Posted on Wednesday 23rd August 2017 at 7:35pm
The Western Australia Parliament has established an inquiry - like Victoria's in 2015/6 - into end-of-life choices
After months of public remarks about end-of-life choices by the WA Premier Mark McGowan, the WA Parliament has just passed a resolution to establish a Joint Select Committee to investigate end-of-life choices for Western Australians.
Similar to the Victorian Parliamentary inquiry in 2015/16, the move is a strong step forward in assessing current practice and recommending improvements to both legislative and regulatory oversight of end-of-life for Australians in the west.
Keywords:
Western Australia |
Legislative reform
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Posted on Sunday 6th August 2017 at 3:36am
Victorian MP Mr Daniel Mulino's "carefully researched" minority report against assisted dying contains multiple serious errors and misinformation. He must withdraw it.
Last year, the Victorian Parliament's Legal and Social Issues Committee concluded an extensive investigation into end of life choices, publishing a report of over 400 pages recommending improvements to palliative care and for assisted dying. Catholic-backed Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees' Association (‘shoppies’ union) Labor member of the Victorian Parliament Mr Daniel Mulino furnished his own minority report, opposing the majority recommendation for assisted dying law reform. That’s entirely his right. However, his report contains multiple, serious cases of misinformation. He must withdraw his report.
Daniel Mulino, Labor parliamentary member for the Victorian Region of Eastern Victoria,1 and a member of the Catholic-backed ‘shoppies’ union,2 was a member of the Legal and Social Issues Committee that thoroughly investigated end of life decision making and produced a 400+ page report in 2016 making recommendations for law reform and regulation.
Keywords:
Flapdoodle |
Fudge |
Fiction |
Faith |
Australia |
Victoria |
Paul Russell |
Alex Schadenberg |
Margaret Somerville |
Religion |
Catholic
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Posted on Sunday 6th August 2017 at 2:31am
Religious leaders have the right to argue for their faith. But they deserve scrutiny when they put forward misleading arguments.
In Monday’s Herald Sun, Victorian Archbishops Philip Freier and Denis Hart, and Bishops Ezekiel, Suriel, Lester Briebbenow, Bosco Puthur and Peter Stasiuk published a half-page advertisement admonishing the Victorian government for its initiative to legalise assisted dying for the terminally ill, an ad similar to the one published by religious figures in 2008.
I have no quarrel with individuals of faith regarding their own private beliefs. However, the bishops’ attempt at public “leadership” through the advertisement is deserving of redress for its multiple fallacies.
The ‘abandonment’ fallacy
Keywords:
Fearmonger |
Fudge |
Faith |
Assisted dying (AD) |
Australia |
Victoria |
Religion |
Catholic |
Legislative reform |
Lobbying: Opponents |
Rhetoric: Palliative care can always help |
Rhetoric: Slippery slope |
Rhetoric: Suicide |
Rhetoric: The 'vulnerable'
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Posted on Thursday 27th July 2017 at 11:52pm
Paul Russell must publish the entire ‘research’ methodology of his recent ‘poll’ or withdraw the purported ‘results.’
In his latest blog, titled “Who are you going to trust?”, anti-assisted dying lobbyist Mr Paul Russell says:
“Polling noted today in the Australian shows a significant level of distrust in our political classes to get the issue of euthanasia and assisted dying right.”
He then goes on to quote some select statistics from said poll. In his blog, he mentions nothing about the sponsorship or conduct of the poll. After some searching, I found no other reference to said poll on his ‘HOPE’ website.
This is rather curious, because The Australian article he quotes, points out that the ‘poll’ was commissioned by him (his website is called ‘HOPE’).
Keywords:
Fudge |
Assisted dying (AD) |
Australia |
Victoria |
Paul Russell |
Margaret Somerville |
Statistics |
Rhetoric
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Posted on Friday 21st July 2017 at 1:53am
The Victorian Ministerial Advisory Panel on voluntary assisted dying today handed down its final report to the Government.
The Victorian Government has introduced its assisted dying Bill into the Victorian Parliament. It's based on extensive consultation with a wide range of stakeholders, and over 1,000 submissions. You can read all about it here.
The Ministerial Advisory Panel on voluntary assisted dying today handed down its final report to the Government.
The Panel was comprised of seven subject experts, with Professor Brian Owler as Chair and Professor Margaret O'Connor as Deputy Chair.
