Is Euthanasia the Future of End-of-Life Choices?

  • Thread starter jackson6612
  • Start date
In summary: As long as you have a living will and it's not revoked, you should be okay.A living will is a document that specifies when and how you want to be resuscitated if you become incapacitated.
  • #71
jarednjames said:
I would like you to answer this question, don't add to it, don't change it, just answer for the scenario laid out:
You have a family member who is a terminally ill, they are in terrible pain and don't want to suffer for the next three months, after which they will die. Do you think they shouldn't have a choice and should be made to endure it until their coming death or do you think they should be allowed to commit suicide?
After having prevented me from changing the question, you went and asked a complicated one. Simplify it and I will answer it.
 
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  • #72
Jimmy Snyder said:
After having prevented me from changing the question, you went and asked a complicated one. Simplify it and I will answer it.

Why is it complicated? It's a simple and realistic scenario faced by many people every single day. In what way would you like it simplified?
 
  • #73
Jimmy Snyder said:
I suppose they would do the same thing they did during their lives. Do nothing to help themselves, and blame others for the result.

This is neither helpful nor good for the individual . By blaming others the individual is only going to delay accepting reality.
 
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  • #74
In the U.K. people go to Switzerland for assisted suicide, and there is at least one case where it was chosen because the person was "not prepared to live what he felt was a second-class existence".

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/hereford/worcs/7675745.stm

There seems to be a "tacit agreement" that family members will not be prosecuted for this, as none ever have been, if the police are happy it was the dead persons wish. An attempt was made to clarify the law on this:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7698636.stm
 
  • #75
xxChrisxx said:
I've had enough of talking about this now.
Man I pressed a button there didn't I. It's not just the law after all.
 
  • #76
I am all for assisted suicide. I do not want to suffer needlessly and I have made this very clear to everyone that knows me. If i have to move to a state where it's legal, I'll do that. Hopefully, before I hit that point people will wise up and it will be legal everywhere. I am tired of living my life according to the irrational fears and religious beliefs of others. Don't want to let me die? Ok, let's hook you up to a machine that inflicts the same level of pain I'm enduring and see what you think, oh and you'll not be able to stop the pain until I die. What, you say that's cruel and inhuman to make someone suffer like that?
 
  • #77
Evo said:
I am tired of living my life according to the irrational fears and religious beliefs of others.
Again, the arguments against assisted suicide have nothing to do with religion. To blame it on religion is a form of ad hominem.
 
  • #78
DaveC426913 said:
Again, the arguments against assisted suicide have nothing to do with religion. To blame it on religion is a form of ad hominem.

Not every argument has to do with religion, but some do. The Catholic church campaigned against the 1994 Oregon law. Some googling will take you to the appropriate newspaper clippings.

Actually, to save you some of the trouble, I found this.

http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F40B1FF63B5C0C7B8EDDA90994D1494D81

The Oregon law was first approved in 1994, 51 percent to 49 percent, but was promptly put on hold amid great legal dispute, with the Roman Catholic Church leading the opposition. In 1997, the state's voters backed the law again, this time by 60 percent to 40 percent.

A little more googling on your part, though, will find many Christian websites in opposition of laws legalizing euthanasia.
 
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  • #79
Jack21222 said:
Not every argument has to do with religion, but some do. The Catholic church campaigned against the 1994 Oregon law. Some googling will take you to the appropriate newspaper clippings.

Actually, to save you some of the trouble, I found this.

http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F40B1FF63B5C0C7B8EDDA90994D1494D81



A little more googling on your part, though, will find many Christian websites in opposition of laws legalizing euthanasia.
Just because a group is Christian does not mean their opposition is based on specifically religious grounds (though it might be).

I didn't see anything in that article that was a religious argument. What I saw was:

...opposed abortion and assisted suicide because of ''our concern for the vulnerable and powerless -- in one case, unborn children; in the other case, people with disabilities, older people, poor people, people at the margins of society, who are at risk of being coerced into euthanasia.''
 
  • #80
Jimmy Snyder said:
Man I pressed a button there didn't I. It's not just the law after all.

It's still tremendously upsetting thinking (more that i would have anticipated) about it, so I am stopping.
 
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  • #81
DaveC426913 said:
Just because a group is Christian does not mean their opposition is based on specifically religious grounds (though it might be).
I didn't cite any specific religions. Many religions hold life sacred and killing yourself or assisting someone is considered a sin. So for a lot of people, it's against their religion. I'm not going to start a discussion on it, but you can easily google it and finds tons about religious views against suicide and euthanasia.

