Keeping the not-quite corpse on ice until God sees fit to collect them — Vera Mont
↪Andrew4Handel Read the rest of the sentence like you want to comprehend it. — 180 Proof
I have no problem with your faith. You can linger as long as your health care insurance lasts; I won't unplug you against your will. But you just bloody well keep your pious paws off my right to die. Religious people have caused an incredible amount of unnecessary suffering with their "value of human life" claptrap — Vera Mont
I was referring to specifically myself and how I think defeasibly about the issue at hand and not second-hand guessing about the valuations of "others" or "society".How is that valuing human life? — Andrew4Handel
Says who? And If true, so what? The ethical problem only arises in circumstances where lives are shortened unsafely and / or coercively.Assisted suicide had never just been used on people right at the end of life in severe pain ... it has been used to shorten viable lives.
I hope you've gotten some help since then. And if you're against assistant suicide, Andrew, then don't you use an assistant or kill yourself. That said, it's incoherent and biased of you to advocate denying – criminalizing – others for making those choices for themselves.... undiagnosed cognitive conditions that I received no help for and nearly ended my own life ...
This type of palliative care is used at end of life and not to keep someone in a coma for years or it would not be classed as palliative care. — Andrew4Handel
I am just looking for evidence people value human life. I started this thread with examples including a 44 year old and 24 year old who had assisted suicides for mental health reasons not terminal illness and whose lives were shortened considerably. How is that valuing human life? — Andrew4Handel
I also raised the cases of my brother who didn't want an assisted suicide despite being paralysed among other things and the case of myself who had undiagnosed cognitive conditions that I received no help for and nearly ended my own life because of the side effects of these conditions. — Andrew4Handel
Hardly. Which politician orders up a flood or a snowstorm or a pandemic? Those are realities with which real, live, present-on-the-scene health care, rescue and emergency workers have to deal with. There are too many of those and too few of them. No politician is able to pull a few thousand doctors out of his hat. People with chronic debilitating illness don't have ten or twelve years - it would actually longer - for a new crop of graduates, even if higher were offered without tuition fees immediately. — Vera Mont
The 'because' doesn't fit. They were already doing it when they themselves legislated against assisted suicide and abortion, against gay rights and birth control, against science education and school lunches, against environmental protection and worker's safety - but for guns, prisons, executions, militarized police and even more tax-cuts.
Not because of erosion of humane values, but because the things they were for required lots of gullible votes and they presented their platform of 'againsts' as the moral choice. — Vera Mont
the shortages now are the result of past policy choices. — Tobias
ou use a lot of ' it' and ' they', so much so that I have trouble understanding your argument — Tobias
Assisted suicide or euthanasia laws may play into that hand, because if we do not have to keep people alive, and it becomes socially not to, we can cut more beds. — Tobias
That's not why they do it. 'It' is the policy of allocating resources from agencies of public service to agencies of control. 'They' are the aforementioned right-wing political parties which are taking over governance in much of the world.The 'because' doesn't fit. — Vera Mont
I.e. They are not concerned with the value of human life, and never have been; their attitude didn't change when the law was relaxed.They were already doing it when they themselves legislated against assisted suicide and abortion, against gay rights and birth control, against science education and school lunches, against environmental protection and worker's safety
What they are interested in is central, lock-step power, protecting concentrated wealth.- but for guns, prisons, executions, militarized police and even more tax-cuts.
To which end they wooed and won the religious fundamentalist, the racist, the xenophobic, the economically insecure voter blocs by appropriating their simple, punitive values.Not because of erosion of humane values, but because the things they were for required lots of gullible votes and they presented their platform of 'againsts' as the moral choice.
Not everyone has an accommodating Germany next door. And what, when all the well-prepared nations need the capacity for their own critically ill - who will take the extra old and infirm off your hands? — Vera Mont
So is climate change, but knowing that doesn't alleviate the present problem or mitigate the much larger future problem or increase the available resources for whenever the polity is ready to throw out the bums and install a civic-minded, smart administration. With every hurricane and coastal flooding. more infrastructure is destroyed. How many hospitals did Katrina take out? And she was a pussycat, compared to storms yet to come. — Vera Mont
I had alluded to the conservative parties - everywhere, not just in the US - moving rightward, striking down laws for personal autonomy and cutting social programs, including health services.
To which you replied:
Assisted suicide or euthanasia laws may play into that hand, because if we do not have to keep people alive, and it becomes socially not to, we can cut more beds.
