Unspeakable Conversations
By Harriet McBryde Johnson
He insists he doesn't want to kill me. He simply thinks it would have been
better, all things considered, to have given my parents the option of killing
the baby I once was, and to let other parents kill similar babies as they come
along and thereby avoid the suffering that comes with lives like mine and
satisfy the reasonable preferences of parents for a different kind of child. It
has nothing to do with me. I should not feel threatened....
I used to try to explain that in fact I enjoy my life, that it's a great sensual
pleasure to zoom by power chair on these delicious muggy streets, that I
have no more reason to kill myself than most people. But it gets tedious.
God didn't put me on this street to provide disability awareness training to
the likes of them. In fact, no god put anyone anywhere for any reason, if you
want to know...
It is an interesting exchange. In the lecture hall that afternoon, Singer lays it
all out. The ''illogic'' of allowing abortion but not infanticide, of allowing
withdrawal of life support but not active killing. Applying the basic
assumptions of preference utilitarianism, he spins out his bone-chilling
argument for letting parents kill disabled babies and replace them with
nondisabled babies who have a greater chance at happiness. It is all about
allowing as many individuals as possible to fulfill as many of their
preferences as possible.
As soon as he's done, I get the microphone and say I'd like to discuss
selective infanticide. As a lawyer, I disagree with his jurisprudential
assumptions. Logical inconsistency is not a sufficient reason to change the
law. As an atheist, I object to his using religious terms (''the doctrine of the
sanctity of human life'') to characterize his critics...
The tragic view comes closest to describing how I now look at Peter Singer.
He is a man of unusual gifts, reaching for the heights. He writes that he is
trying to create a system of ethics derived from fact and reason, that largely
throws off the perspectives of religion, place, family, tribe, community and
maybe even species -- to ''take the point of view of the universe.'' His is a
grand, heroic undertaking.
But like the protagonist in a classical drama, Singer has his flaw. It is his
unexamined assumption that disabled people are inherently ''worse off,'' that
we ''suffer,'' that we have lesser ''prospects of a happy life.'' Because of this
all-too-common prejudice, and his rare courage in taking it to its logical
conclusion, catastrophe looms....
Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company
http://www.grasp.org/media/unspeak.pdf