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Catholic News 2

Washington D.C., Oct 18, 2016 / 05:15 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Treatable depression, financial gain from a patient's death, doctors who can write a fatal prescription with little knowledge of the person it's for – all things that supporters of physician assisted suicide in the District of Columbia would perhaps prefer not to discuss.But as the city council in the nation’s capital may soon legalize the procedure, both the Church and local citizens have taken up arms to label it as prejudiced against the “most vulnerable.”The bill is immoral, unethical, and unjust, said Dr. Lucia Silecchia, a law professor at the Catholic University of America’s Columbus School of Law, and a D.C. citizen.“Thus, while the Catholic and Christian understanding of the dignity of human persons, made in the image and likeness of God undergirds the moral critique of such statutes, the medical opposition long predates Christ, and the legal objections should compel anyon...

Washington D.C., Oct 18, 2016 / 05:15 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Treatable depression, financial gain from a patient's death, doctors who can write a fatal prescription with little knowledge of the person it's for – all things that supporters of physician assisted suicide in the District of Columbia would perhaps prefer not to discuss.

But as the city council in the nation’s capital may soon legalize the procedure, both the Church and local citizens have taken up arms to label it as prejudiced against the “most vulnerable.”

The bill is immoral, unethical, and unjust, said Dr. Lucia Silecchia, a law professor at the Catholic University of America’s Columbus School of Law, and a D.C. citizen.

“Thus, while the Catholic and Christian understanding of the dignity of human persons, made in the image and likeness of God undergirds the moral critique of such statutes, the medical opposition long predates Christ, and the legal objections should compel anyone who observes how easily disregard for the life of one spreads,” she stated to CNA.

On Oct. 18, the city council for the District of Columbia voted to put legalization of physician-assisted suicide on their legislative agenda. The bill was introduced in January 2015 by Mayor Muriel Bowser.

In the summer of 2015, citizens of the city showed up in large numbers to support or oppose the bill; a public hearing went on for hours as many advocates, one after another, insisted that the city not legalize the measure.

Cardinal Donald Wuerl of Washington has been outspoken against the measure, and other assisted suicide measures that have been introduced in states around the country in what he called “a concerted aggressive campaign…which plays on people’s darkest fears and exploits their vulnerabilities to advance ideas and practices that have long been understood to be grave infamies opposed to human dignity and which poison human society.”

What is at stake is nothing less than how society views human life, he maintained.

“We are facing a seismic shift in how we, as a society, will look at life in the future and, even more frightening, what powers the state will have to determine who lives and who dies,” he said.

“We are all responsible for working to protect all human life until it ends naturally, until the time that God alone appoints for our departure. It is not for us to decide the hour, we are not the arbiters of life and death.”

The D.C. bill is flawed for a number of reasons, Silecchia explained to CNA.

For one, any two physicians could write a prescription for a fatal drug overdose request, no matter how little they know the patient. Also, if patients are refused their request by their primary care physician, they could just seek out another doctor who may not know them well, but will write them a prescription.

“This undermines the dignity of those who suffer by suggesting to them – while they are most vulnerable – that their lives no longer have value,” she said.

Witnesses of the patient’s consent could be an “interested party” – someone who could benefit financially or personally from the patient’s death – Silecchia noted, raising even more ethical challenges to the proposal.  

Also, the measure may apply disproportionately to the “most vulnerable,” like low-income or elderly persons who feel they may be a “burden” to friends and family as they become sicker, and those suffering from mental illness like depression or anxiety, she explained.

Herbert Hendin, M.D. has written on the psychological issues surrounding patients with terminal diagnoses. In his book Seduced by Death, he explained how many of these patients, when they fear a terminal diagnosis, desire to end their lives – but many of them are suffering from a curable mental illness that can be treated.

It’s not the fear of death that exacerbates their psychological condition, but rather the fear of dying, he explained, when “patients displace anxieties about death onto the circumstances of dying: dependence, loss of dignity, and the unpleasant side effects of medical treatments.”

The advocacy group “Not Dead Yet” has also claimed that such fears drive a patient’s desire to die, noting that “among the top five reasons given” for a fatal prescription request “are feelings of being a ‘burden on others’ (41%) or feeling a ‘loss of autonomy’ (92%) or ‘loss of dignity’ (78%).”

“These are not about pain from a terminal disease, but are psychological and social issues that cry out for meaningful supports and genuine care,” the group continued.