— Tobias
By which I assumed you meant liberal governments' permissive suicide laws encourage conservative governments to cut health-care on the pretext that old people will have been killed before they need it.
I contend that this is not a cause-effect situation. — Vera Mont
I.e. They are not concerned with the value of human life, and never have been; their attitude didn't change when the law was relaxed. — Vera Mont
What they are interested in is central, lock-step power, protecting concentrated wealth. — Vera Mont
To which end they wooed and won the religious fundamentalist, the racist, the xenophobic, the economically insecure voter blocs by appropriating their simple, punitive values. — Vera Mont
I don't know how it came about (other than through the Middle Eastern debacles) in Europe, or how it will play out in each nation. You're in a far better position to see that side and predict what comes next. — Vera Mont
I feel we have an odd debate because I feel we are in agreement, but you are not agreeing with me — Tobias
I do not know what a civic minded smart administration is. — Tobias
I doubt though that when we install it, presto, all our problems will be over. — Tobias
Do not look at the state to keep you alive, we will only do so when we still see some benefit in it, after all you can pay for it yourself, or choose death....'. — Tobias
I tend to agree, but, that said.... well, the religious. conservatives may well be concerned with the value of human life and oppose it on that ground. There is a plethora of conservativisms. — Tobias
Populist parties often couple the law and order values with economic policies that might well be agreeable to the progressive left. — Tobias
I also raised the cases of my brother who didn't want an assisted suicide despite being paralysed among other things and the case of myself who had undiagnosed cognitive conditions that I received no help for and nearly ended my own life because of the side effects of these conditions.
— Andrew4Handel
I would not have interfered in either of your decisions. But you want to interfere in mine. — Vera Mont
ou would have interfered because you want assisted suicide legalised which would mean I could have been drawn to an assisted suicide before knowing I had autism and ADHD. — Andrew4Handel
You want to throw vulnerable people under the bus with health systems that are complex and easily compromised and societies marred by social inequalities that make slow progress. — Andrew4Handel
And you fail to comprehend the vulnerability of people who don't want an assisted suicide under your legal system. — Andrew4Handel
millions of other people should not have to suffer, for the sole purpose of safeguarding your specific personal vulnerabilities. — Vera Mont
You could have been drawn to jump off a bridge without any help from me. Are you going to make bridges illegal - just in case? — Vera Mont
No you are throwing millions under the bus and the integrity of the health and care systems and the value of life due to your desire to have someone help kill you. Something you could easily do yourself. — Andrew4Handel
Old people in reasonable health are killing themselves long before they need to die, and in unnecessarily painful and messy ways, for fear that if they are no longer strong and independent when the time is right — Vera Mont
There are quick accessible ways to potentially painlessly kill yourself if you are able bodied. — Andrew4Handel
If people don't have access to advanced palliative care how would they have access to assisted suicide? — Andrew4Handel
Your side of the argument are doing your own scaremongering and convincing health old people that they could face and unpleasant and unbearable death.
Several of the most prominent terminally ill assisted suicide campaigners died peacefully and or quickly in the end — Andrew4Handel
The only real difference is optimism vs pessimism. I think we'll run out of time, resources and options before the [relatively; numerically] insignificant matter of suicide, assisted and otherwise, can be addressed in any systematic way. I think far bigger and more urgent matters will take up all our attention and efforts... — Vera Mont
... until the final collapse of our civilization. Many civilizations have collapsed before, and I'm pretty sure their comfortable middle classes also refused to contemplate the possibility that their own could go the same way. What comes after is open to interesting speculation. — Vera Mont
But you can imagine it: government that puts the needs interests of the citizens before those of its military or financial or religious or political elite, designs policy, enacts legislation and allocates funds with those priorities. — Vera Mont
It's not a question of how much we value life in general; it increasingly and inevitable becomes a question of how many can be preserved at all. — Vera Mont
I started this thread with examples including a 44 year old and 24 year old who had assisted suicides for mental health reasons not terminal illness and whose lives were shortened considerably. How is that valuing human life? — Andrew4Handel
No you are throwing millions under the bus and the integrity of the health and care systems and the value of life due to your desire to have someone help kill you — Andrew4Handel
I have already provided evidence of who is being affected by assisted suicide such as the poor, the lonely and victims of abuse from others. — Andrew4Handel
You want a law that effects everyone because of a personal preference. And you fail to comprehend the vulnerability of people who don't want an assisted suicide under your legal system. — Andrew4Handel
There are quick accessible ways to potentially painlessly kill yourself if you are able bodied. — Andrew4Handel
Several of the most prominent terminally ill assisted suicide campaigners died peacefully and or quickly in the end — Andrew4Handel
I can cite several more if needs be — Andrew4Handel
It is a matter of how much we value preserving everyone and how hard we are willing to try and of course what to sacrifice for doing so. — Tobias
It isn't necessary. There are plenty of people ready to help voluntarily. Many of the strongest advocates of legalizing assisted suicide have been health-care workers who had too watch too many patients suffer through terminal illness that no decent person would allow their pet to endure. — Vera Mont
Can you provide any evidence for this claim? I can provide evidence to the contrary. — Andrew4Handel
What you provided was evidence that people who disapprove of assisted suicide disapprove of itand don't discuss it with people who do approve of it. — Vera Mont
I think people have failed to defend the notion of autonomy. — Andrew4Handel
The people who have the most autonomy are the people with the most interventions and assistance and the most access to resources.
