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Serious Debates & News Debate and discussion about political, moral, philosophical, celebrity and news topics. |
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#51 | |||
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Flag shagger.
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This all reminded me of this poem:
Let Me Die a Young Man's Death By Roger McGough Let me die a youngman's death not a clean and inbetween the sheets holywater death not a famous-last-words peaceful out of breath death When I'm 73 and in constant good tumour may I be mown down at dawn by a bright red sports car on my way home from an allnight party Or when I'm 91 with silver hair and sitting in a barber's chair may rival gangsters with hamfisted tommyguns burst in and give me a short back and insides Or when I'm 104 and banned from the Cavern may my mistress catching me in bed with her daughter and fearing for her son cut me up into little pieces and throw away every piece but one Let me die a youngman's death not a free from sin tiptoe in candle wax and waning death not a curtains drawn by angels borne 'what a nice way to go' death |
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#52 | |||
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I Love my brick
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Quote:
![]() I was with my dog Curly when he was put to sleep and it's peaceful so if it's anything like that it's good.
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#53 | |||
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OG(den)
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when my big staffy got the injection he lay still for a bit and with his last spurt of energy he hauled himself up onto the lap of ex-mrs LT (we were all sat on the living room floor). It makes me sad even to type that ![]() |
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#54 | |||
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TeamDiegoPooth <3
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#55 | ||
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#56 | |||
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I Love my brick
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Quote:
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#57 | |||
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Senior Member
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But I love your plan of a rock and roll exit. |
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#58 | |||
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Piss orf.
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Cant a patient refuse medication to die sooner?
So why its not allowed is beyond me. |
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#59 | |||
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OG(den)
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we do it for animals aside form humans so why not human animals too?
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#60 | |||
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I Love my brick
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If something is terminal I reckon most of what they're taking is probably just for pain relief rather than prolonging a sickness
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#61 | |||
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Flag shagger.
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They let you die in hospital by withholding food and drink, so you die of hunger and dehydration. And what's more, the medical profession let people die all the time.
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#62 | |||
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Piss orf.
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#63 | |||
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Flag shagger.
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It's the right thing to do. I know their Hippocratic Oath doesn't permit them to kill actually people, but sometimes preserving life is the cruellest thing they could do. And their Oath would forbid them from performing abortions... but they still do.
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#64 | |||
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Senior Member
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Hospices are very tuned in to when a person has reached the final stages of life. One of the more umpleasant processes of dying is air hunger where a person gasps, sometimes frantically for air. Oxygen won't help if a person is going through the biological process of dying because organs are naturally shutting down. This is when they are normally given morphine. Its not to kill them, its to relax them and reduce air hunger. IMO, morphine during the final days is a dignified and relaxed way to die.
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#65 | |||
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Likes cars that go boom
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I know it's hard I watched my own father get eaten away at by cancer in my mums living room over a period of 3 months in his late 60s. What individuals do is up to them but a managed decline via pain relief is as dignified as is possible medically, we can't be passing the burden of assisted suicide/dying onto anyone else.
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#66 | |||
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it’s a mad, mad world
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oh my god i can’t imagine ever actually doing it however this reminds me of a lady at work with, Jackie, telling me that her sister was paralysed after an accident (i think but i’m not too sure exactly what happened) and in the initial stages she asked her if she would help her die. Jackie told her no because she was her sister and her 2 daughters adored her. she died a month later
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#67 | |||
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Senior Member
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My mum once said to me that if she was ever that ill that she would never recover to help her end it. Thankfully when she did get very poorly, she didn't ask.
In some ways we were quite lucky (!?) with my mum. She was diagnosed with cancer and died within 4 weeks and I can say with some certainty that after her dianosis she was never in pain but she was very quickly not my mum either. Sitting by her bed at home firstly and then in a hospice was the darkest days of my life. She was asleep (unconscious?) most of the time. Her last day was awful with the gasping for breath but the hospice staff were amazing but I would have loved her not to have lost last days of suffering but to be honest, I don't think once she was diagnosed that they would have let her make the decision of assisted suicide as the cancer was in her brain so would have been deemed not mentally competent. I am still in agreement though but with stringent rulings to prevent any exploitation or coercion
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#68 | |||
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I Love my brick
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#69 | ||
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It doesn't need to be a case of forcing or passing the buck either; it would be fairly simple to allow medical professionals to opt in / out of being involved in euthanasia. I believe that there have been studies showing that 50% or more of doctors are in favour of euthanasia in extreme / end-of-life circumstances. |
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#70 | |||
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OG(den)
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When I die, I want to die like my grandfather who died peacefully in his sleep.
Not screaming and praying like all the passengers in his airplane ![]() well someone had to |
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#71 | |||
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I Love my brick
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#72 | |||
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Likes cars that go boom
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'So does the thought of being an intolerable burden to their family. But campaigners scrupulously avoid talking about the wider social landscape, the rocketing numbers of those with dementia outliving their brains at vast personal and social cost.'
This is the portion I don't agree with the part where you are meant in your dotage to feel you are social slurry... This I feel is in alignment with a eugenics ethic, you are no longer useful, you should therefore feel it is acceptable to cease to exist. If you want this do it, it is quite rightly a huge social taboo and it's a cop out to suggest it's only the religious who are ethically opposed. I would be interested to see the medical professionals opinions in support of euthanasia, not the BMA actual practicing doctors. https://www.theguardian.com/commenti...imers-guernsey
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#73 | |||
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Senior Member
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Dying with dignity.
Well, if vomiting and choking on your own $hit is dignified, not being able to lie down in bed to sleep and not being able to eat or even drink without it coming straight back up is dignified, you can keep it. My sister died a terrible death last June, my sister-in-law has been in the hospice this past 15 days, both no hope and terminal, the choice should have been there for them both. Perhaps neither of them would take that choice, but the option should be open to us all. |
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