Ex-NY Times Editor Keller to
Cancer Patient: 'Going Gently' Saves Money
by John Nolte 14 Jan 2014, 11:33 AM PDT
Lisa Bonchek Adams is currently
hospitalized and being treated for Stage IV breast cancer. Since her diagnosis
in October of 2012 at the age of 37, this mother of three has been blogging and
tweeting about what she has been through mentally, personally, physically, and
medically. For a chilling and revealing reason, former New York Times editor
Bill Keller has a big problem with this.
First it was Keller's wife Emma Keller who on January 8 went after Adams
in the left-wing Guardian with a piece titled, “Forget funeral selfies. What
are the ethics of tweeting a terminal illness?” Because Mrs. Keller published
Direct Messages she received from Adams via
Twitter and without permission, for ethical reasons the Guardian has taken the
article down. But the gist of Mrs. Keller's criticism was aimed at Adams' decision to publicly share her experience:
“…I felt embarrassed at my voyeurism.
Should there be boundaries in this kind of experience? Is there such a thing as
TMI? Are her tweets a grim equivalent of deathbed selfies, one step further
than funeral selfies? Why am I so obsessed?”
Of all the abuses on social media out
there today, this is what energizes Emma Keller? To begin with, no one is
forced to follow Adams on Twitter or Facebook.
The only way to find yourself torn up and "obsessed" over Adams' decision to use social media in this way is by
volunteering to do so. Hey, Emma -- it's called the "unfollow"
button.
Moreover, numerous Adams'
defenders claim she is doing a public service with the information she is
sharing and most especially through her regular pleas that those who follow her
work get regular cancer screenings.
Mrs. Keller's bizarre issues with Adams alone are not worthy of note, but it was when Keller's husband, former New York Times editor Bill Keller,
dove into the controversy that things got interesting.
On the pages of the Sunday Times Keller
reveals a monstrous philosophy that in so many ways is revealing of the elite
left as a whole -- especially as it pertains to ObamaCare.
In so many words, Keller just can't bring himself to understand why Adams doesn't give up her fight and die. In his mind, her
death is inevitable and all she's doing is spending a lot of money that could
be better spent elsewhere:
In October 2012 I wrote about my
father-in-law’s death from cancer in a British hospital. There, more routinely
than in the United States,
patients are offered the option of being unplugged from everything except pain
killers and allowed to slip peacefully from life. His death seemed to me a
humane and honorable alternative to the frantic medical trench warfare that
often makes an expensive misery of death in America.
Among doctors here, there is a growing
appreciation of palliative care that favors the quality of the remaining life
rather than endless “heroic measures” that may or may not prolong life but
assure the final days are clamorous, tense and painful. (And they often leave
survivors bankrupt.) What Britain
and other countries know, and my country is learning, is that every cancer need
not be Verdun,
a war of attrition waged regardless of the cost or the casualties. It seemed to
me, and still does, that there is something enviable about going gently. One
intriguing lung cancer study even suggests that patients given early palliative
care instead of the most aggressive chemotherapy not only have a better quality
of life, they actually live a bit longer.
Keller's primary fear seems to be that Adams will serve as an example to others to never give up
-- to keep spending someone's inheritance or The State's money as opposed to
dying with dignity like a good little socialist. This is how Keller closes the
column:
Steven Goodman, an associate dean of the
Stanford University School of Medicine, said he cringes at the combat metaphor,
because it suggests that those who choose not to spend their final days in
battle, using every weapon in the high-tech medical arsenal, lack character or
willpower.
“I’m the last person to second-guess what
she did,” Goodman told me, after perusing Adams’s
blog. “I’m sure it has brought meaning, a deserved sense of accomplishment. But
it shouldn’t be unduly praised. Equal praise is due to those who accept an
inevitable fate with grace and courage.”
This all seems to stem from the left's
horrific view of humans as a biological accident, and life as nothing more than
utilitarian, as opposed to something sacred.
