Wow, this thread blew the heck up.
Alright, since there seems to be a lot of confusion about what I'm talking about, where my stance is, and also why I think this behavior is harmful no matter what the person's intentions are.
1) Specifically, I'm talking about people who, no matter what their intentions, ask leading questions to extract information from people about their situation. I'm not referring to people legit asking "do you want to talk about it?"--that's fine. No, I'll go a step further and say that's actually helpful. It's reaching out, leaning no way or another, no strings, no motivations, just lending an ear. However, subtly differently saying, "what are the details of these feelings?", or "what led you here?", or "is there anything that might get you to reconsider?", are all leading questions. They're a means of trying to start a discussion over the person's reasons for coming to the decision they've come to.
2) My stance is neither pro-life nor pro-death(for those who didn't bother to read my first response). My stance is pro-choice. And I've seen a lot of things here saying, "well, there's no way to respond without your own will/view/etc. making it in there". Or saying that you'd have to respond in the most basic of ways to achieve this. That's simply not true. Each and every one of you here, if you're a member of this community, has had thoughts of suicide. You may not know exactly what each person is going through, but you should at least be able to empathize at a basic level. And you can communicate that without anything else thrown in. You can say, for example, "I really relate to what you've said", or "gosh, that's a terrible situation", or "I wish the best for you", or any number of other neutral statements, but that would require some careful thought regarding a very serious subject, and I know a lot of people don't want to put in that effort.
3) Now on to why subtlety asking leading questions is harmful, unethical, and insulting.
3.a) The biggest one is harmful. The reason this one is the biggest is because I'm saying this directly to the people who ask these leading questions: you're not helping. You may think, "oh, but I'm saving this person from a terrible mistake", or "I'm just making sure they're super duper sure about this", and I get that. However, what you also have to consider is that almost every single person here has some level of serious trauma. I'm not sure if you're considering this or not, but asking someone to re-live that trauma so that you can feel better about letting them make their own decision could very well be the thing that drives them even further down the road to making that pain and trauma go away. It can be very harmful to subtly drag this information out of people, no matter what your intention is. And that brings us right into why this behavior is unethical.
3.b) You don't know what these people are going through if they don't volunteer it. You have no way of knowing what effect your words are going to have on this person, and you have no right or responsibility to "help" them into what you believe to be a better place, or try to make them reconsider. I wanted to avoid quotes from past posts here since there's no way I could get to all of them, but eryu said something that really encompasses this:
3.c) Now onto why it's insulting. This is probably the least important out of all these really important things, but it's worth mentioning anyway. No matter what someone's reasons are for doing what they're doing, you have no idea what it's like for them. Even if you've gone through the same exactly the same thing or have a similar trauma, everyone's experiences and perceptions are different. What could be an average day for me might emotionally scar and destroy another person's sanity. I've said it before on here and I'll reiterate it: no one gets here without careful consideration and understanding the gravity of choosing to die. Asking people if they're sure or to reconsider is a fucking insult to their intelligence and the significance of their pain. They have a right to choose to live or choose to die.
If my understanding of this forum is correct, it's here to be a safe space for people to express how they feel about their own life and their own death, and it's up to us as a community to support one another emotionally and be mature enough to respect that choice.
I'll finish with this, and this is the culmination of my point:
If I were to go into the recovery section of this forum and ask, "Is there anything that might make you reconsider?", would that be helpful? Would that be ethical? No. No, it most certainly fucking wouldn't be.
PS:
If you're going to be condescending, at least take the time to get my gender right.