Keywords:
Assisted dying (AD) |
Australia |
Victoria |
Legislative reform
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Posted on Thursday 22nd June 2017 at 1:05am
The Catholic Church fundamentally flip-flops on its position between assisted dying and refusing life-saving medical treatment, regarding theoretical risks for ‘the vulnerable.’
The Catholic Church in Australia is reeling from revelations at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, of a shocking number of cases that have occurred under its ‘pastoral umbrella.’ Yet it presumes to tell the rest of us about the hypothetical moral dangers of assisted dying laws for ‘the vulnerable.’
To add insult to injury, it flip-flops on its stance.
Never mind that the argument is contradicted by evidence
The Church’s favourite argument — already contradicted by scholarly analysis that curiously seems to be of no interest to the Church — is this: if people are given the choice of assisted dying, they will feel compelled to choose it, coerced by doctors, greedy relatives or others; subtly or otherwise.
Keywords:
Fearmonger |
Flip-flop |
Faith |
Australia |
USA |
Catholic Church |
Paul Russell |
Religion |
Rhetoric: The 'vulnerable'
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Posted on Wednesday 21st June 2017 at 3:14am
More empirical evidence from the Netherlands contradicts Professor Margaret Somerville’s ‘suicide contagion from assisted dying’ theory.
I’ve previously published an extensive analysis of how Professor Margaret Somerville, of the Catholic Notre Dame University of Australia, cherry-picked her way through select data that seemed to be (but wasn’t) consistent with her ‘contagion’ theory from assisted dying to the general suicide rate. I provided ample evidence from lawful jurisdictions that comprehensively contradicts her claim. I also published the summary in ABC Religion & Ethics.
Yet Somerville still says despite extensive real-world experience to the contrary, that “I believe that my [suicide contagion] statement will prove to be correct.”
Keywords:
Fearmonger |
Fudge |
Faith |
Assisted dying (AD) |
Netherlands |
Margaret Somerville |
Catholic |
Rhetoric: Slippery slope |
Rhetoric: Suicide
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Posted on Tuesday 20th June 2017 at 9:23pm
New university research from Germany continues to evidentially clobber Margaret Somerville’s claim about fearful Dutch elderly going to Germany for aged and health care.
I’ve criticised Catholic ethicist Professor Margaret Somerville in the past for promoting misinformation about assisted dying. One of her favourite stories is about supposed non-voluntary euthanasia (NVE) ‘contagion’ from voluntary euthanasia laws.
NVE is where a doctor deliberately hastens the death of a patient without a current explicit request from the patient.
Somerville claims that elderly Dutch citizens fear NVE — a slippery slope claim previously promoted by the Vatican. She stated that:
Keywords:
Fiction |
Assisted dying (AD) |
Germany |
Margaret Somerville |
Catholic |
Rhetoric: Slippery slope |
Rhetoric: The 'vulnerable'
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Posted on Tuesday 13th June 2017 at 2:38am
Religious crusaders against assisted dying are attempting to misinform the Victorian campaign again, this time by trying to scare politicians.
Both the Herald Sun and The Age reported last week that religious anti-assisted dying crusaders are running a 'gloves off' campaign in Victoria.
Religious forces are gathering once again to attempt to thwart the views of the great majority of Victorians in favour of assisted dying law reform.
Keywords:
Fearmonger |
Fudge |
Faith |
Australia |
Victoria |
Paul Russell |
Religion |
Statistics |
Rhetoric
Read more...
Posted on Wednesday 19th April 2017 at 1:39am
Xavier Symons defends fellow Catholic, Margaret Somerville, against a 'bullshit' call on national TV, and spreads a bit of his own in the process.
Last week, Mr Xavier Symons published a defence of Professor Margaret Somerville, whose arguments against assisted dying were called ‘bullshit’ by Patricia Flowers on the ABC’s Q&A program. Symons and Somerville are colleagues at the Institute for Ethics and Society at the Catholic Notre Dame University of Australia.
Mr Symons made an important point: that a law about restricted self-choice for assisted dying is in no way comparable to the Nazi Germany euthanasia (or more correctly, eugenics) programme. While Prof. Somerville agrees that such comparisons are invalid, she nevertheless often mentions Nazi Germany as a ‘question’ when debating assisted dying. That’s a bit of a fudge.
Keywords:
Fudge |
Fiction |
Australia |
Margaret Somerville |
Catholic |
Claim response |
Rhetoric: Slippery slope
Read more...