The Weeping Angel wrote: ↑Sun Feb 16, 2025 5:14 pm
So where has assisted dying been a success?
Literally anywhere where someone’s suffering has been alleviated. Which - again - is what happens in the vastly overwhelming majority of cases.
And as for Canada’s “appalling” system:
“What this increase tells me is that Canada has paid the most attention to individual human rights and autonomy,” said Chantal Perrot, a physician and Maid provider. “An increase in deaths with Maid means to me that people are choosing to die with their loved ones around them. The last days, weeks or months of life can be horrific. Why would they want to go through that if they could have a peaceful death surrounded by their family and loved ones?”
Of the 13,102 people who died using assisted death, 96.5% had terminal illnesses or faced imminent death. Only 463 people suffering from a chronic condition accessed Maid.
“I work in the healthcare system and see people with severe chronic medical conditions all the time,” said Mona Gupta, a psychiatrist at the University of Montreal and the chair of the federal panel on Maid and Mental Illness. “The idea that 400 of them – in a country of 40 million people – had reached the point where they had exhausted all treatment options, and wanted to access Maid, does not seems extreme to me.”
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/ ... used-again
So your “bin fire” scenario is still helping thousands of people, many believe it is not overly generous but a reflection of a truly autonomous society. and no one as far as I can see is saying “let’s replicate the Canadian system, flaws and all” anyway.
So my question now is, what else have you got? Because your “argument” seems to be nothing but an appeal to paranoia - assuming the only possible outcome if this is implemented in the U.K. is the worst version of the “worst” example, which will be immediately be taken advantage of by an eager cohort of abusers who inexplicably otherwise wouldn’t do a thing if the status quo remains.
I would invite you to consider what you would say to any one of those 13,000 people in defence of your position, and explain why they need to die a prolonged, painful and unavoidable death to ease your conscience about something that has a tiny chance of happening and every chance of happening anyway even if assisted suicide did not exist. I for one would like to hear it because it will need to be quite the statement.