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Mason's
Meditations
If
you're looking for something to chew over, some thoughtful seeds
for mental cultivation, bookmark this page for Jeff Mason's fortnightly
meditations. To think in or take away...
Number
Twelve: Assisted Suicide
If
assisted suicide were legal, it would be possible to make a date
with death. People could choose to say goodbye to their families,
their friends and their lives all at the same time. If it were legal,
an individual would no longer have to commit a lonely suicide, write
a sad note and then take the pills, pull the trigger or jump off
a chair into a noose. One could die with dignity, realizing that
it is a right to choose to cease living and to have help in doing
so.
Religion
has been a key factor in preventing the legalization of suicide
because it condemns ending one's life as a sin. People stoically
have to bear the process of losing their powers one by one, slowly
becoming racked by the pains of debilitating diseases, and wait
for the end to come. Without the perspective of faith, this religious
view makes little sense and should not involve itself with public
policy. If one's religious beliefs prohibit suicide, that is fine,
but the prohibition should no longer be mandatory for all. Whether
or not there is an afterlife, what possible reason can there be
for extreme suffering when the desire to live has gone?
Of
course, not just anyone should assist a person to die. The assistants
should be licenced death planners and counselors. After the proper
precautions are taken, people tired of pain and misery would be
free to seek help to terminate their lives. These precautions include
psychological counseling to ensure that the individual really does
want to die and is not acting impulsively. They also include a watchdog
body to make sure that old and handicapped people are not killed
outright to save money for public hospitals and rest homes, not
pressured into assisted suicide by the avaricious beneficiaries
or stigmatized for refusing to do the "decent thing."
We
are living in an age of enlightenment where assisted suicide should
be legal and people free to plan for their deaths by assisted suicide
or palliative care. We would be spared the torment of watching our
loved ones die in excruciating pain or mindless with pain killers.
As for ourselves, if, in one's own steady eyes, infirmity or disease
takes away the reason to continue living, then it is rational to
contemplate the choice of an arranged death over a slow and painful
one. The world would be a better place if human beings had that
choice.
Mason's
Meditations will next be updated at the beginning of July 2001
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Previous
Meditations
11.
(1st May 2001)
10.
(1st April 2001)
9. (16th March 2001)
8. (1st
March 2001)
7.
(15th February 2001)
6.
(1st February 2001)
5. (15th
January 2001)
4. (1st
January 2001)
3.
(15th December 2000)
2.
(1st December 2000)
1. (15th November
2000)
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