I find it scary that the older brother of Chicago Mayor Rahm
Emanuel, a physician, an oncologist and bioethicist is publicly stating that
people should die by age 75! That’s even lower than the age 85 horror I
describe in my suspense novel Directive 99. http://amzn.to/1fetNOF
The Chicago Tribune, Wed. Nov. 12, 2014 states Emanuel declared
in the October issue of the Atlantic magazine that our consumption (of earth’s
resources) must be worth our contribution. What!! Shades of Nazi Germany again.
Also Emanuel believes people become less creative as they age. He even says that he
wants to die at age 75.
It’s begun! The public argument to end the life of our elderly
before their natural death! And it’s coming from a politician who was a health
policy advisor to the White House in the design of the Affordable Care Act
commonly called Obamacare, a so-called doctor who disregards his code of
ethics!
Doctors within the American Medical Association have
expressed their anger against Emanuel saying he violated their code of ethics
by suggesting that human life becomes less valuable with age.
A drive to say life is not of value after a certain age is
pure wrong, incredibly evil and totally contrary to respecting God’s plan for
each life. Can you imagine persuading elderly citizen to believe that they’ve
lived long enough by the time they’re 75 and deserve to die?
If you haven’t read Directive 99 I suggest you get a copy fast.
Gift copies to your legislators. Be prepared for the coming push to make this
horror a reality. It’s not just euthanasia, horrible as that is. It’s a push to
convince older people that they are not worthy and valuable.
God determines birth and death. And every breath every
person takes has meaning in some way in our present environment. An important
role for the elderly may be to heighten compassion in those privileged to be
caregivers.
As for Emanuel’s argument about diminished creativity in the
elderly:
Wikipedia has this to
say about "Grandma Moses," a renowned American folk artist. “Having begun
painting in earnest at the age of 78, she is often cited as an example of an
individual successfully beginning a career in the arts at an advanced age. Her
works have been shown and sold in the United States and abroad and have been
marketed on greeting cards and other merchandise. Moses' paintings are among
the collections of many museums. The Sugaring Off was sold for US$1.2
million in 2006.”
A New York Times article (March 2, 1981) says creativity and
old age are not mutually exclusive. Sophocles wrote ''Oedipus at Colonus'' at
the age of 89, and Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes began the study of Greek at
the age of 92 because, as he said, ''When else would I have had the time to
take it up?''
Let’s look at the scientific facts about aging:
Among the mentally alert and healthy elderly, recent
cognitive studies have shown that intelligence among the aged does not
inevitably decline, said Harry R. Moody, deputy director of the Brookdale
Center. ''In some areas,'' Dr. Moody said, ''as in tests measuring insight into
problem situations, in creative understanding, and metaphoric processing, older
people show actual statistical gains.''
The aging brain: Why
getting older just might be awesome is another fascinating article about the
treasure within the elderly mind. Google Amanda Enayati, Special to CNN updated 11:11 AM EDT, Tue June 19, 2012. Amanda concludes by
stating, “The true picture of healthy, productive aging is so much more interesting
and complex than any of us can begin to imagine.”
“There are neuro-circuitry factors that can favor age in
terms of innovation,” observes Dr. Gary Small, professor of psychiatry and
director of the UCLA Center on Aging. “First there is empathy, the foundation
of a human-centered design process. Empathy is critical to design because of
the need to understand the people for whom you are designing. Older people have
a greater capacity for empathy because empathy is learned and refined as we
age. As we age, we are better able to anticipate problems and reason things out
than when we were young.” Small's research shows that our complex reasoning
skills continue to improve as we get older.
In the UK the Baring Foundation believe that there is
intrinsic value in engaging the talent, experience and enthusiasm of older
people in the creative arts and the pursuit of cultural activities. Their work in
the UK with the elderly and the arts is amazing.
This is a conversation we all need to be having. Let us
protect our gifted and vulnerable senior population.
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