“Yet the assisted suicide law does not even require disclosures about consumer controlled home care options to address feelings of loss of autonomy or feelings of being a burden on family, much less require that those services be provided.”

“When these fears are dealt with by a caring and knowledgeable physician, the request for death usually disappears,” he added.

In his experience treating these patients, Hendin found that when a patient chose treatment over a fatal prescription and resolved his fears – as well as unresolved conflicts he may have had with friends or family – he greatly appreciated his final months to do so, even if he experienced physical suffering in that time.

And, some warn, the legalization of assisted suicide actually opens the door for the normalization of other dark practices like euthanasia.

When a patient expresses a desire to die but chooses to wait until they are further along in their sickness to take the prescription, the ethical lines can become blurry as to whether that action was their own decision made with a clear mind, or was the decision of their friends and family who pressured them, while under extreme duress, into taking the medication.

The state of New York Governor Mario Cuomo’s own task force pointed to the possibility of this scenario in their 1994 guidelines “When Death Is Sought,” updated in 2011.

“Even if the law is never changed to sanction involuntary euthanasia, the potential for abuse would be profound,” they wrote. This is because “once euthanasia is established as a ‘therapeutic’ alternative, the line between patients competent to consent and those who are not will seem arbitrary to some doctors,” including in some cases of patients who are “incapacitated” where their doctors will deem it therapeutic to give them a fatal dose of medication.

Leon Kass, who chaired President Bush’s Council on Bioethics from 2001-05, explained this from a doctor’s perspective in his work “Why Doctors Must Not Kill” – cited in the task force report.

“How easily will they be able to care for patients when it is always possible to think of killing them as a 'therapeutic' option?” he asked. “Physicians get tired of treating patients who are on their way down - 'gorks,' 'gomers,' and 'vegetables' -  are only some of the less than affectionate names they receive from house officers.”

And an assisted suicide law could also disproportionately target minorities and the poor, the New York task force report argued, because everyday prejudices – from which physicians, however well-intentioned, “are not exempt” – will affect how doctors choose to treat patients – with their very lives at stake.

“Finally, it must be recognized that assisted suicide and euthanasia will be practiced through the prism of social inequality and prejudice that characterizes the delivery of services in all segments of society, including health care,” the report stated. “Those who will be most vulnerable to abuse, error, or indifference are the poor, minorities, and those who are least educated and least empowered.”

For example, the disproportionate number of minorities and poor persons who are executed by the state shows how policies like the death penalty are not immune from prejudice, the task force claimed. That injustice would not disappear under physician-assisted suicide, they added.

Someone who faces a terminal diagnosis is in a tough situation, Cardinal Wuerl acknowledged in a recent blog post on assisted suicide.

Yet the merciful response is not to give them a fatal dose of medication, he insisted.

“It cannot be denied that there are hardships in life, some of which seem to overwhelm us,” he wrote. “Whether experienced late in life, in a physical illness of a bout of mental depression, or in a crisis pregnancy, the human condition is for us all beset with trials and tribulations. In particular, the losses and changes associated with the progression of a terminal illness often contribute to psychological distress and feelings of worthlessness and despair.”

“A truly compassionate and merciful response to the sick and vulnerable is not to confirm these impulses by offering them a lethal drug,” he added, but rather “our response should be to draw them away from the edge, to help the vulnerable among us – regardless of their condition or circumstances – with genuine compassion and give them hope.”

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DETROIT (AP) -- Several families filed a class-action lawsuit Tuesday against the state of Michigan and the Flint school district, saying more needs to be done to help students whose academic performance and behavior have worsened because of the city's lead-tainted water....

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BADANA, Iraq (AP) -- This farming village east of Mosul was turned into a bunker during more than two years of Islamic State rule: A network of tunnels and cramped living quarters betrays an extremist group increasingly forced to operate underground by a punishing air campaign and mounting territorial losses....

BADANA, Iraq (AP) -- This farming village east of Mosul was turned into a bunker during more than two years of Islamic State rule: A network of tunnels and cramped living quarters betrays an extremist group increasingly forced to operate underground by a punishing air campaign and mounting territorial losses....

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- "Stop whining," President Barack Obama rebuked Donald Trump on Tuesday, speaking out as seldom before on next month's election and chiding the Republican for sowing suspicion about the integrity of America's presidential vote....

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QUITO, Ecuador (AP) -- Ecuador's government acknowledged on Tuesday that it cut off WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange's internet access at its embassy in London after the whistleblowing site published a trove of damaging emails from Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign....

