Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Euthanasia
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I say yay, at least have the choice - if it's not for you fair enough, sign the thing to say you DON'T want it, but why should your views mean someone else has to live in pain? Drives me crazy this, it's the same with abortion, IF YOU DON'T AGREE WITH IT, DON'T DO IT, i'm pro-choice more than anything.
I remember doing a project on euthanasia when i was doing my gcse's (about 8 years ago) and couldn't believe then that we don't have the choice, and i still can't believe it now. There'll always be people against it but there'll be a hell of a lot of people for it, and speaking in practical terms it would free up some hospital beds and save mmoney for the NHS - i know that's a really cynical view but it's something else the government will be considering.
If it was me, i wouldn't want to be in hospital, terminally ill, in pain, or severely disabled, unable to communicate or recognise my family and loved ones, we put dogs down for less, so why can't people be given the same right to die?
I think Bernardo is right and there are circumstances which we need to ensure cannot happen. A living will is a good way of doing this, but there is still a long way to go in determining a framework that ensures that the sort of things he describes happening in the Netherlands cannot happen.
From what I have read from pro-euthanasia groups, there is an unequivocal acknowledgement that any laws would to be very carefully drafted.
This is a very difficult one. Some years ago I was extremely ill with cancer, the doctors told my relatives I had no chance & stopped medication. I was in pain & so desperate & I have to admit that if anyone had come in with a big syringe & offered me a way out I would have said yes please.
Twenty years on I'm still here!
However, if I was to develop dementia or have some very long term disabling condition I have to say that I would have liked the option to have made my wishes known at a time when I was able to.
So over all I would vote yay.
Definitely pro choice. I find it obscene to keep a person alive against their express wishes when for those who would choose euthanasia it is the only way to escape the living hell of a body racked with pain, causing untold misery. Obviously the choice can only be made by the individual and that individual must be deemed to be competent and there be no third party involvement.
It is obvious that those who choose such a course of action have no credible alternative. We don't keep suffering animals alive so why do it to humans who can actually choose not to suffer?