Here is just a listing of religious views so as not to specify just one.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_views_on_suicide
 
  • #82
Evo said:
I didn't cite any specific religions. Many religions hold life sacred and killing yourself or assisting someone is considered a sin. So for a lot of people, it's against their religion. I'm not going to start a discussion on it, but you can easily google it and finds tons about religious views against suicide and euthanasia.

Here is just a listing of religious views so as not to specify just one.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_views_on_suicide

Agreed. All of which we can agree to dismiss, since we have religious freedom, without further debate - leaving us holding a much smaller subset of rationales that claim to stand on their own.
 
  • #83
DaveC426913 said:
Agreed. All of which we can agree to dismiss, since we have religious freedom, without further debate - leaving us holding a much smaller subset of rationales that claim to stand on their own.
You can't dimiss them when they vote.
 
  • #84
Evo said:
You can't dimiss them when they vote.

Exactly.
 
  • #85
Jimmy Snyder said:
It is by no means an individual choice. Euthanasia takes two.
So does assisted suicide. But if I understand your earlier posts, you consider euthanasia immoral, but not assisted suicide.
 
  • #86
Gokul43201 said:
So does assisted suicide. But if I understand your earlier posts, you consider euthanasia immoral, but not assisted suicide.
I don't recall ever saying that assisted suicide isn't immoral. Can you link to it? My objection to euthanasia is not based on the number of people involved. For instance, I see nothing immoral in dancing the tango which also, I am informed, takes two.

My objection to allowing one person to kill another is by no means unusual, nor is it confined to religious dogma. It is the overwhelming choice by law and by practice in all countries and has been so at all times in history. Anyone here who thinks they are going to get my OK to off grandma is delusional.
 
  • #87
Gokul43201 said:
So does assisted suicide. But if I understand your earlier posts, you consider euthanasia immoral, but not assisted suicide.
In the case of the latter one is making the decision for oneself, whereas in the former, one is making the decision for someone else.

But of course that didn't need to be reiterated...
 
  • #88
Jimmy Snyder said:
I don't recall ever saying that assisted suicide isn't immoral. Can you link to it? My objection to euthanasia is not based on the number of people involved. For instance, I see nothing immoral in dancing the tango which also, I am informed, takes two.

My objection to allowing one person to kill another is by no means unusual, nor is it confined to religious dogma. It is the overwhelming choice by law and by practice in all countries and has been so at all times in history. Anyone here who thinks they are going to get my OK to off grandma is delusional.

And what if Grandma is the one who pushes the button starting the flow of lethal drugs? This is how assisted suicide is normally done. The point of assisted suicide is to provide the means for Grandma to make her own choice.

You seem to be equating assisted suicide with euthanasia.

I'm glad to say that I live in the State of Oregon, which has chosen not to force people to suffer terribly, with no hope of relief, against their will.
 
  • #89
Ivan Seeking said:
You seem to be equating assisted suicide with euthanasia.
I think I have done 180 degrees the opposite. I would prefer that you quote me having done so rather than just putting those words in my mouth. As far as I know, I have confined my comments to euthanasia and I have made it abundantly clear that what I mean is one person killing another.
 
  • #90
Jimmy Snyder said:
I don't recall ever saying that assisted suicide isn't immoral.

Jimmy Snyder said:
I think I have done 180 degrees the opposite. I would prefer that you quote me having done so rather than just putting those words in my mouth. As far as I know, I have confined my comments to euthanasia and I have made it abundantly clear that what I mean is one person killing another.

So are you saying assisted suicide is immoral, or not?
 
  • #91
Ivan Seeking said:
So are you saying assisted suicide is immoral, or not?
To the best of my knowledge I have not said one way or the other.
 
  • #92
DaveC426913 said:
In the case of the latter one is making the decision for oneself, whereas in the former, one is making the decision for someone else.

But of course that didn't need to be reiterated...

Can we please stop making things up.

There is voluntary euthanasia and non-voluntary.

You are only 'forced' into one of them.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euthanasia#Voluntary_euthanasia
Euthanasia conducted with the consent of the patient is termed voluntary euthanasia.

So to say euthanasia is done without consent or you don't "make the decision" is complete crap..
 
  • #93
Jimmy Snyder said:
I don't recall ever saying that assisted suicide isn't immoral. Can you link to it?
I don't know if you've said it explicitly, but it's what I thought you implied in post #9.
Jimmy said:
That's assisted suicide. He [Kevorkian] made very sure not to engage in euthanasia. To the extent that euthanasia means taking positive measures to end someone else's life, I am against it and I hope that it will not become legal.

DaveC426913 said:
In the case of the latter one is making the decision for oneself, whereas in the former, one is making the decision for someone else.

