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Recently, I saw this news article about a woman who decided to take her own life after being diagnosed with brain cancer.
Her comments on the ethics of her decision:
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"I believe this choice is ethical, and what makes it ethical is it is a choice," she says. "The patient can change their mind right up to the last minute. I feel very protected here in Oregon."
This woman thinks "autonomous decision-making" is the yardstick for ethics. I don't think she has considered that she didn't decide to get cancer.
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"I really wanted to celebrate my husband's birthday, which is October 30," she says. "I'm getting sicker, dealing with more pain and seizures and difficulties so I just selected it."
So, her ethical decision is to kill herself two days after her "beloved" husband's birthday?
In this instance, I think this is an example of Type-A woman who has always gotten her way and was completely blindsided by her diagnosis. Her dogged insistence that "this is her choice" is mostly likely a way of a woman who is terrified of losing complete control of the world around her, so suicide is a way of keeping the story about her and ensuring those around her will never forget her.
Recall Elliot Rodger. Part of what motivated his suicide was his desire to ensure that those around him will never, ever forget about him. They might have ignored him while he was alive, but he knows they can't forget about him if he kills himself. It ensures his relevancy in his death.
Obviously, I have never been a fan of euthanasia. Framing it as compassion and dignity is a way of paving over what happens: either a doctor takes a life (what happened to the cardinal rule, "First, do no harm?") or a person takes their own life.
Personally, I could not perform euthanasia on a patient. I could not live with myself. I would be much more comfortable executing a convicted murderer or serial rapist after judicial appeals. In that situation, a person has caused great and substantial harm to others and the fabric of society, so taking a life is justified because there are lines that humans should never cross and there simply is no coming back from some extremely depraved decisions.
I just don't think I could take a life simply because a person is in pain. I would feel a great level of empathy with those slated to the grave, but I could not pull the lever or administer the needle. Given the reality of pain-killers and the advanced state of modern medicine, I just don't think I could justify the act in my mind. To me, there is a difference between mercifully taking a man's life when you are in the wild and he is suffering from a fatal snake bite or flesh wound. When a person can avail themselves of the modern medical establishment, I would feel much more anxiety over committing the act.
Further, when considering a sick individual decides to take their own life, I can't support that. While certainly people have always been free to string themselves up or fling themselves off bridges, I can't support that because of the harm that said act will cause their family. Not only is a family struggling to cope with the imminent loss of a loved member, but to also deal with suicide?
Death, when reached naturally, has a curious way of resolving some emotional issues. When a person decided to unnaturally take their life before God does, I think it creates needless emotional turmoil in people who love the person because it forces them to come to terms with the death before nature runs its course. In essence, it forces people to deal with your death on your timetable, instead of nature's or other people's timetables.
What are you opinions these sorts of situations? I don't think there ever can be a clean-cut answer that is satisfying to all people. Emotions that are stirred up by euthanasia are incredibly strong. That being said, I don't think it should cloud our judgment about what really is going on: either euthanasia involves a doctor violating their first principle about not doing any harm or it involves suicide.
Thoughts?