A 'Duty to Die'?
By Thomas Sowell
PatriotPost.us
One of the many fashionable notions that have caught on among some of the
intelligentsia is that old people have "a duty to die," rather than become a
burden to others.
This is more than just an idea discussed around a seminar table. Already
the government-run medical system in Britain is restricting what medications
or treatments it will authorize for the elderly. Moreover, it seems almost
certain that similar attempts to contain runaway costs will lead to similar
policies when American medical care is taken over by the government.
Make no mistake about it, letting old people die is a lot cheaper than
spending the kind of money required to keep them alive and well. If a
government-run medical system is going to save any serious amount of money,
it is almost certain to do so by sacrificing the elderly.
There was a time-- fortunately, now long past-- when some desperately
poor societies had to abandon old people to their fate, because there was
just not enough margin for everyone to survive. Sometimes the elderly
themselves would simply go off from their family and community to face their
fate alone.
But is that where we are today?
Talk about "a duty to die" made me think back to my early childhood in
the South, during the Great Depression of the 1930s. One day, I was told
that an older lady-- a relative of ours-- was going to come and stay with us
for a while, and I was told how to be polite and considerate towards her.
She was called "Aunt Nance Ann," but I don't know what her official name
was or what her actual biological relationship to us was. Aunt Nance Ann had
no home of her own. But she moved around from relative to relative, not
spending enough time in any one home to be a real burden.
At that time, we didn't have things like electricity or central heating
or hot running water. But we had a roof over our heads and food on the
table-- and Aunt Nance Ann was welcome to both.
Poor as we were, I never heard anybody say, or even intimate, that Aunt
Nance Ann had "a duty to die."
I only began to hear that kind of talk decades later, from highly
educated people in an affluent age, when even most families living below the
official poverty level owned a car or truck and had air-conditioning.
It is today, in an age when homes have flat-panelled TVs, and most
families eat in restaurants regularly or have pizzas and other meals
delivered to their homes, that the elites-- rather than the masses-- have
begun talking about "a duty to die."
Back in the days of Aunt Nance Ann, nobody in our family had ever gone to
college. Indeed, none had gone beyond elementary school. Apparently you need
a lot of expensive education, sometimes including courses on ethics, before
you can start talking about "a duty to die."
Many years later, while going through a divorce, I told a friend that I
was considering contesting child custody. She immediately urged me not to do
it. Why? Because raising a child would interfere with my career.
But my son didn't have a career. He was just a child who needed someone
who understood him. I ended up with custody of my son and, although he was
not a demanding child, raising him could not help impeding my career a
little. But do you just abandon a child when it is inconvenient to raise
him?
The lady who gave me this advice had a degree from the Harvard Law
School. She had more years of education than my whole family had, back in
the days of Aunt Nance Ann.
Much of what is taught in our schools and colleges today seeks to break
down traditional values, and replace them with more fancy and fashionable
notions, of which "a duty to die" is just one.
These efforts at changing values used to be called "values
clarification," though the name has had to be changed repeatedly over the
years, as more and more parents caught on to what was going on and objected.
The values that supposedly needed "clarification" had been clear enough to
last for generations and nobody asked the schools and colleges for this
"clarification."
Nor are we better people because of it.
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