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Should we have a right called 'Right to Die'?
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A, Crazy.
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May 12, 2014 10:35AM

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There's no such law in real...I'm just saying, should there be one. So that people can decided when to give up their lives?? That would make suicide look legal...

Like I always, since my childhood , wanted to fulfill all my dreams by 35 and then die..I always had this plan of suicide marked..but now am not sure whether the ends which I feel are the reasons for my birth are exactly the same why am born..I mean I really don't know what the real purpose of my birth is ..so I don't think I want to kill myself even in a legally acceptable manner ..
coming to another aspect of this, mercy killings, I feel these should be allowed and practiced with a certain set of guidelines and stringent measures...I mean, you really don't want a paraplegic or braindead person to live forever suffering the pain and with no chance of recovery in sight .



Back to topic, I'm against suicide committed by a healthy person. However, I don't really object to a 'right to die'. Let assume there is a law for that. Its apparent goal should be to deliver a quick and painless death. Its underlying goal should be to reduce the rate of suicides.
Because we are talking about extinguishing a life here, people cannot just sign a paper and get to die. There should be procedures, appeal to authority, presenting your case, or 'lawful stuffs' because I run out of words. This should allow people time to think this through before choosing to die.
On the other hand, people can be both clever and stupid. Why goes all through that trouble when one can end one's life oneself? Does that render this law essentially unnecessary?
Chris wrote: "Slightly related topic, What do you think of Euthanasia (assisted suicide)?"
We have a thread on Euthanasia...check that out. Lots of different opinions...
We have a thread on Euthanasia...check that out. Lots of different opinions...



Thanks for the suggestion Colleen, I am gonna check that book out.
Ananya wrote: "Ruchi, Me Before You by Jojo Moyes deals with this topic extensively. you should check it out"
Thanks :)
Thanks :)

My grandmother, uncle and cousin all passed within the last 5 years and it was a struggle to watch them toward their end of life as they lose their mental facilities, their body function and their dignity. I know that they would not want to live that way.
In Washington State I think it's legal to commit (assisted) suicide in cases of the terminally ill. I just heard in the news recently about a woman in her early 30's who moved there b/c she was diagnosed with an illness and committed suicide about 2 weeks ago.
Yes. I heard about it first in the newspaper about someone who announced she will kill herself on 1st November since she has terminal cancer.
Religiously, I forbid it. But I was in a position like that. So I understand.
Religiously, I forbid it. But I was in a position like that. So I understand.

People will say that suicide is selfish, or "the easy way out" and I actually agree with them to a point. It is definitely a loophole, in the scheme of things, however painful it may be. I'm not sure that, as a person who has never experienced serious, clinical depression, I can speak to whether or not it is selfish, but I do know, from what I've read and heard about, that it is often hardest on the people a person leaves behind.
However hard life may be, I don't know that I could ever devastate my family and friends like that - even if I happened to be in an impossibly difficult/dark place.
Physician-assisted suicide though, I completely support. If a person truly wants to end their time on Earth, and makes that formally known, I think of it more as respecting their wishes, than anything.
I do know, for myself - If I ever come to a point where I am a vegetable...please just let me go. I don't want to live in a vegetative state indefinitely; because I don't count it as truly living.
Just my perspective.

(Just my viewpoint)




Have you ever seen a loved one w/ terminal intestinal cancer or other disease? It's horrible to watch someone suffer in pain 24/7 for months, listening to them crying in pain wishing for death to come sooner rather than later just so the pain will stop. I've been in that situation and if there had been a law in place I would have def helped my loved one.
We treat our pets with more dignity to end their suffering, people should also have the same rights.