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Various representatives from several African countries have this week participated in the 30th anniversary ceremonies of the death of former Mozambican President, Samora Machel.  The commemoration ceremonies held at the Samora Machel Monument in Mbuzini, Mpumalanga, South Africa were attended by the country’s Deputy President, Cyril Ramaphosa. According to SABC news, the focus of the commemoration ceremonies on Wednesday shift to Mozambique.Samora died on 19 October 1986 when he and other officials were returning from an African leaders' meeting in Lusaka, Zambia. His plane crashed into the Lebombo Mountains, an 800 km long, narrow range of mountains in Southern Africa.Samora Machel led his country to its independence from the Portuguese in 1975.  He espoused a Marxist-Leninist approach to government.Vatican Radio’s Portuguese programme correspondent, in Maputo, Herminio Jose, went around to talk to some of Mozambique’s clergy about Samora’s l...

Various representatives from several African countries have this week participated in the 30th anniversary ceremonies of the death of former Mozambican President, Samora Machel.  The commemoration ceremonies held at the Samora Machel Monument in Mbuzini, Mpumalanga, South Africa were attended by the country’s Deputy President, Cyril Ramaphosa. According to SABC news, the focus of the commemoration ceremonies on Wednesday shift to Mozambique.

Samora died on 19 October 1986 when he and other officials were returning from an African leaders' meeting in Lusaka, Zambia. His plane crashed into the Lebombo Mountains, an 800 km long, narrow range of mountains in Southern Africa.

Samora Machel led his country to its independence from the Portuguese in 1975.  He espoused a Marxist-Leninist approach to government.

Vatican Radio’s Portuguese programme correspondent, in Maputo, Herminio Jose, went around to talk to some of Mozambique’s clergy about Samora’s legacy. Notwithstanding Samora’s socialist approach, many still have fond memories their leader. 

Father Pinto Cuna of the Archdiocese of Maputo, said Samora Machel was a legend par excellence killed by the enemies of peace and justice.

"Samora was for peace and social justice, and because of his charisma, he was murdered barbarously.  We Mozambicans should embrace Samora’s values by putting into practice a just system in our society. That is, we must avoid the deep inequality that we see here in our country. We must avoid bloodshed and armed conflict. We can immortalise Samora by living as brothers and sisters,” said Fr. Cuna.

Another member of the clergy, Pastor John Timba of The Universal Church of the Kingdom of God said, "Samora Machel did not want his people to suffer; he wanted the collective good for his people.” Continued pastor Timba, “Mozambicans should be inspired by Samora, because only then, will the Mozambique that he [samora] always desired -a one, indivisible and democratic country- become a reality ."

At the Mpumalanga event this week, SABC news quotes the 37-year old son of Samora, Melanga Machel, calling for another inquiry into the death of his father.

(Email: engafrica@vatiradio.va)

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IMAGE: CNS/Nancy WiechecBy Nancy WiechecYELLOWSTONENATIONAL PARK, Wyo. (CNS) -- Jesuit Father Rick Malloy very much enjoys summersin Yellowstone National Park."I'ma fanatical fisherman," he admitted. "And a good one, too."Butexceptional fishing is not the main thing that brings him to Wyoming summerafter summer. He said it's the privilege and beauty of park ministry that keepshim coming back.Massin Yellowstone is "an experience of God unlike any other," he said. "It's areal privilege to be able to celebrate the Eucharist with people here in thepark."FatherMalloy is a cultural anthropologist, professor and chaplain at the Jesuit-runUniversity of Scranton in Pennsylvania. For the past seven summers, he has gonewest to minister in Yellowstone, do some writing and, of course, fish.CatholicNews Service caught up with him in early August, one of the park's busiestmonths.Itwas a late Saturday afternoon, and Yellowstone's Canyon area was teeming withpeople. A steady stream of cars and RVs m...

IMAGE: CNS/Nancy Wiechec

By Nancy Wiechec

YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Wyo. (CNS) -- Jesuit Father Rick Malloy very much enjoys summers in Yellowstone National Park.

"I'm a fanatical fisherman," he admitted. "And a good one, too."

But exceptional fishing is not the main thing that brings him to Wyoming summer after summer. He said it's the privilege and beauty of park ministry that keeps him coming back.

Mass in Yellowstone is "an experience of God unlike any other," he said. "It's a real privilege to be able to celebrate the Eucharist with people here in the park."

