Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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Anyone else done an Archbishop ?
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amateur51
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostWe don't do "safeguards" in the UK very well when it comes to some of the most vulnerable do we ?once the door is open, even by the tiniest amount there is no shutting it again
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostImproved pain management and palliative care are often held up as alternatives to assisted suicide by those opposed to it. Sadly almost all the drugs that cut pain quite dramatically also cause terrible constipation and poor breathing...
A friend who had pancreatic cancer was mercifully pain-free at the end. For another, who had bone cancer, things were very different.
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Originally posted by jean View PostYou mean a woman's right to choose.
The idea of making a doctor or two the arbiter of a woman's decision was never going to be satisfactory.
I merely highlighted these as cases where we were told 'at the outset 'here and no further' and these assurances proved wholly meaningless. The 'slippery slope' and 'thin end of the wedge' advocates at the time have been proved 100% correct. That is undeniable as it is now staring us all straight in the face!!
Originally posted by jean;416527Talk of [Islippery slopes[/I], aka thin ends of wedges, is therefore not apposite in this case..
Originally posted by jean;416527[IShopping hours[/I] probably belong in a different category.
Any change in our euthanasia laws will inevitably lead to pressure for others to be considered for assisted suicide. And why not? Once you have crossed a very thick line future thin lines are a relative dawdle to negotiate.
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View Post... but the argument is about 'slippery slopes' amd 'thin end of wedges'...
Other Terms and/or Related Concepts Thin end of the wedge; Trojan horse. Description The slippery slope fallacy assumes without evi...
Everyone knew that the only sensible position was to allow women themselves to choose whether to have abortions or not. Any intermittent stage was never going to be more than just that - no slippery slopes involved at all.
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Originally posted by jean View PostFallacious argument, that's the trouble.
Other Terms and/or Related Concepts Thin end of the wedge; Trojan horse. Description The slippery slope fallacy assumes without evi...
Everyone knew that the only sensible position was to allow women themselves to choose whether to have abortions or not. Any intermittent stage was never going to be more than just that - no slippery slopes involved at all.
Lots of people "knew " differently,and many still do.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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amateur51
Originally posted by jean View PostOh no, that won't be necessary - you just have to pay proper attention to what I tell you.
It is precisely because heterosexual men in general still regard issues of contraception as being completely the responsibility of women that attitudes such as Mr Tipps' on abortion are still around.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View Post
It is precisely because heterosexual men in general still regard issues of contraception as being completely the responsibility of women that attitudes such as Mr Tipps' on abortion are still around.
It's a shame that this subject is always hijacked by those of a "religious persuasion"
I spy a serious conflation
When my mother started going on about this I asked her if she had ever made a decision that she later regretted? To which her answer was "NO" ........... 1st prize for self delusion methinks
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The reason this issue keeps coming up is that there are significant numbers of people who are dying in circumstances of exceptional distress and indignity, and there are even greater numbers of their friends and relatives witnessing that suffering. So strong is the life force that it must be unusually powerful mental or physical suffering that leads someone to want to end his life, and to be supported in that wish by those who are closest and dearest to him. Yet strangely permitting assisted suicide is viewed as denying people the "right to life" (as I heard an opponent say on the radio the other day). No right to life is being denied at all to those who wish to continue living - on the contrary, the duty to live even to the bitter end is being imposed on those living with desperately unpleasant terminal conditions.
The "slippery slope" argument is to me an extremely poor one: it is an argument for doing nothing about any difficult moral issue. Legalising homosexuality - the slippery slope to legalising all kinds of sexual deviancy. Legalising gay marriage - the slippery slope to "society degenerating even further than it already has into immorality". No generation should be hidebound by the moral principles of an earlier age: it must discover its own. Fortunately the weight of opinion is moving in favour of change: this was the polling two years ago, and a more recent poll last year conducted among religious believers of various faiths was even more striking.
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