E
excinephile
Member
- Aug 20, 2024
- 53
My sudden onset disease that landed me on SaSu instantly converted me into an assisted dying advocate as seems to be the norm on this platform. I haven't really delved into this topic when healthy but vaguely remembered skeptics speaking out about possible dangers of the legalization of VAD.
Yesterday I listened to an interview with the Journalist Ashley Frawley who's critical of Britain's recent move towards legalization and I started to get really angry about her obvious ignorance about the depths of possible suffering people are forced to endure in absence of a secure way to end their lifes. But then the general trajectory of her argument stuck with me.
The gist of it being that the normalization of euthaniza would create a social climate with strong incentives to nudge the elderly, chronically or terminally ill and disabled towards euthaniza because it would literally spare tons of money. She sees it as part of a general trajectory of devaluation of human life.
Here's an article where she expresses these arguments (big trigger warning for everone passionate about this cause):
It may seem like a stretch and this woman is clearly oblivious of the severity of the suffering endured by so many of us. Yet knowing this fucked up society and the reign of neoliberal profit logic I have to admit that she has a point. I can absolutely see a dystopian scenario in which vulnerable populations of people who can't generate profit for society because they are too sick are encouraged to check themselves out for the greater good, even if they wouldn't have chosen that way independently. How can these problems be addressed within a pro choice argument?
As usual the the fact seems to apply that capitalism ruins every big innovation society undergoes and turns it against its own people.
Yesterday I listened to an interview with the Journalist Ashley Frawley who's critical of Britain's recent move towards legalization and I started to get really angry about her obvious ignorance about the depths of possible suffering people are forced to endure in absence of a secure way to end their lifes. But then the general trajectory of her argument stuck with me.
The gist of it being that the normalization of euthaniza would create a social climate with strong incentives to nudge the elderly, chronically or terminally ill and disabled towards euthaniza because it would literally spare tons of money. She sees it as part of a general trajectory of devaluation of human life.
Here's an article where she expresses these arguments (big trigger warning for everone passionate about this cause):
Keep the Stigma Against Suicide | Ashley Frawley
The stigma served an important function. It reminded us of the value of being human—not just our biological lives, but the unique capacities that make us human.
www.firstthings.com
It may seem like a stretch and this woman is clearly oblivious of the severity of the suffering endured by so many of us. Yet knowing this fucked up society and the reign of neoliberal profit logic I have to admit that she has a point. I can absolutely see a dystopian scenario in which vulnerable populations of people who can't generate profit for society because they are too sick are encouraged to check themselves out for the greater good, even if they wouldn't have chosen that way independently. How can these problems be addressed within a pro choice argument?
As usual the the fact seems to apply that capitalism ruins every big innovation society undergoes and turns it against its own people.
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