Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Japanese government intends to reduce suicide rate

By Alex Schadenberg
euthanasiaprevention@on.aibn.com

Japan is reviewing its guidelines aimed at reducing the number of suicides in Japan and hopes to reduce the suicide rate by 20 percent by 2016.http://www.bloomberg.com:80/apps/news?pid=20601101&sid=a_2Lhi9MAfY0&refer=japan

Japan has been plagued by more than 30,000 suicide deaths each year over the past 10 years. According to the United Nations they have the 9th highest suicide rate in the world.

Recently the Japanese government asked internet providers to block websites that promote suicide and suicide methods, such as hydrogen sulphide on the internet after their was a rash of suicides committed using these techniques in the past few months. http://alexschadenberg.blogspot.com/2008/05/internet-providers-urged-to-remove.html

Chief Cabinet Secretary Nobutaka Machimura said "It's outrageous that something that seems to promote suicide is widely available on the Internet. There is freedom of expression but it must be accompanied by responsibility. These things shouldn't go unregulated."

The Australian government passed a law prohibiting the promotion and counseling of suicide on the internet a few years ago in response to the work of Dr. Philip Nitschke, the Australian Dr. Death, who was providing suicide and counseling people to commit suicide via the internet.

All western nations need laws that protect vulnerable depressed and mentally incompetent people from falling victim to the euthanasia lobby who are promoting suicide (right to die) as a human right.

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2 Comments:

At May 28, 2008 , Blogger Wesley J. Smith said...

The problem with any suicide prevention program today is that so many are pushing suicide as a positive for some populations. At best this means that society is receiving a mixed message. That makes prevention difficult since suicidal people are hardly likely to say, oh that's for someone else but not for my category of desiring to die.

 
At May 28, 2008 , Blogger Mike Matteson said...

This is just pointless censorship. It is clearly not the case that people who want to commit suicide can only do so in the ways that are described on websites.

 

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