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A Person Should be Able to Choose the Time, Place, and Manner of Their Own Death.
I'm For Euthanasia. I Support Your Right to Choose.

You've just been diagnosed with Cancer. Now comes the time to answer the question you have always feared, what comes next?
You're Going to Die Anyway, So Why Not Choose Your Own Time, Place, and Manner of Death?
What Is Life?
Life is a path whose destination is known. That destination is death.
Whether we arrive today or tomorrow it is certain that we will arrive.
Life is the way to death.
You are going to die anyway, so why not do it your way, in a place that you choose, when you're ready? Think about it. Why shouldn't you be allowed a peaceful and painless death?
According to my edition of the 'Funk and Wagnall's Standard College Dictionary', Euthanasia is defined as a 'painless, peaceful death'. ERGO, the web site of Derek Humphry the founder of America's Hemlock Society, tells us that, 'The word 'euthanasia' comes from the Greek -- Eu, "good", and Thanatos, "death". Literally, a 'good death'.
Nothing in that requires the assistance or intervention of any other person in your death. It is only in recent years that the meaning has changed.
When you decide that the time to end your life has come you can end it in a peaceful and painless manner in the company and companionship of your friends, family and loved ones. You do not need your doctor to be involved. If you are careful, your friends, family and loved ones may not be prosecuted for murder.
Most countries will have a law that says a person assisting with a suicide may be prosecuted. These laws provide a safeguard against murder, but make no allowance for those in need.
A Compassionate Law is needed.
The End of Life Experience
Death is the end of life.
All life leads to an end of life experience.
A reasonable and rational person wants that experience to be as peaceful and painless as possible.
Euthanasia is an 'end of life experience'.
So euthanasia, a peaceful and painless death, is a rational end of life choice.
You are not crazy.
You are going to die anyway, so make a difference before you go.
You can enrich the lives of others by the choices you make.
Choose a place.
Waiting for death to happen in a sterile hospital room does not sound like an appealing end of life experience.
Instead of enduring expensive, painful, debilitating and often useless treatment for an incurable medical ailment you can choose to live in a place that needs you.
You would meet some truly wonderful people.
You could sponsor an orphanage, build a school, help provide a home for a disabled villager, or teach English in a remote village school.
The place you choose for an end of life experience will benefit from your having lived there.
This is a rational choice.
Death is not a painful event.
Illness can be.
Hospitals are designed to keep you alive.
If you are specifically and actively seeking an option for your own end of life experience, there are places where people are desperately in need and where you would be appreciated.
Whether for a few days, months, or years you can make a difference to many others before you go, and then choose your own time, place, and manner of a peaceful and painless death.
The Final Exit
The book, 'Final Exit', by Derek Humphry describes the preferred method for achieving a peaceful and painless death. I recommend it. You may order a copy by using the links below.
Or click here for another description.
A Compassionate Law
Those about whom we care the most may be subject to legal prosecution if they choose to be with us when we need them most.
A dying person does not need the additional worry that their manner of death might cause felony charges to be brought against their loved ones.
A Compassionate Law would make it possible for a person to be in close physical contact with the dying at the time of death and not be subject to legal prosecution afterwards.
A Euthanasia Clinic
would be a place which would be morally defensible, legally acceptable, and compatible with a Compassionate Law.
A p
lace where people could be together at the time of death and know that they would absolutely not be subject to criminal prosecution afterwards.A Euthanasia Clinic would provide a place where a Compassionate Law could be implemented.
The old Charlton Heston movie, Soylent Green, depicted a practical Euthanasia Clinic. Your local DVD rental shop may have a copy, or you can order a copy from Amazon with this link and a percentage will be donated back to help support this site.
Here's a link to an .avi video file that will play on most video player software. It was spliced together from the movie and shows just the Euthanasia Clinic portion. It loses some of it's impact by being taken out of context, but it is a quick and easy way to see what a Euthanasia Clinic can be like.
Euthanasia Clinic of the Future
Order your copy of Final Exit or other books from Amazon and a percentage will be donated back to help support this site.
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Here is an image from a referenced web site.

Here is an image from the video, Soylent Green, showing a Euthanasia Clinic of the future.

The first shows a man contemplating the means of his own death, alone. The other shows a man receiving tender care from compassionate individuals at the time of his death. The first may die alone, while the other will never feel abandoned.
Compassionate care and a Euthanasia Clinic.