And I don't speak for thousands - only my concerns in this place - but I know that thousands share similar concerns through the disability rights groups which have been brushed off here as illogical.
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Kimmio said:But it is unconstitutional from the get-go seeing as a whole population of a protected group people is affected by this decision - whether they care or are aware or not.
They are affected only in as much as they now have the right to approach a doctor and ask for specific assistance.
They will not be compelled by any one to start that conversation.
They cannot compel a doctor to offer that assistance or even agree that the request justifies such action.
No open season exists.
No new danger now exists.
A door previously shut is now open.
The shut door forced people to act in secret. The open door means nobody has to scurry through shadows and the fact that there will be a discussion means doctors (the kind committed to medicine not the kind hoping to get to kill people) have a chance to actually discuss death with a patient.
You want to close the door. Fine. It won't save people. How many commit suicide without a doctor's help? How many times does a family have to weep about not seeing the signs? How many individuals have to agonize about not having an opportunity to tell their loved ones that there is another option other than death?
But lets not have those conversations at all.
Let's make the illegal like they were before when everything was sunshine and roses because people killed themselves then but you felt safer.
Some say life is a terminal condition - it always ends in death.
Some say life is a terminal condition - it always ends in death.
They are affected only in as much as they now have the right to approach a doctor and ask for specific assistance.
They will not be compelled by any one to start that conversation.
They cannot compel a doctor to offer that assistance or even agree that the request justifies such action.
No open season exists.
No new danger now exists.
A door previously shut is now open.
The shut door forced people to act in secret. The open door means nobody has to scurry through shadows and the fact that there will be a discussion means doctors (the kind committed to medicine not the kind hoping to get to kill people) have a chance to actually discuss death with a patient.
You want to close the door. Fine. It won't save people. How many commit suicide without a doctor's help? How many times does a family have to weep about not seeing the signs? How many individuals have to agonize about not having an opportunity to tell their loved ones that there is another option other than death?
But lets not have those conversations at all.
Let's make the illegal like they were before when everything was sunshine and roses because people killed themselves then but you felt safer.
I'm not entirely sure where the wording came from in the first place - was it actually coming from the court?. I do agree that medical condition is probably more suitable than disability.Aarg. Why wouldn't 'medical condition' suffice for wording. Why an antiquated assumption about what disability is?
I'm not entirely sure where the wording came from in the first place - was it actually coming from the court?. I do agree that medical condition is probably more suitable than disability.
Kimmio said:I don't see why the ruling could aknowledge the people who are terminally ill who want to die humanely but be resolved to save those who are not terminally ill and ease suffering.
In the past couple of days I've chatted with some friends over this issue. There really is some concern out there beyond what Kimmio has been expressing on here. A blind friend of mine shared her concern with me - and others have opined that what we have now is a slippery slope - going down to where doctors can declare someone's life should be extinguished without their consent.
Slippery slope arguments rarely bear fruit in my experience. The Gwen Jacobs decision on whether women could go topless in public spaces in Ontario (which still stands, by the way) was supposed to be a slippery slope leading to all sorts of public hedonism being legalized (it happened in Waterloo so I was there for it and remember the fuss) and I have not seen any evidence of it after almost 25 years.
Your argument assumes a right has been granted to doctors to decide when to end a person's life. But that's not what was said. A right has been granted to competent patients to decide when to end their own life with the support of a physician. And the government has been told that they can regulate it. So I would suggest that any such alarmism about this decision is misplaced until we see that regulatory regime.
So, which is worse - someone suffers in too much pain for 8 days like Dr.Lowe, or the person who doesn't have a terminal illness who dies decades before their time, because they weren't offered help to live? Which is morally worse?
I answered.I have to ask again. No one answered before. Given two scenarios - Dr. Low in too much pain for 8 days, or someone without terminal illness who died decades too soon because no one provided help for a better outlook or alternative - which of those is less 'moral'?
They should never have included non-terminal illness.