John Kelly’s Letter Published in the Cape Cod Times

Not Dead Yet New England Regional Director John Kelly sent a letter to the editor last week after the Cape Cod Times published Rabbi Elias Lieberman’s opinion piece promoting legalized assisted suicide.

In the lead up to the 2012 referendum on assisted suicide, Rabbi Lieberman invited John to take part in a panel discussion about assisted suicide before his Reform congregation. Lieberman stacked the panel with four proponents of assisted suicide, and after a review of the long-standing Jewish teaching against assisted suicide, added his own support for the referendum. The referendum, known as Question 2, went down to defeat because of the strong turnout of people of color, historically opposed to assisted suicide.

Just as he did at that panel discussion, John’s letter uses some of Not Dead Yet’s main arguments against assisted suicide: that it leads to innocent people losing their lives because of misdiagnosis, coercion, and abuse, and because of bottom line decisions by insurers. Because of space limitations, John did not address the issue of “unacceptable suffering,” which relates not to uncontrolled pain but mental distress about the disabling aspects of people’s serious illnesses. For a more in-depth look, please see Not Dead Yet President/CEO Diane Coleman’s recent analysis of the Oregon assisted suicide program data.

The Cape Cod Times published John’s letter in its November 28th edition. Here it is:

To the Editor:

Proponents of legalization like Elias Lieberman (My View, 11/16) present assisted suicide as a fairytale in which doctors can predict the future and everyone wants the best for you.

In the real world, legalized assisted suicide inevitably leads to the tragic deaths of innocent people, through mistakes and abuse.

Every year nationally, thousands of people prove doctors wrong by outliving their mistaken terminal diagnosis. Every year in Oregon and Washington, doctors prescribe suicide for people who are not terminally ill. You may have months, years, or decades of life left, but with assisted suicide it takes just one mistaken doctor and their colleague to put you in the ground.

One out of every 10 older adults is abused every year, mostly by adult children and caregivers. Someone in line to inherit your estate can help sign you up, pick up the prescription, and then take action against you. No witness is required at the death, so who would know?

Insurers always cover assisted suicide because it’s the cheapest “treatment.” Meanwhile, they routinely deny seriously-ill people medical treatment prescribed by their doctors.

Let’s protect innocent people like ourselves from a law that could send us to our early deaths.

John B. Kelly
Director
Second Thoughts MA: Disability Rights Advocates against Assisted Suicide

2 thoughts on “John Kelly’s Letter Published in the Cape Cod Times

  1. As always, John Kelly tells brutal truth. He lives in a World where his good life and his daily courage as an esteemed member of the disabled community is testimony to the fact that ALL LIVES MATTER and are WORTHY and that no laws should be passed that endanger the lives of elderly, the disabled, the poor, the mentally incompetent.

    He fights for all of us. We will not be murdered to protect the profits of the Medical Industrial Complex and their stock holders.

  2. THANK YOU! GOOD JOB, I’M GLAD I CAUGHT THIS…HERE’S WHAT I WROTE TO THE TIMES (I DID NAME THE HOSPICE COMPANY INVOLVED, BUT I AT THIS POINT REALLY DON’T CARE)…
    “Mr. Lieberman, The day my mother died from her final illegal (in my state of Florida) hospice-imposed sub-ligual Roxinol dose, I didn’t rant or punch the walls—I muttered to myself “this is systemic”, sucked up the disgust and humiliation I felt, and called mother’s funeral director. Later, I called the Winter Park cops and wrongful death attorneys through my local Bar Association to no avail. You see, my mother was not a victim of Alzheimer’s or heart disease. Or even of heartbreak. She was the direct victim of criminal intent directed at her by a administrators within a private company—yes, a hospice firm—who gauged her timeline of death and figured it was stretching out too long. Dumb luck was on hospice’s side: I had just lost power-of-attorney over Betty in favor of some stranger who does that type of dirty work professionally. She blackballed me from the hospice facility for enough time for the drugs to get into the bloodstream of a perfectly happy, albeit silly-acting, old gal with moderate dementia but no organ failure. None at all. I had, really, no business setting Betty up for home hospice care for all those 18 months for no reason other than a promise that I’d get quarterly respite from my caregiver’s woes at no cost. Yes, some free weekend party breaks and with the full graces (but not the full knowledge) of MediCare. I should be in jail right now, along with some Cornerstone Hospice bureaucrats, that black-hearted E.T.G. woman, her lawyer cohorts, and two of Betty’s complacent and conniving bloodkin from out-of-town. Beyond these facts, I also see medically-assisted suicide as nothing other than a sucking vortex of life insurance fraud, political payback (years after the news headlines), and eucumenical blunderings down into a liturgy of unglued intentions and cash-n’-carry redemption.

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