Thursday, January 23, 2020
Euthanasia Essay - Let Them Die! :: Euthanasia Physician Assisted Suicide
Euthanasia - Let Them Die!       Euthanasia is one of society's most widely and hotly debated moral issues. It  has pained and exhausted the courts for entirely too long, questioning the  ethics and morality of the issue. It is a never-ending loop that by no means  considers our right, or the victim's right, to freedom. It has pierced the  pocket books of American taxpayers extensively and should be put to rest with  only this statement. Let them die!     I believe that euthanasia is only debated and kept on the political agenda to  keep the courts busy, thereby ensuring the security of political pocket books.  The vast majority of the population is in favor of euthanasia. However, their  elected candidates don't represent their views (Humphry). Thus eliminating  their power of democracy and right to freedom. In this essay I will argue that  euthanasia is not a concern of religious ethics but rather an entitlement of  freedom.     Euthanasia is typically broken into two categories:     1. Active euthanasia: The act of ...administering a lethal drug, or using other  means that cause a persons death" (MacKinnon, 126).     2. Passive euthanasia: "Stopping (or not starting) some treatment, which allows a  person to die, the persons condition causes his or her death, (MacKinnon, 126).     Active euthanasia is typically the more highly debated of the two acts of  euthanasia and is better known because of the actions of Dr. Jack Kevorkian, who  has aided in many successful suicides.     Passive euthanasia, on the other hand, is rarely debated and usually never  enters the mind's eye because it is typically looked at as letting someone die  naturally. In passive euthanasia one simply refuses treatment with the  knowledge that death is imminent. This offers little debate for several  reasons, primarily because it is seen as a natural way of dying. The exception,  however, is that some religions refuse to accept treatment with the knowledge  that without the treatment they will die. For example in the faith of the  Jehovah's Witness, a child, who has been in a vicious car accident and is in  need of blood, will die rather that accept treatment. This kind of passive  euthanasia would come under much scrutiny, but be accepted because it is tied to  religious convictions.     In either case, active or passive, the victim will die. There is essentially no  difference between them. From herein both active and passive euthanasia will not  be separated but rather both will be referred to simply as euthanasia. It will  be the primary interest of this paper to focus on and address the concerns of    					    
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