Disregard the Fearmongering and Support Euthanasia Legalisation

The right to die on your own terms is inherent to the right to life. Until fairly recently, the controversial question of medical assistance in dying had flown under the radar of public debate. However, last month, in the UK, a new Assisted Dying Bill was introduced in PLACEHOLDER19cc54e0db323b32, aiming to grant terminally ill adults with six months or fewer to live the right to seek a medically supervised death. The text of the bill is now PLACEHOLDER2569b374f9f691c3.

This might be the first piece of good news coming out of the United Kingdom since July’s general election. The right to euthanasia is a moral necessity rooted in the individual’s sovereignty over their own life. It is also easily justifiable per most mainstream moral worldviews. For a utilitarian, euthanasia maximises overall happiness and reduces suffering. Deontology justifies it by respecting a person’s autonomy. Existentialism upholds it as a deeply personal, authentic choice in confronting death. Nihilism sees it as a matter of personal preference, given life’s lack of intrinsic meaning.

Still, it is an issue with the potential to rile up the masses like few others. There is little substance to the arguments against euthanasia. Talking about ethics around death is naturally icky and prone to charge people emotionally. Perhaps that is why the opposition to legalising it seems to come down to organised hysteria around far-fetched scenarios with little or no connection to reality.

In the United States, there exists considerable moral panic on this topic. MAGA conservatives try PLACEHOLDER44d88797695804f1 with stories of Canada’s Medical Assistance In Dying (MAID) program, in which Canada’s inefficient government-run healthcare system is demonised as killing the patients it can’t afford to cure. American intellectual Richard Hanania PLACEHOLDER00fb439d7895bf49 into the specific cases of medical assistance in dying which often come up as scare stories. He found that in all cases, they are either made up or wildly misrepresented.

Hanania also points to the statistics, which rebut the argument that euthanasia is used for those with trivial or non-terminal issues. The overwhelming majority of people seeking MAID in Canada are doing so after receiving palliative care. The program’s primary users are the elderly and those grappling with severe, incurable medical conditions. Only 2% of MAID recipients in 2021 were people without terminal conditions, and even this group primarily consisted of individuals facing extreme and unbearable suffering. According to the data, euthanasia is working exactly as it is supposed to. It allows willing individuals to escape the dread of never-ending pain and a life devoid of meaning or pleasure.

There is one moral worldview that does not allow euthanasia: divine command theory. In many ways, the current policy on euthanasia is a relic of Europe’s Christian past, which held to the dogma of cherished suffering. Earthly life, according to the theologian, is a string of misery and suffering with a grand purpose: atonement for sins. However, let go of the presupposition that there exists some cosmic balance wherein pain in this life will ever be compensated for and opposition to euthanasia starts to look like pearl-clutching.

To force a man to endure agony against his will is the peculiar cruelty of those who claim moral superiority—an affliction more vicious than the disease itself. Euthanasia is not an attack on life—it is the affirmation of its value. It is a recognition that life is worth living only when it can be shaped and guided by the individual who possesses it.

Belief in freedom stands at the core of the argument for medical assistance in dying. It is an issue so fundamental that if I voted, I could be a single-issue voter on this topic, considering the magnitude of unnecessary suffering caused and freedom violated by bans on euthanasia.

My support for euthanasia comes down to a strong moral intuition I cannot shake off: that I should be free to escape the fate of consistent unbearable suffering devoid of any meaning wherein I can no longer pursue any value in life. That I have the right to face death on my


Comments

2 responses to “Disregard the Fearmongering and Support Euthanasia Legalisation”

  1. Thunder Nut Avatar
    Thunder Nut

    Oh, splendid! Just what we need in the UK – a shiny new bill that gives terminally ill folks the right to choose how they want to exit stage left. 🎭 Because obviously, discussing life and death with a cuppa must be the highlight of our parliamentary sessions now, eh? ☕️

  2. liferobber Avatar

    Of course, because who wouldn’t want to make a life-altering decision under the guidance of a government bill named after a random string of numbers? 🤔 Makes you wonder if this is the first step to euthanizing bureaucracy itself—now that’s a cause I’d sign up for! 😂💼

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Last News

‘Tusk Warns of Real Threat of ‘Polexit”

