My fear and worries about the advent of Assisted Death/Euthanasia in Britain
JasonRA
Online Community Member Posts: 310 Championing
I think anyone with a terminal illness should have the right to choose, my worry is that Disabled people who the Right Wing press basically smear and ridicule daily will be coerced into choosing a "good death" because they're seen as a burden on the NHS or the Benefits system.
I tried to kill myself in July 2021 but I failed, damaged my liver though, I grew to realize that there is a reason to live to try to combat the mental disability I have, to live a more normal and prosperous life and to stay strong for my Mother and my Brother.
I'm gravely worried that Disabled people will be nudged into ending their lives, I'm worried that Britain's financial woes and the NHS stretched to breaking point will offer this as a way to cut costs ala in Canada with their healthcare. I find it unnerving and disturbing, people call it a contentious situation for me it's cut and dry, if you have a terminal illness and live in the most unfathomable pain then there's a way out.
Disabled people are my argument that if there's a will there's a way, overcoming considerable odds and obstacles, I saw a lady, wheelchair bound, incredibly small and her arms were inverted and in an atrophic position where she could barely move, she looked at me and smiled, I saw the glint in her eyes. That's all I'm saying.
I tried to kill myself in July 2021 but I failed, damaged my liver though, I grew to realize that there is a reason to live to try to combat the mental disability I have, to live a more normal and prosperous life and to stay strong for my Mother and my Brother.
I'm gravely worried that Disabled people will be nudged into ending their lives, I'm worried that Britain's financial woes and the NHS stretched to breaking point will offer this as a way to cut costs ala in Canada with their healthcare. I find it unnerving and disturbing, people call it a contentious situation for me it's cut and dry, if you have a terminal illness and live in the most unfathomable pain then there's a way out.
Disabled people are my argument that if there's a will there's a way, overcoming considerable odds and obstacles, I saw a lady, wheelchair bound, incredibly small and her arms were inverted and in an atrophic position where she could barely move, she looked at me and smiled, I saw the glint in her eyes. That's all I'm saying.
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Comments
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Hello @JasonRA
I believe my colleague has sent an email over if you haven't seen it yet
Hope you are well today? 0 -
Personally I'm for it. I'm far more interested in quality of life than simply 'life or death'.
Having to endure existence with little to no quality, no chance of improvement, and being trapped in unsuitable accommodation in an inaccessible society shouldn't be forced upon anyone in my opinion.
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@OverlyAnxious
I don't like giving my opinion on sensitive topics but this is something I have felt really strongly about for a long time
For a long time I have thought that forcing someone to live a life of absolute pain, misery and anguish, denying them any chance of escape, is equally immoral as killing someone who enjoys life and wants to live
If a person was in so much pain (whether mental or physical) that they genuinely decided that to not exist anymore was the better option, I believe that it takes a special type of sadist to want to carry on inflicting that pain
That said I am totally against the idea of people being pressured into making the choice to die because they feel a burden or whatever. How the law could allow individuals to make the choice, without allowing people to be pressurised into it, I don't know1 -
Hi @JasonRA I'm just checking in to see how you were feeling today? Did you get a chance to read the email my colleague sent you during the week?0
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