Keller isn't even paraphrasing poet Dylan
Thomas properly, who urged us "Do not go gentle into that good night …
rage, rage against the dying of the light."
The Kellers are engaging in life-shaming,
which like fat-shaming, is an excuse to tell someone else what to do while
couching it in a "greater good" argument. To hell with personal
freedom, let's force people to be healthy because obesity costs our beloved
State money. And now this brave woman,
who is understandably desperate to see her children grow up, and who believes
sharing her story will help others, is being life-shamed on the pages of the
Guardian and New York Times because the Kellers are made uncomfortable by the
idea of someone making the personal choice to stay alive for every possible day
and minute she can.
What the Kellers appear to be doing is
worse than lobbying for euthanasia, which at the very least is a personal
decision. From their elite perches, the Kellers are tag-teaming a woman
hospitalized with Stage IV cancer as a selfish and narcissistic financial drain
over the twin sins of aggressively fighting for her life and, through her
example, possibly encouraging others to do the same.
This is yet another glimpse into those I
call "Soylent Green Liberals." The
left's mask of compassion slipped late last year as they attempted to dismiss
millions losing their health insurance as an overall positive. And now the Kellers have given us another
chilling example of those who are all too eager to sacrifice a few to serve
some cold robotic vision of a cold robotic Utopia.
Emma Gilbey Keller
Emma Gilbey
Keller, dated John F.
Kerry, and is married to Bill Keller.
Note: John F.
Kerry dated Emma Gilbey Keller, is the
secretary at the U.S. Department of State for the Barack Obama administration, and married to Teresa Heinz Kerry.
Robert F.
Bauer was the White House counsel for the Barack Obama
administration, Barack Obama’s
personal counsel, and a partner at Perkins Coie.
Paul F.
Eckstein is a partner at Perkins Coie,
and a trustee at Pomona College.
Teresa
Heinz Kerry is married to John F. Kerry,
a life trustee at Carnegie Mellon University,
and an honorary trustee at the Brookings Institution
(think tank).
Paula
Kauffman Wagner is a life trustee at Carnegie Mellon University,
her attorney is Bert Fields.
Edward
G. Robinson’s attorney was Bert Fields,
and was an actor in Soylent Green.
Andrew
Carnegie was the endowed predecessor schools for the Carnegie Mellon University,
and the founder of the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace (think tank).
Jessica Tuchman Mathews
is the president of the Carnegie Endowment
for International Peace (think tank), a director at the American
Friends of Bilderberg (think
tank), was an honorary trustee at the Brookings
Institution (think tank), and a 2008 Bilderberg conference participant (think tank).
Ed Griffin’s interview
with Norman Dodd in 1982
(The investigation into
the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace uncovered the plans for
population control by involving the United States in war)
Foundation
to Promote Open Society was a funder for the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace (think tank), the Brookings Institution (think tank), the NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, People for the American Way, and the Committee
for Economic Development.
George Soros
is the chairman for the Foundation to Promote
Open Society.
Steven
L. Rattner was a trustee at the Brookings
Institution (think tank), and an economic correspondent for the New York Times.
Richard C.
Blum is an honorary trustee at the Brookings
Institution (think tank), married to Senator Dianne
Feinstein, and a board member for the Haas School
of Business.
William
A. Hasler is a board member for the Haas School of Business,
and was a trustee at the Pomona College.
Bill Keller
was an executive editor for the New York Times,
is married to Emma Gilbey Keller, and a trustee
at Pomona College.
John A.
Payton was a trustee at Pomona College,
a director at the NAACP Legal Defense &
Educational Fund, and a director at People for
the American Way.
Donna S.
Morea was a trustee at the Committee for Economic
Development, and the EVP for the CGI Group
Inc.
CGI
Group Inc. was the Obamacare
contractor that developed Healthcare.gov web site.
Obamacare
is Barack Obama’s signature policy
initiative.
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