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KamaAina

(78,249 posts)
3. Disability rights activists are trying as hard as we can to "hold us back".
Fri Apr 15, 2016, 07:57 PM
Apr 2016
http://dredf.org/public-policy/assisted-suicide/why-assisted-suicide-must-not-be-legalized/#intro

Assisted suicide strikes many people, when they first hear about it, as a cause to support. But upon closer inspection, there are many reasons why legalization is a serious mistake. Supporters focus on superficial issues of choice and self-determination. It is crucial to look deeper. Legalizing assisted suicide would not increase choice and self-determination, despite the assertions of its proponents. It would actually augment real dangers that negate genuine choice and control.

The disability community’s opposition is based on the dangers to people with disabilities and the devaluation of disabled peoples’ lives that result from assisted suicide. Further, this opposition stems from factors that directly impact the disability community as well as all of society. These factors include the secrecy in which assisted suicide operates today, even where it is legal; the lack of robust oversight and the absence of investigation of abuse; the reality of who uses it; the dangers of legalization to further erode the quality of the U.S. health care system; and its potential for other significant harms.

In view of this reality, we address many of the disability-related effects of assisted suicide, while also encompassing the larger social context that inseparably impacts people with disabilities as well as the broader public. First, after addressing common misunderstandings, we examine fear and bias toward disability, and the deadly interaction of assisted suicide and our profit-driven health care system. Second, we review the practice of assisted suicide in Oregon, the first U.S. state to legalize it, and debunk the merits of the so-called Oregon model. By detailing significant problems with Oregon’s supposed safeguards, we raise some of its real dangers, particularly for people with depression and other psychiatric disabilities. Third and finally, we explore the ways that so-called “narrow” assisted suicide proposals can easily expand. This article focuses primarily on conditions in the United States, though much of our discussion also applies in other countries.

In short, we must separate our private wishes for what we each may hope to have available for ourselves some day—a hope that often fails to understand how assisted suicide actually operates—and, rather, focus on the significant dangers of legalizing assisted suicide as public policy in our society today. Assisted suicide would have many unintended consequences.

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Kick azmom Apr 2016 #1
Thank you! smirkymonkey Apr 2016 #2
Disability rights activists are trying as hard as we can to "hold us back". KamaAina Apr 2016 #3
Yes, but there are so many safe-fails in place. Nobody is going to off somebody if they smirkymonkey Apr 2016 #4
Thanks KamaAina. smirkymonkey Apr 2016 #5
WTG Canada!!! nt LostOne4Ever Apr 2016 #6
Are things that bad now in Canadia under Trudeau? NobodyHere Apr 2016 #7
Bad, are you serious? smirkymonkey Apr 2016 #8
Good. Consenting adults should be the ones to make the decisions about their own bodies. Warren DeMontague Apr 2016 #9
Will we ever see that in this country? smirkymonkey Apr 2016 #13
I actually think so. I hope so. Warren DeMontague Apr 2016 #15
So do I, I just wonder why we are so slow to do so. smirkymonkey Apr 2016 #16
We (collectively) have a lot of programming- most of it religious- to overcome, I think. Warren DeMontague Apr 2016 #17
I really hope so. smirkymonkey Apr 2016 #18
Trudeau is a leader like his father and fears nothing He does what's right tough if the right wing Monk06 Apr 2016 #10
I must say that I envy you guys on more than one level. smirkymonkey Apr 2016 #12
Trudeau is a leader like his father and fears nothing He does what's right tough if the right wing Monk06 Apr 2016 #11
May I ask what you personally think of him and this smirkymonkey Apr 2016 #19
Not too personal Assisted suicide has been a common practice in Canada for at least twenty years Monk06 Apr 2016 #25
I'm so sorry. smirkymonkey Apr 2016 #28
I would still really like to know where DU'ers stand on this issue. smirkymonkey Apr 2016 #14
I consider it a fundamental human right. Alkene Apr 2016 #20
So do I. I am sorry to hear about your wife. smirkymonkey Apr 2016 #21
Why are we not having a dialogue about this issue here in the US right now? smirkymonkey Apr 2016 #22
Denial? Discretion? Alkene Apr 2016 #23
I think you are right. smirkymonkey Apr 2016 #24
Hell yeah! libodem Apr 2016 #26
To set the record straight the Supreme Court of Canada awake Apr 2016 #27
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