In Sick Belgium, Children Have the “Right to Die”

YESTERDAY, as has been widely reported, Belgium became the first nation in the world to allow euthanasia for terminally ill children of any age. Children, who aren’t typically trusted with decisions on far less weighty matters,, are expected to be fully cognizant of what they are requesting in approved cases. The law is the latest measure advanced by the aggressive right-to-die movement in the formerly Roman Catholic country. Western society is so saturated with a death wish that even little children under expert care with all kinds of pain medications are not exempt. As Wesley Smith of the Center for Bioethics and Culture, remarked, “Treating a child like a sick horse is what passes for ‘compassion’ these days.” Smith has documented some of the abuses of “euthanasia” in Belgium. He said the child euthanasia bill was unsurprising: “Once killing is accepted as an answer to human difficulty and suffering, the power of sheer logic dictates that there is no bottom.”
The measure has deflected attention from the more pressing issue — and one can’t help but suspect that distraction is intentional. Most often euthanasia does not concern the young. It concerns the old. With this type of decline in the abhorrence toward voluntary death, the old are the ones most likely to feel the pressures to end their lives.
Here is an interview at CNN with a Belgium woman who supported the new law, and it gives a powerful glimpse into the Belgium people, whose problem appears to be not too much suffering but too little:
Mother Linda van Roy, from Schilde, Belgium, [was] among those backing the bill.
She could do nothing to help her terminally ill baby, Ella-Louise, in the last hours of her life.
Ella-Louise, who was 10 months old when she died just over two years ago, would never have qualified for euthanasia.
But her mother had to watch as her baby — who had Krabbe disease, a rare and terminal genetic mutation that damages the nervous system — slowly faded away under palliative sedation, food and liquid withheld so her suffering was not further prolonged. (more…)










