black.over.green
underground activity.
- Oct 31, 2025
- 3
Hi.
I don't want to "catch the bus." I don't trust buses — you can never rely on them.
I'd rather "take a train" — one that arrives on schedule, at the right time that I choose. Comfortable and steady.
Painlessly. While I sleep.
I know there are people here who think deeply, who analyze without compromise, and who still look for ways even where there seem to be none.
There's almost no space in our societies for those who can't sell themselves, who can't live in falseness, who can't accept systems where human dignity means nothing.
I'm not encouraging anything.
I just want to understand how we could influence the possibility of making the right to a voluntary, painless death legally recognized — at least in cases of:
— terminal or incurable illnesses,
— chronic and unbearable physical suffering,
(— and a conscious and rational decision. of course)
I'm interested in what legal, philosophical, or ethical paths could make governments take this seriously:
— what kind of organizations or movements could push it forward,
— what might be possible in your own country, considering its religion and culture,
— are there examples where euthanasia isn't seen as a sin,
— and could we create a new kind of ethics where life and death aren't enemies, but parts of one whole.
If anyone here has studied this topic, has thoughts, logic, or ideas — I'd really like to hear from you.
I don't want to "catch the bus." I don't trust buses — you can never rely on them.
I'd rather "take a train" — one that arrives on schedule, at the right time that I choose. Comfortable and steady.
Painlessly. While I sleep.
I know there are people here who think deeply, who analyze without compromise, and who still look for ways even where there seem to be none.
There's almost no space in our societies for those who can't sell themselves, who can't live in falseness, who can't accept systems where human dignity means nothing.
I'm not encouraging anything.
I just want to understand how we could influence the possibility of making the right to a voluntary, painless death legally recognized — at least in cases of:
— terminal or incurable illnesses,
— chronic and unbearable physical suffering,
(— and a conscious and rational decision. of course)
I'm interested in what legal, philosophical, or ethical paths could make governments take this seriously:
— what kind of organizations or movements could push it forward,
— what might be possible in your own country, considering its religion and culture,
— are there examples where euthanasia isn't seen as a sin,
— and could we create a new kind of ethics where life and death aren't enemies, but parts of one whole.
If anyone here has studied this topic, has thoughts, logic, or ideas — I'd really like to hear from you.
Last edited: