Monday, July 18, 2005

More Proof that Assisted Suicide is not about Terminal Illness--Or the Practice of Medicine

A Canadian MP has introduced an assisted suicide legalization bill that not only permits the assisted suicides of people with "severe mental pain" who are not terminally ill, but also allows the person who assists to not be a medical professional. "Aiding another person to die with dignity" is not precisely defined so it would also seem to permit active homicide with the consent of the killed person. This bill seems primarily aimed at legally enabling assisted suicide advocacy groups to get into the business of hastening the deaths of members. The Canadian bill is a more honest piece of legislation than most of its kind in that it openly promotes the actual goals of the assisted suicide movement.

2 Comments:

At July 18, 2005 , Blogger Robert B said...

There's not much that is defined well in this bill.

Any severe "mental pain" would qualify - so any chronically depressed could go forward with a legal suicide.

Witnesses are unrelated / uninterested parties SO OF COURSE pressure on the patient or medical staff or other "friends" by interested parties LIKE beneficiaries to "speed things along" would NEVER happen.

 
At July 18, 2005 , Blogger Wesley J. Smith said...

You got it. And "terminal illness" isn't defined, either. Thus, if somebody has asymptomatic HIV, it would seem he or she would qualify.

 

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