I don't know where you heard you'd die, I don't know if that's necessarily the case.
Do you remember the effect(s) that thalidomide had? Reverse chiralty is hugely detrimental to our bodies, just because we are not designed to cope with those molecules.
Comparing thalidomide to a D-amino acid is comparing apples to oranges. Re-read my statement, nowhere do I discount the importance of chirality. The author writes that use of D-amino acids instead of L-amino acids would lead to death. Because the human body is so exquisitely selective we have no idea what would happen if someone did start making D-amino acids because it doesn't happen. There are some therapeutic peptides that use D-amino acids for the very reason that they aren't recognized by our body and survive longer than L-amino acid treatments. But what would happen if one of the enzymes in your body consisted of an oppositely twisted helix? I don't know, and neither does anybody else.
quantum_toothpaste, I don't know if you have access to online chemistry journals, if you do let me know and I will send you some good review articles. Here's a few books you can maybe look through:
Principles and Applications of Asymmetric Synthesis. Lin, G. -Q. 2001
Catalytic Asymmetric Synthesis. Ojima, I. 2000
Stoichiometric Asymmetric Synthesis. Rizzacasa, M. A. 2000
Asymmetric Catalysis on Industrial Scale. Blaser, H. U. 2004