But of course that didn't need to be reiterated...
I think it is good you reiterated it, because I can't easily tell the difference between the terms (and as is often the case, and as seen from post #92, I fear we may be suffering from a clash of definitions, even as far as 6 pages into the thread).

If I ask someone to stick a lethal injection into me and he does it, is that euthanasia or assisted suicide? If I ask him to prepare the dose for me, and I stick myself, what is it? If I prepare the injection, and ask him to fetch it from my medicine cabinet, following which I stick myself with a fatal dose what is it then?

Do you [Dave, Jimmy, others] have an objection to any of these actions? Which one? If not, where on this extended spectrum - feel free to extrapolate in some reasonable manner - would you first start to have an objection to the actions of the 'someone'?
 
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  • #94
Jimmy Snyder said:
I don't recall ever saying that assisted suicide isn't immoral. Can you link to it? My objection to euthanasia is not based on the number of people involved. For instance, I see nothing immoral in dancing the tango which also, I am informed, takes two.

My objection to allowing one person to kill another is by no means unusual, nor is it confined to religious dogma. It is the overwhelming choice by law and by practice in all countries and has been so at all times in history. Anyone here who thinks they are going to get my OK to off grandma is delusional.

It's even more delusional for you to think you should be allowed to have any say in whether or not I get to help my grandma off herself. Who do you think you are, anyway?
 
  • #95
The key difference between euthanasia and assisted suicide is who performs the act of ending a life.

However, assisted suicide and voluntary euthanasia both have the consent of the person dying, non-voluntary euthanasia doesn't.

Can we please stop using euthanasia broadly to mean "it is forced upon you without consent", as many here are implying.

I'm also curious about whether or not people who don't support assisted suicide / voluntary euthanasia also support the death penalty. The death penalty is killing someone, generally without their consent. Not euthanasia, but you are giving someone the right to kill another for far less a reason than the arguments for assisted suicide and voluntary euthanasia.
 
  • #96
Jimmy Snyder said:
To the best of my knowledge I have not said one way or the other.
Would you care to express on opinion now, or do you prefer not to?
 
  • #97
  • #98
Our choice said:
They were in their own home and having a DNR, doesn't mean a thing, as they had attempted suicide
Please explain.
 
  • #99
Gokul43201 said:
Would you care to express on opinion now, or do you prefer not to?
I prefer not to. I consider that I am going after low-hanging fruit just now.
 
  • #100
Jack21222 said:
It's even more delusional for you to think you should be allowed to have any say in whether or not I get to help my grandma off herself. Who do you think you are, anyway?
I have been talking about euthanasia, not assisted suicide. Read my posts before you get angry at them.
 
  • #101
Jimmy Snyder said:
I have been talking about euthanasia, not assisted suicide. Read my posts before you get angry at them.

And as my previous posts, you have not clarified what type of euthanasia. I assume it's voluntary?
 
  • #102
Over a hundred posts in, and no one knows what anyone else is talking about, except that they disagree with each other! :rofl:
 
  • #103
jarednjames said:
And as my previous posts, you have not clarified what type of euthanasia. I assume it's voluntary?
I mean when one person kills another. Clear?
 
  • #104
Jimmy Snyder said:
I mean when one person kills another. Clear?
I'm still a little unclear what exactly that means. I think it would help if you could say which of the following three things (copied - modulo some formatting - from an earlier post) you would say involves one person killing another (and why):
Gokul43201 said:
If I ask someone to stick a lethal injection into me and he does it, is that euthanasia or assisted suicide?

If I ask him to prepare the dose for me, and I stick myself, what is it?

If I prepare the injection, and ask him to fetch it from my medicine cabinet, following which I stick myself with a fatal dose what is it then?
 
  • #105
Gokul43201 said:
If I ask someone to stick a lethal injection into me and he does it, is that euthanasia or assisted suicide?

If I ask him to prepare the dose for me, and I stick myself, what is it?

If I prepare the injection, and ask him to fetch it from my medicine cabinet, following which I stick myself with a fatal dose what is it then?
From a moral point of view, the first one is euthanasia, I don't see how it could be anything less. But it might be more. It depends on his compentency to determine your state of body and mind. From a legal point of view, the difference wouldn't matter. It would bring a charge of murder. Kervorkian never engaged in such a practice.

From a moral point of view, the next two are assisted suicide (assuming you die) because he can't be sure that you will actually take the dose. I don't know the law in this case, and I continue to avoid expressing my opinion on the morality of assisted suicide. I think Kervorkian's MO was along these lines except that he proposed the method of suicide, not the client.
 

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