Assisted Suicide is just immoral. It devalues life. The next step from that is euthanasia at the request of the family.
Self-injury is not new, Kett. The whole "emo" subculture might be but cutting, burning, and the like wasn't their innovation.
I guess I don't see the "value" in insisting someone go on in misery and unstoppable agony in order to satisfy the desires and misplaced mercy of somebody else.
Newman would be proud.
:nono: Being that I might face it, there is morphine and more powerful derivatives to keep the pain away. I mean you are on :cloud9: There is no reason for rejecting 'heroic measures', or life support, no wrong in rejecting transplants, or radiation, chemotherapy and other artificial gadgets.
Guess I had something to say.:car:
What the heck is 'emo' subculture?
Knight answered his own post, what is more to say.:dizzy:
:nono:
I remember talking about this with you. Remember? I told you about the time I called 911 because I saw somebody trying to get hit by a car on the highway.
If/When I/'ve see/n somebody try to commit suicide, I will/have try/tried to stop them, even if it means violating pure libertarian self-ownership/non-aggression principles (which is arguable).
Instances of extreme suffering are difficult. As are situations in which one person must sacrifice his/her life so that others may live.
Judges 16 has the account of Samson in such an occasion. He asked God to give him one last burst of strength to bring down the building, and then let him die with the Philistines.
There's also the case that Jesus willingly gave himself over to the Jewish and Roman authorities, knowing that his ultimate fate was death on a cross. They even broke the legs of the other two, which was intended as a way to speed up their death.
Ecclesiastes 3 seems to suggest that there may be a season, or an occasion, for such a thing, but I don't know.
Buuuuut, there's also tons of Scripture passages on the sanctity of life and how God is in control of such things.
Again, it isn't perfectly conclusive in Scripture one way or another, but I lean toward anti-suicide.
It's something that I'm not totally convinced one way or another, so in the meantime, I'm going to err on the side of life until I have some sort of epiphany. lain:
Should I end crippled or suffering from dementia, I'd very much welcome a Kevorkian.
Having seen people die of terminal cancers while receiving being given palliative care (including large doses of various painkillers) I can tell that you certainly are not on :cloud9: during the weeks or months before death. The drugs available are strong but all too often they aren't strong enough to remove the pain without quickly killing the patient.:nono: Being that I might face it, there is morphine and more powerful derivatives to keep the pain away. I mean you are on :cloud9:
Emo is a whiny, sissy, crybaby, sub-culture that is centered around crying,cutting, and excessive eyeliner.
How is that different than flamers?
:hammer: Thread derail.Your average drag queen is incredibly more masculine than just about any emo boy.
:hammer: Thread derail.
There is plenty of reason to reject chemo. And someone may not want to live out the rest of their days in a drug-addled stupor. They may simply wish to go. What you're saying is that your own pet sense of morality is more important than the decision made by the patient who's actually suffering.
Your average drag queen is incredibly more masculine than just about any emo boy.
Funniest thing I ever saw in the classroom was two emo boys fighting. Two boys that looked more like girls screaming, crying and bumping in to each other. It was probably wrong of me to tell them that one of them needs to throw a punch so I could honestly put "fighting" on the referral. They just cried more. I ended up sending them up to the office for disrupting the class. I heard they cried all the way to the office.
Yes, it's wrong. No one owns their own life. We were bought at a price. And even those who reject that and refuse the exchange are wrong to kill themselves, because they are wrong for rejecting the price that was paid.