If a person was about to jump off a bridge what would be your reaction ? I doubt that anyone's first thought would be "O well, it is their right to die so I'll just walk on by".
Honest answer Warri?? Yes, that would be exactly my first reaction. The first thing that would cross my mind is that it is none of my business. But I'm a bit odd like that, and I'm aware that most 'reactions' haven't evolved much since we were just another creature surviving in the jungle, so that first millisecond reaction would indeed be that one.
But I have acquired just enough veneer of civilization for conscience to remind me that maybe I should at least ask if they'd thought hard about it. But I'd ask from a distance.
I must have once had an exemplary teacher because I distinctly remember, as a youngster in primary school, a series of lessons on 'rescuing people'. We were told to crawl in a fire to stay under the smoke. and not to tug or roll people who may have spinal injuries etc.
It was stressed, quite forcibly, that the best way to rescue the drowning was to use something, anything, a shirt, a long stick etc for them to grab. Something that separated the rescuer from the victim as we were warned of exactly what Phil just outlined. That a drowning person will climb on top of you and drown you instead without even thinking about it. They will not share your logical thinking processes nor appreciate your good intent.
I share Phil's opinion that the
publicly suicidal aren't ticking right and do to a point equate with the drowning.
The ones who've already decided on the course of action just take a running jump over the railing. The ones who choose to balance on it until someone like you comes along to 'rescue' them are looking for either an excuse to go on living or an audience for their exit.
But we digress !!! This thread is about legally sanctioned
Voluntary Euthanasia. Not suicide per se.
Voluntary euthanasia isn't nearly as exciting as jumping off bridges. It is about the people who aren't capable of getting to the bridge still having a right to end it with a smidgeon of dignity and in a peaceful, painless, trauma free manner.
Their decision is reached over time and by far more logical thought processes than made by someone who jumps off a bridge, or under a train with a shopping bag in each hand because they had a bad day.
That we wander off the point of this topic into the realm of the bizarre 'what if's' is indicative that it's a subject most don't want to concentrate on.
We continually paste our own personal values onto other people's right to make a decision according to theirs. To me that is the ultimate arrogance!
If the legislation condoned it, and it was made an easier option to implement by the sufferer, then other people's 'reactions,' beliefs and complicity needn't enter the question at all. A legal form could absolve any named, consenting, individual assisting the person from any legal culpability. Too simple??
The only question we need to consider, and express opinions on, is if other people have the right to decide their own fate, according to their own values and opinion, regardless of it's relevance to our own.
We need to get past what's right for us, personally. It's not all about us and our choices and decisions, it's about extending the permission to others to make a decision for themselves. Is it really all that hard to do?