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How does it necessarily fit into the theory that there would be no judgment? I believe in God, Creation, and free will, but I also believe we will be judged for the choices that we choose to make using our free will.Here is a theory, based on the notion of free will. If one believes in Creation, and God, and the gift of free will.... it follows that all who are created, as individuals, make choices, live by free will, and may choose, without judgment, to end life when confronted with pain and suffering.
I never said any such thing. I don't like this ruling because it sys that, even with choice, my life as a PWD is worth less than your life as someone who is not a PWD.
No it does not. It just doesn't. Sorry.
This ruling says that people who are suffering greatly, and have personally decided that the suffering exceeds what they personally can cope with, and who are capable of consent, MAY meet a threshold that gives them access to assisted suicide.
I do not disagree with your comments about prejudice and stigma for people with disabilities. But, by repeatedly asserting this ruling devalues the lives of people with disabilities you affirm this notion that the lives of people with disabilities are somehow worth less. That is your message. It is not the message of the ruling.
Say you were a counsellor - and two people at different appointments came to see you and expressed that they were suicidal. One appeared to be able bodied the other did not. Would you make an assumption that the person with a disability's life was more hopeless with less investigating, or help to reframe how they view pain management and lifeskills management, etc, than the able bodied person or not? Would you assume that the able bodied person had more to live for?
No. I would definitely not make these assumptions.Say you were a counsellor - and two people at different appointments came to see you and expressed that they were suicidal. One appeared to be able bodied the other did not. Would you make an assumption that the person with a disability's life was more hopeless with less investigating, or help to reframe how they view pain management and lifeskills management, etc, than the able bodied person or not? Would you assume that the able bodied person had more to live for?
I think what is complicating this is that the definition Seeler posted was, AFAIK, used before the one you are using. Giving up the first doesn't come very easily, especially when it's based on the roots of the word.No, it is not me saying that. The inappropriate use of the word disability negates society's responsibility for addressing the other factors that create "disability". That is totally unfair and treating PWDs as unequal from the premise.
What about when illness or disease is someone's norm?@Carolla @Northwind @Mendalla Well, keep in mind that if they were going through a relationship crisis, it could be exacerbating other symptoms but their disability is their 'norm'. But by naming disability with illness and disease it disregards that that is their 'norm'. Their very way of being in the world is equated with illness and disease and so that's why the ruling is prejudicial at it's premise.
What about when illness or disease is someone's norm?
I'm not saying a person is a disease, I'm also not saying they are a disability.What about it? That person is not a disease though. They have a disease. That's why this is prejudicial.
But by naming disability with illness and disease it disregards that that is their 'norm'.
I'm not saying a person is a disease, I'm also not saying they are a disability.
Say you were a counsellor - and two people at different appointments came to see you and expressed that they were suicidal. One appeared to be able bodied the other did not. Would you make an assumption that the person with a disability's life was more hopeless with less investigating, or help to reframe how they view pain management and lifeskills management, etc, than the able bodied person or not? Would you assume that the able bodied person had more to live for?
Remember they are both equals. One lives with more complications than the other but that is the baseline they are starting from. Don't compare the level of inconvenience the person with a disability already lives with to the one who doesn't.
I also find it offensive that you consider someone with a disability to have a life that is more complicated than someone who is "normal".
I also find it offensive that you consider someone with a disability to have a life that is more complicated than someone who is "normal".
I've been through the 'system' myself and I also worked with some pretty insensitive 'helpers' in one extension of the 'system'. You don't need to feel offended that there are people working in the system who don't actually care to help or understand much. They're not you. But it's helpful to recognize it.I most certainly would not assume that the apparently able bodied person had more to live for than the person with an obvious disability. I would also not assume that the PWD had less to live for or was less capable than the so called normal person. I have learned that appearances are deceiving.
I find it rather offensive that you believe helpers devalue some lives so much.
Being systemically oppressed is rather complicated.Well, the person with the disability has the added bit of being systematically oppressed by the majority, under my understanding of the 'social model of disability' Belief System?
Good thing, too, that you are finding things offensive...they can also point to something one believes that is being challenged...