Partial-Elf
Eternal Oblivion
- Dec 26, 2018
- 461
Even worse, lots of people don't believe that mental illnesses like anxiety or depression are even real. My family have given me lots of "snap out of it" and "choose to be happy" and "just go for a run" kinds of talks despite an actual diagnosis of major depressive episode.There are a few cases like that but it's very rare. Most young people who died by assisted suicide were terminally ill. Cancer is a prime-example of such terminal desease.
Belgium authorised euthanasia of a terminally ill nine and 11-year-old in youngest cases worldwide
Two children, aged nine and 11, have become the world’s youngest to be euthanised, according to a report.www.telegraph.co.uk
That's how it could look like in other countries but we still have work to do. I think the right-to-die movement has more rational arguments than the people who oppose it, so logically speaking we should win this war in the long run. I hope we will accept mental illness as a valid reason for assisted suicide someday in the future. I honestly don't know why this isn't recognized already, you don't need to be very smart to realize that mental pain can be as severe as physical pain. But I guess it's some kind of ableism. A lot of people simply just don't think mentally ill people can make sane decisions, which is extremely dehumanizing and degrading. Mentally ill people can make sane decisions and they should have the right to decide over their lives. Not other authorities. But as I've said in the past, the psychiatric system seriously needs to reconsider how we treat suicidal and mentally ill people. It's terrible.
Right to die is a tough issue in America, with it being such a fiercely pro life culture. It's bizarre to me how the US lionizes suffering and how most of the people I know are incapable of truly coming to terms with death
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