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- Sep 4, 2018
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The phrase 'committed suicide' needs to stop
When the news about the drop in male suicide was reported on Channel 4 News last week, for example, I was shocked that, in an otherwise sympathetic piece of reporting, the correspondent several times used the phrase "committed suicide". Language matters, and it must adapt with the times. The phrase comes from a time when suicide was a criminal offence. We commit a crime. We commit a sin. Suicide is neither. It is the tragic last step of someone who, for whatever reason, believes death is preferable to life. It stopped being a crime more than half a century ago. We need to stop using the language of crime around it.
When the news about the drop in male suicide was reported on Channel 4 News last week, for example, I was shocked that, in an otherwise sympathetic piece of reporting, the correspondent several times used the phrase "committed suicide". Language matters, and it must adapt with the times. The phrase comes from a time when suicide was a criminal offence. We commit a crime. We commit a sin. Suicide is neither. It is the tragic last step of someone who, for whatever reason, believes death is preferable to life. It stopped being a crime more than half a century ago. We need to stop using the language of crime around it.