‘Tusk Warns of Real Threat of ‘Polexit”

The alert follows Nawrocki’s veto of legislation on Thursday that would have enabled Poland to acquire up to €43.7 billion in low-interest EU defense loans. Tusk’s administration lacks the parliamentary majority required to overturn the veto, intensifying uncertainty about how Poland will fund planned military expenditures projected to reach nearly 5 percent of GDP this year.
Tusk has cauti

Read More

Iran Under U.S. Airstrikes

Iran Under U.S. Airstrikes

Several major Iranian cities, including Tehran, have experienced explosions, signaling a new phase in the military escalation involving Iran, the United States, and its allies. The confirmed deployment of B-52 bombers as part of the U.S. operation Epic Fury indicates that the conflict has reached a particularly dangerous level. These bombers, symbols of American air power, demonstrate Washington&

Read More

Iran Reports ‘Military Cooperation’ from Russia and China

Iran Reports ‘Military Cooperation’ from Russia and China

On Friday, U.S. President Donald Trump speculated that Russian President Vladimir Putin might be assisting Iran “slightly.”
“I guess, and he probably thinks we’re helping Ukraine, right?” remarked Trump, referring to support for Kyiv against Moscow’s invasion.
Iran and Russia have fortified ties in response to U.S. opposition, with Iran supplying Russia with its Shahed drones, us

Read More

Orbán’s Still Winning Over Older Rural Voters — But Not the Young

Orbán’s Still Winning Over Older Rural Voters — But Not the Young

Tisza believes this election will be different because it is putting forth local star László Gajdos as its main candidate. Hungarians have two votes—one for the national party list and another for their preferred candidate in single-member district constituencies. Of the 199 seats in the National Assembly, 106 are filled by district race winners, while 93 are filled from party lists. Gajdos, a pop

Read More

Can Strasbourg Align with the CRPD?

Can Strasbourg Align with the CRPD?

Europe Must Rethink Article 5(1)(e)
Europe’s human rights framework is facing a challenge: can the European Court of Human Rights align more closely with the disability-rights standards of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, despite the European Convention’s text still allowing psychiatric detention and coercion? The answer is partially affirmative, as Stras

Read More

Anti-Doping Agency to Consider Banning Trump, US Officials from Olympics

Anti-Doping Agency to Consider Banning Trump, US Officials from Olympics

The World Anti-Doping Agency is considering a rule change due to the United States’ refusal to pay its dues since 2023, as reported by the Associated Press.

Read More

Disability Rights Absent in EU Migration Pact

Disability Rights Absent in EU Migration Pact

As the European Union prepares for the full implementation of its Pact on Migration and Asylum in June 2026, disability-rights advocates highlight the often-overlooked group: migrants and asylum seekers with disabilities. A policy brief by the European Disability Forum and the International Refugee Assistance Project indicates that despite Europe’s legal obligations, many individuals encounter i

Read More

EU Agrees to Extend Russia Sanctions

EU Agrees to Extend Russia Sanctions

The EU’s sanctions list requires unanimous renewal twice a year from all 27 member states, affecting over 2,600 individuals and entities. Slovakia had advocated for the removal of tycoons Alisher Usmanov and Mikhail Fridman, but sources confirmed these names remain on the list. Envoys failed to agree during extended talks on Friday, resulting in a Saturday written procedure to finalize the r

Read More

Steps to Take If Your Personal Data Is Misused in Europe

Steps to Take If Your Personal Data Is Misused in Europe

You open your inbox to find a message from an unknown company that surprisingly knows your name, email, and even your home address. Shortly after, you receive a bank alert for an unfamiliar login attempt. You may wonder: how did they get my data, and what can I do about it?
In Europe, individuals have significant rights over their personal information. The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR

Read More

France Proposes Mediating Israel-Lebanon Discussions

France Proposes Mediating Israel-Lebanon Discussions

French President Emmanuel Macron announced on Saturday that Lebanon is prepared to “engage in direct talks” with Israel and proposed hosting the discussions in Paris. Macron shared on social media that the Lebanese government is ready for dialogue, following his conversations with Lebanon’s President Joseph Aoun, Prime Minister Nawaf Salam, and House Speaker Nabih Berri. He emphasized

Read More