Father Malloy is a cultural anthropologist, professor and chaplain at the Jesuit-run University of Scranton in Pennsylvania. For the past seven summers, he has gone west to minister in Yellowstone, do some writing and, of course, fish.

Catholic News Service caught up with him in early August, one of the park's busiest months.

It was a late Saturday afternoon, and Yellowstone's Canyon area was teeming with people. A steady stream of cars and RVs made its way into Canyon village.

Father Malloy, dressed in black clerics, a jean jacket and a baseball cap, hopped out of a red SUV and placed a sign along the roadway.

It read, "Catholic Mass," and pointed to the campground amphitheater, a clearing where a small folding table, wooden benches and surrounding stands of lodgepole pines serve as a makeshift chapel.

The air smelled of pine, fallen rain from a day earlier and campfire smoke.

The priest set up a tiny altar with the help of Dan and Kathleen Golder, parishioners of St. Anthony of Padua Church in Cody. The parish coordinates the Catholic ministry in Yellowstone and its parishioners do what they can to assist.

"Actually, we're just here to keep an eye on Father Rick," Kathleen joked as she held up a bag of hosts to be consecrated for Communion.

"What's your number, Father?" she called out, referring to what number of hosts would be needed. The two quickly determined that there would be 40 or so Massgoers, maybe half as many as the previous Saturday.

After setting up, Father Malloy and the Golders had some time to spare and their conversation turned to news about St. Anthony parishioners and good fishing spots.

Yellowstone is among America's best-loved national parks. Its 3,500 square miles of wilderness showcase the world's largest collection of geothermal features, including its remarkable geysers. Roaring waterfalls, crystal-clear lakes and a great diversity of wildlife are big draws for recreational visitors.

Priests have been coming into the park to celebrate Mass since the 1920s when yearly visitors numbered less than 200,000. Today, with 4.1 million annual visitors, Yellowstone has the potential for more than 600,000 Catholic vacationers a year.

Catholic services -- Mass if a priest is available and Communion service if one is not -- are held Saturdays at the Canyon campground, and Sundays at Yellowstone Lake Lodge and Old Faithful Lodge mid-June through mid-September.

St. Anthony's, the nearest Catholic church to much of the park, is a two-and-a-half-hour drive from Old Faithful, and that's if traffic in the park is moving.

Father Malloy waits several extra minutes before he starts each Mass. He knows there could be people stuck in a buffalo jam. The omnipresent bison have the right-of-way on park roadways and often cause rubbernecking delays.

When the priest got started this day, he broke the ice with a quip.

"I'm originally from Philadelphia, the city of brotherly shove," he said. "Where's everyone from?"

Members of the visiting congregation shouted out their home states: Wisconsin, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Minnesota, Florida, California, South Dakota, Pennsylvania and other places.

About 75 showed for the Mass, surpassing what the priest had expected.

Among them were retirees John and Elizabeth Crawford, full-time RVers and park volunteers originally from New Jersey; Charles and Kay Tubbs of Arcata, California, campground hosts and trail volunteers who first visited Yellowstone in 1965; and Amie and Kevin Heinlein of Ionia, Michigan, visiting Yellowstone for the first time with their three children.

Father Malloy said giving a homily in Yellowstone National Park is like preaching to the world.

"It's literally a chance to preach to the whole world. You have no idea who will be here each Sunday."

The Heinleins, who thought they might have to travel to a nearby town for Mass, were surprised to learn of the campground service.

"This was absolutely wonderful," Amie Heinlein told Father Malloy as he greeted her family at the end of the service.

"It's sometimes difficult to attend Mass on vacation," admitted her husband, Kevin. "This was just perfect."

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Copyright © 2016 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. www.catholicnews.com. All rights reserved. Republishing or redistributing of CNS content, including by framing or similar means without prior permission, is prohibited. You may link to stories on our public site. This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To request permission for republishing or redistributing of CNS content, please contact permissions at cns@catholicnews.com.

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- Millions of Social Security recipients and federal retirees will get a 0.3 percent increase in monthly benefits next year, the fifth year in a row that older Americans will have to settle for historically low raises. The adjustment adds up to a monthly increase of less than $4 a month for an average recipient....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Millions of Social Security recipients and federal retirees will get a 0.3 percent increase in monthly benefits next year, the fifth year in a row that older Americans will have to settle for historically low raises. The adjustment adds up to a monthly increase of less than $4 a month for an average recipient....

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