
Versailles
Enlightened
- Oct 1, 2020
- 1,652
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You're Dutch, right? So you live in a country with legally enshrined assisted death. How would you say that informs attitudes towards voluntary death in your country?To a very small extent. MAID is more talked about and I hear less people talk about how it is "selfish", more people seem to understand that someone who attempts suicide is in the greatest pain imaginable.
That's right. It's also a very Christian country still. I would say people are only accepting of it when elderly have dementia yet those are the trickiest cases within assisted death (being not seen as capable of making decisions despite going through the whole process beforehand).You're Dutch, right? So you live in a country with legally enshrined assisted death. How would you say that informs attitudes towards voluntary death in your country?
Anyway, given the backlash triggered by that dumb video suicide is definitely not anywhere near normalized, which is said given that the numbers have been rising and rising. In America between now and 30 years ago (1993) there is a difference of over 10,000 people.
The cynic in me asks: are people admitting to it now just to get more sympathy? For all the "outpouring of sympathy" seen when a celeb does it or it becomes news there's very little change, now they just paste on the magic number to call."talking about people who have died from suicide"
Sorry, my second paragraph was addressing the general question.I didn't say it was normalized, I specified "a little bit" because it's being seen with a somewhat less judgemental eye.