Disability Rights Group Challenges Language for Assisted Suicide Ballot Measure as "Misleading, Inaccurate, and Euphemistic"
John Kelly, Director of Second Thoughts,
disability activists opposed to legalizing assisted suicide
A YES VOTE would enact the proposed law allowing a physician licensed in Massachusetts to prescribe medication, at the request of a terminally-ill patient meeting certain conditions, to end that person’s life. (Massachusetts Register, page 3.)
Boston, Massachusetts (PRWEB) May 18, 2012
On Thursday, May 17, 2012, over 60 Massachusetts voters including members of the disability rights group Second Thoughts
filed a challenge before the Supreme Judicial Court (Case No. SJ 2012
0216) regarding the proposed ballot language for the measure that, if
approved, would legalize assisted suicide in the state.
"The ballot language is clearly misleading," said Second Thoughts
director John Kelly of Boston. "We want the voters of Massachusetts to
know exactly what they are voting on this November," he said.
The petition asks the Supreme Judicial Court to remand the language
to Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley and Secretary of State
William Galvin with the requirement that they amend the language for
clarity and accuracy.
"The ballot language repeats the problems of the bill itself," said
Second Thoughts member Paul Spooner of Taunton. "The title is
euphemistic, with the word ‘medication’ twisted beyond recognition.
People will be led to believe that the measure is about palliative care,
when it is about taking a lethal overdose -- in other words, poison.
Why not just call the act by its common and legal name,
'physician-assisted suicide?'"
"The way 'terminally-ill' is used in the description is clearly
misleading," said Kelly, "people will be encouraged to assume that being
'terminally ill' is a biological fact, rather than a human guess."
"People with disabilities are very familiar with so-called terminal
diagnoses," said Second Thoughts member John Norton of Florence.
"Everyone knows someone who has outlived their terminal diagnosis -- I
was diagnosed with Lou Gehrig's Disease as a teenager; I'm alive and
well fifty years later. The ballot language misleads by implying that a
'terminally-ill' diagnosis actually leads to death within six months.
Instead, it should say ‘diagnosed as terminal’ or something similar in
terms of accuracy."
"And what about choice," asked Spooner. "There are no safeguards to
protect patients from having the poison given to them by an heir or
abusive caretaker. No witnesses are required under the law, so if
someone else were to administer the drugs, who would know?"
The language submitted by the Attorney General Martha Coakley and Secretary of State is:
Title: Prescribing Medication to End Life [11-12] - Petition G
A YES VOTE would enact the proposed law allowing a physician licensed in Massachusetts to prescribe medication, at the request of a terminally-ill patient meeting certain conditions, to end that person’s life. (Massachusetts Register, page 3.)
Second Thoughts has taken a leading role in opposing the ballot
measure, and has been featured in the Boston Sunday Globe Magazine, the
Wall Street Journal, and on local TV and radio.
For full features of release, go to: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2012/5/prweb9517524.htm
Petition to Amend Ballot Language: http://ww1.prweb.com/prfiles/2012/05/17/9517524/Petition%20to%20Amend%20Ballot%20Title%20and%20Yes%20Statement2.pdf
As long as the patient dies, everyone feels like they are off the hook-- what a huge opportunity for abuse.
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