It is not a Natural state. We are not created through or with our autonomy. We are unable to care for ourselves for several years so cannot rely on our autonomy as we are reliant on parents and other adults. — Andrew4Handel
If we have a desire to be a doctor or pilot etc we need pre-existing societies structures like scientific institues, roads, money and welfare systems. The more of these societally created tools the more we can fulfil our desires. There are few desires we can fulfill if left alone in the wild. So we are in something of a social contract where we are provided services due to cooperation and giving up some freedoms for others. — Andrew4Handel
Assisted suicide is being pushed by people who are already privileged have increased autonomy given by others through societal innovation and support not the truly disenfranchised who have been the biggest victims of euthanasia and have lives determined unworthy. — Andrew4Handel
Lack of desire to live can often be associated with and induced by helplessness, learned helpless and disenfranchisement and that was my experience of feeling suicidal. — Andrew4Handel
Feeling pushed to die by suffering or fear of is an experience of coercion. — Andrew4Handel
If one could "easily do it", then assistance euthanizing oneself wouldn't ever be needed; but it is, thus the issue.No you are throwing millions under the bus and the integrity of the health and care systems and the value of life due to your desire to have someone help kill you. Something you could easily do yourself. — Andrew4Handel
Seems to me, Andrew, what your position 'criminalizing the choice of whether or not to assist or be assisted ending one's life' amounts to is the tradeoff Ben Franklin warns about.Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety. — Benjamin Franklin
With or without the option of well-regulated assisted suicide, "the poor, the lonely and victims of abuse from others" will always be adversely affected, so your "evidence" is moot.I have already provided evidence of who is being affected by assisted suicide such as the poor, the lonely and victims of abuse from others. — Andrew4Handel
Because you say so, nice. — Tobias
That people need each other does not mean that one can make decisions for them. Sure I am reliant on my parents up until a certain age, however when I am 'of legal age', I can decide for myself how long I stay out at night. — Tobias
In the Netherlands where we have such laws, physicians will not just put you down (at least they should not lest they commit manslaughter) because you have lost the will to live. — Tobias
people used the autonomy argument there but failed to define or justify it as if we all agreed on something before hand — Andrew4Handel
You can only safely stay out at night because of a social contract and a police service. — Andrew4Handel
Some people are attacked when walking at night so this doesn't prove you have an autonomy that is not provided or dependent by social structures. — Andrew4Handel
I think the theory of social autonomy leads to antinatalism and defeats itself because autonomy is not possible due to the nature of procreation and fundamental lack of consent. — Andrew4Handel
But they have done that. — Andrew4Handel
Of course, vulnerable as we are, we are cradled within the family, society, a bedrock of rules etc, but with the purpose of becoming individuals, people realizing their autonomy. — Tobias
How does one realise their autonomy?
They can't choose their genes, their parents, their country of birth, their sex and so on on.
A lot of theorists no longer believe in free will. How are autonomy and the belief in no free will compatible? — Andrew4Handel
I don't think that necessity to get a job or to work/strive to avoid starving is autonomy but brute necessity. — Andrew4Handel
If you need someone to assist and legalise your suicide that does not indicate autonomy either. — Andrew4Handel
At best committing suicide by your own hand is autonomy but not involving others and enforcing legislation that effects others. — Andrew4Handel
This topic can also be linked to the topic of personal identity which I made a thread about as well and who is it that persists over time. — Andrew4Handel
If, as I mentioned earlier, you are put in a coma before dying naturally does that person in a coma have interests? — Andrew4Handel
Peoples beliefs and identities change through time and this applies to peoples suicidality and value towards life. — Andrew4Handel
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