Saturday, October 12, 2019
Euthanasia Essay - Laws Against Assisted Suicide in Canada :: Physician Assisted Suicide
      Laws Against Assisted Suicide in Canada                 "This is a very special day for me. It's the  day of my release, the     release from suffering, the release from the torment of my body." Those were  the     words of the very first Canadian to die through the process of doctor  assisted-     suicide, with the doctor being Jack Kevorkian. His name was Austin Bastable,  and     in the last few years of his life he became a crusader for the right to die  with     dignity.                 It has been only in these last few years, with  the introduction of     people such as Dr. Jack Kevorkian and Austin Bastable, that the world has  begun     to see the benefits made possible by the act of assisted-suicide. The  prevention     of suffering and pain made possible through this medicide, regarded as  immoral     for years, affects not only the patient but their immediate and distant     relatives as well. Kevorkian told a judicial court the same one day in  late     April, early May: "Suicide is not the aim. Eliminating suffering is the aim,  but     you pay a price with the loss of a life." Although Kevorkian's methods  have     succeeded with some difficulty, in the USA, their northern neighbour, our  great     dominion of Canada, disallows the administration of this relieving practice.  In     our grand country assisted suicide is illegal.                   Cases of other terminally ill  persons have surfaced throughout the news,     the most prominent being those related to Dr. "Death" Kevorkian. We don't  often     think on what a terminally ill person might be like. They might be  suffering     from Lou Gehrig's Disease. They might be suffering from multiple sclerosis.  They     might be suffering from any number of other types of injuries and diseases.  What     we don't think about are the cases that bring out our most empathetic  feelings.                   Take the case of one Christine  Busalacchi, who was so severely injured     in an accident that she now lives in what her father calls a "persistent     vegetative condition." Vegetative is precisely the word to describe her     condition. She has lost enough weight to cause her to appear as someone  else.     She has her right leg bent with her knee always in the air and her left foot  is     frozen in a quite unnatural manner.  					    
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