So, I'm not arguing that "every last detail" needs to be considered. In fact, my argument is that the primary detail I'm saying needs to be considered or limited is if you are infringing on the life or safety of others. My problem is that if you find it morally acceptable for someone who is committing suicide to infringe on the rights of others and have it be acceptable due to their past history at what point does it stop? If someone goes on a suicidal rampage and kills others, does their past treatment by the world and/or situation they were dealt in life make it morally justified? I say no, it is not justified.
Also as a heads up, I respect your opinion on this matter and appreciate the open dialogue. More open dialogue and debate on ethical issues is almost always a good thing as long as both sides respect each other.
I dont think your argument is valid without making the assumptions that the person: 1) Had
intent to screw the bystanders, or 2) The suicide was well planned out i.e.
rational. These are not assumptions that hold up in the average suicide. Having exposure to SS would make one conditioned to thinking that is the case so the argument and subsequent value judgments are flawed.
In the case of a murder rampage, your argument has gone from suicide to intentional murder. Merely putting another's safety at risk does not equate to intentional murder.
I actually liken this to vehicular homicide. Nearly all drunk drivers receive lenient or no punishment outside of a ticket. Only in extreme cases of repeat offenders is the person sentenced to 30days to maybe 2 years of jail. It is only the drunk driver that commits vehicular homicide that goes to jail for many years. Well, why should a drunk driver go to jail for 20 to life just for being "unlucky" to have killed someone, when thousands do the same thing and only pay a fine? These people going to the range to suicide are the thousands of drunk drivers that get away with little to no fine.
I have no personal opinion on the matter. I'm not into
violent suicides as a person. I'm just digging into the assumptions. Your statements support an inherent bias that all or even most suicides are rational or have intent but the data suggests the contrary.

I hear you. Debate is appreciated. I often debate things that I have no opinion on. Most people dont have an awareness of their underlying belief systems when they debate a topic. I respect people's personal beliefs as long as they are aware they are choosing those beliefs and said beliefs affect their outlooks and outcomes in situations.