It's clearly a slippery kind of slope, but prescribing whatever the "medication" is seems no different than prescribing sleeping pills or similar, which someone can OD on. If we're splitting hairs of course, which we are. Every side has a side as with all things in life. Opponents are going to point out everything that's wrong and the number of times someone was diagnosed incorrectly, and the
value of palliative care--proponents are going to point out how people should make their own choices in a less traumatic manner than say a gun to the head in the garage or something.
The argument does not make either side more right, it's a moot point. The bill has some flaws, the basic point of it isn't one of them. Do medical professional take oaths to Do no harm in the care of others etc., yes they do, but as we all know human's are fallible. A lot of this is in the language Physician Assisted Suicide is inflammatory and
suicided is used frequently, because it's meant to invoke a negative reaction. Death With Dignity: Patient Choices at the End of Life is a much more pleasant sounding euphemism for the same thing.
As someone pointed out, we are expected to make a living will and direct someone to "pull the plug" if we're in incapacitated, if in fact we don't want to live that way and it's ok to make that directive, but not this one. I also find this a bit of a double standard here--it's also something I hadn't thought of. I guess the difference is you're already mostly dead anyway (??) because you're in a coma and hooked up to respirators & what not (??) I think if my grandmother had this option at some point in the last stages of her life, she would have gladly taken it or called Dr. Kervorkian. (It may have even been pre-Dr.K)
Even if this bill could safeguard Vermonters at end-of-life from potential abuses – which it can’t – it cannot possibly keep suicide-prone Vermonters from thinking that the State of Vermont agrees that when life gets too hard, it’s okay to end it all...Edward Mahoney
Seriously? I'm not sure that's the message people will get. I'm not envisioning a mass exodus of the living, should this pass. My favorite quote from somewhere was about depression--"If we medicate them, they won't want to die earlier than their disease is killing them!" is how it reads to me. If I had a terminal illness, I think I would have a right to be depressed about it.
I know I am. I have looked at this and thought about it and have ultimately concluded that people should have a right to choose, flaws/risks and all. Ed Paquin, former Vt House member from Fairfax gave the most compelling argument against this bill I have heard--it was the only one that made me re-think my position. It was compelling and thought provoking, but at the end of the day, I knew I believed in this as I have from the beginning. And that's how I know, both sides are at an impasse. you're either for it or against it. It probably shouldn't be a legislative vote.