to help inspire our members and help them see the path and destination we are heading.
Thankyou Barbara.
Comment by Jay Dackman — November 3, 2009 @ 4:27 pm
[...] their doctor to help them to a humane and peaceful death? Today Compassion & Choices as well as our opponents on the other side of this question recognize the stars are aligned to make it an emerging focal [...]
Pingback by Barbara Coombs Lee: The Newest Star of Human Liberty | Obama Biden White House — November 6, 2009 @ 5:27 pm
[...] their doctor to help them to a humane and peaceful death? Today Compassion & Choices as well as our opponents on the other side of this question recognize the stars are aligned to make it an emerging focal [...]
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