Well if people with disabilities can seek death from a doctor due to their disabilities, that's what it amounts to. All non-terminal illnesses/medical conditions up against barriers are disabilities. And all disabilities are disabling due to external barriers. The way the ruling currently reads - the ruling equates disability with illness and disease - and allows people with non-terminal conditions to seek death from doctors. The ruling takes disability out of the context of the duty enshrined in human rights law to remove systemic and attitudinal barriers - and then places disability right in the middle of a huge attitudinal and systemic barrier, which is this ruling.I haven't seen that said or implied by anyone in this thread.
You see people with disabilities are supposed to be equal under the law to able-bodied people. That's the baseline. If the judge had respected that human right to be equal then the law could've been made to include only people suffering from terminal illness - either a primary terminal illness for able-bodied people, or a terminal illness on top of the already existing disability. To honour the human rights of people with disabilities it should look more like this:
Able bodied people acquire terminal illness=permission to seek assisted suicide when their suffering becomes intolerable at the latter stages
Already disabled people acquire terminal illness= can ask for permission to seek assisted suicide when their suffering becomes intolerable at the latter stages.
What we have now is:
Terminal illness is intolerable=disability is intolerable
Keep in mind that disability is only disability if the impairment is up against discriminatory attitudinal and systemic and environmental barriers. Impairment alone is not disability according to human rights law. This ruling sets up a systemic barrier for potentially deadly attitudinal discrimination to breed.