RUSH: There are just a few more things that I want to address you on regarding the nomination of Harriet Miers to be an associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and we can couple this with this fun little exercise that I want to present to you today to help illustrate a point. Now, the Supreme Court this morning heard oral arguments in a big case. This is a case about the assisted suicide law in the state of Oregon. The people of Oregon have twice voted by pretty substantial margins for assisted suicide, letting the medical community “off” people who are terminal or who want to be off-ed for whatever reason. The opponents of this have managed to get this case heard by the US Supreme Court. Now, this may not be as easy as you think. I had some conversations today with people, and it’s interesting how people approach me — people who are not, you know, pure conservatives. It’s amazing the clich?s that they think we conservatives believe in. For example, this one person said to me today, “Well, I want to know what you say about this states’ rights. That’s all you conservatives talk about is states’ rights, states’ rights, states’ rights, and you don’t like the federal government and now what do you think about the Supreme Court hearing this. What about the right to vote out there to have assisted suicide?”
On the other hand, is there a compelling interest for the government here to protect and stand for the right to life and liberty and the pursuit of happiness? And then, furthermore, do you want to turn over to the medical community, which signs an oath or takes an oath, Hippocratic oath to heal and make well and all, you want to turn the decision to kill and who to kill over to them? And if it’s not turning the decision on who to kill over to them, do you want to empower them to actually do the killing? “Rush, it’s suicide.” It’s KILLING. We’re ending a life here. So where do you go for the answer to this? Is there one right answer to this? I happen to think there is. But others certainly will disagree, and many of the disagreements will come down to something that’s very simple, very simple and not complicated at all. It’s my life and I can do with it whatever I want, and if I want to end it then it’s none of your business. Well, yeah, as far as it goes, but you’re not ending your life. You’re asking the medical community to do it, and in my mind you might be corrupting the medical community because we know that these kinds of laws do not solve problems; they create new ones, and the new problem that could be created here is that, “Okay, so we’re sanctioning the medical community to off people who are terminal or who desire it.”
Okay, where could that lead? Well, we saw where abortion led. Abortion is simply the killing of the unwanted or the inconvenient, and that has led to the same type of thinking in getting rid of the seasoned citizen population, the elderly. If they become an inconvenience, “Well, they wouldn’t want to live like this. They don’t like putting up with this. Let’s just get rid of them. Everybody would be better off if they were gone. They’ve had a good life. Let’s just send them on to their Great Reward.” So then we further the notion that we can decide who is fit to live and who is not, on the basis of many arbitrary things. So who should referee this, and what should we as a society think about it, and where, furthermore, and more importantly, do you go for the answer to this? Well, certain justices of the US Supreme Court would say, “If we can find evidence that in Belgium or Great Britain, the enlightened there think absolutely this is fine and dandy, then we have to take that into account.” Other justices would say, “The heck with that. Let’s go look at what the Founders of the Constitution wrote, the Founders of the country and the Declaration of Independence. Let’s go look and see what they wrote. What did they think about this?”
“Rush, assisted suicide? They didn’t think a thing about it.”
Oh, really? They didn’t have an opinion on assisted suicide? Maybe not specifically and directly but might they have had an opinion on the sanctity of life and might that opinion on the sanctity of life be fundamental to the structure of this particular country, and might it be fundamental to the ongoing greatness and survivability of this country? Might they have said something about it? Well, who knows, except those who have researched it. Who knows except those who have taken the time to look at it. What of those who haven’t, whether they be judges or just average citizens? What of those who haven’t looked at the Constitution?
“I don’t care, Rush, what it says. It’s my life. It’s my grandmother’s life. It’s not your business. It’s not the court’s business. It’s not Thomas Jefferson’s business.”
Maybe you alone, whatever you do won’t, but we’re not alone. We’re about 300 million people. My point is that these are really challenging questions, and it’s really important you get the answer right, and is there a source authority for this? I happen to think there is, and that’s why you need remarkable people who have an ability and have studied it and care about it and have an honesty about them to be able to read it and interpret it properly, because it’s not that hard. A bunch of egghead elitists can make it hard. But it really isn’t that hard. So it is a big issue and it’s captivated the minds of the media, and I must admit here, folks, that watching the media today, there’s a macabre interest in this. The left just seems to get more excited about anything when death is on the table. I don’t know what it is, whether it’s disaster death or war death or society deciding we’re going to off some of our fellow citizens, they get ginned up about it, really get excited about the death aspect. But, but, you start talking about life and somehow they just don’t have as much interest in that, as though it is enlightened to understand that it’s some people’s duty to die and get out of the way, and that not everybody has a right to life. It depends on what somebody else wants. So I am continually amazed at these people.
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