Originally posted by aeolium
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Anyone else done an Archbishop ?
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It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostCould someone give me an example where the UK has "safeguards" that work ?
This is ALWAYS brushed aside
but IMV is the key issueLast edited by Serial_Apologist; 23-07-14, 22:10.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostThe safeguards will work in this instance. because eventually, as I wrote earlier, we are all in this one together, and in no position to palm it off onto vulnerability or otherwise.
Given the complete lack of empathy that many in our society have for the most vulnerable I can't see that this will be any different
look how "safeguards" have worked to protect people in the past ?
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostI don't think so at all
Given the complete lack of empathy that many in our society have for the most vulnerable I can't see that this will be any different
look how "safeguards" have worked to protect people in the past ?"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View Postindeed
It's a shame that this subject is always hijacked by those of a "religious persuasion"
I spy a serious conflation
In the late Sixties when I was a teenager my father predicted that David Steel's Abortion Bill would inevitably lead to euthanasia calls further down the line. I thought he was mad. I laughed in his face. That could NEVER happen in this country, could it?
There were plenty of others who feared the same and were assured at the time that it could and would never happen. Well it now has ...
It's really that simple. And it doesn't take a degree in logic for someone to work out that things are unlikely to stop here. One can easily see a future where anyone of 'sound mind' who requests a doctor to help kill him/her with a lethal drug will have the legal right to do so.
After all, it is 'their own body', isn't it, and no business of others to interfere into their own 'freedom of choice'?
In other words exactly the same argument!
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostOne can easily see a future where anyone of 'sound mind' who requests a doctor to help kill him/her with a lethal drug will have the legal right to do so.
After all, it is 'their own body', isn't it, and no business of others to interfere into their own 'freedom of choice'?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostCan one also 'easily see' the circumstances in which someone of 'sound mind' would 'demand' that a doctor assist in his/her suicide? One can probably 'easily see' the possible circumstances in which a woman might 'demand' an abortion - in many of which men are either criminal or, at least, equally responsible for an unwanted pregnancy but find it rather easier to escape the consequences.
One could equally argue that a woman might drive a man to consider taking his own life or vice-versa for that matter. We are not talking here about apportioning blame for a suicidal person's condition but the value society puts on that person's life.
Though it might not seem like it, I suspect Mr GongGong and myself are probably not very far apart on the issue at least when it comes to legalised assisted suicide. It's simply that some see a clear connection with previous laws and others obviously don't!
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostCould someone give me an example where the UK has "safeguards" that work ?
This is ALWAYS brushed aside
but IMV is the key issue
In what circumstances do you think the safeguards wouldn't work?
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostOne can easily see a future where anyone of 'sound mind' who requests a doctor to help kill him/her with a lethal drug will have the legal right to do so.
If they tried and failed, they could be prosecuted. The right of others to interfere with their 'freedom of choice' has quietly gone, and you didn't even notice.
Before the Suicide Act 1961, it was a crime to commit suicide, and anyone who attempted and failed could be prosecuted and imprisoned, while the families of those who succeeded could also potentially be prosecuted. In part, that criminalization reflected religious and moral objections to suicide as self-murder.
Isn't that another example of your slippery slope?
What did your supremely prescient father have to say about it back in 1961?
.Last edited by jean; 24-07-14, 08:46.
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amateur51
Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostWell of course that is a separate issue, and quite obviously not best discussed here!
One could equally argue that a woman might drive a man to consider taking his own life or vice-versa for that matter. We are not talking here about apportioning blame for a suicidal person's condition but the value society puts on that person's life.
Though it might not seem like it, I suspect Mr GongGong and myself are probably not very far apart on the issue at least when it comes to legalised assisted suicide. It's simply that some see a clear connection with previous laws and others obviously don't!
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