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A euthanasia expert just unveiled his ‘suicide machine’ at an Amsterdam funeral fair

Mian

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...al-fair/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.d8f955aa849a

It is not the most cheerful offering. But euthanasia activist Philip Nitschke thinks he is about to revolutionize how we die.

At a funeral fair in Amsterdam last week, he showed off his “suicide machine.” The “Sarco,” short for sarcophagus, is designed to “provide people with a death when they wish to die,” Nitschke, an Australian national, told the news agency Agence France-Presse. It comes with a detachable coffin and a hookup for a nitrogen container.

Here is how it would work, according to Nitschke. Users would first take an online test to determine whether they were sane. If they cleared the test, they would be sent an access code, valid for 24 hours. They would then get into the capsule, close the door and press a button to have the nitrogen pipe in. Nitschke says users would pass out within a minute.

“The person who wants to die presses the button, and the capsule is filled with nitrogen. He or she will feel a bit dizzy but will then rapidly lose consciousness and die,” he told AFP.

The Sarco's design is meant to echo that of a spaceship, Nitschke told Newsweek. It is intended to give users the feel that they are traveling to the “great beyond.”

Nitschke developed the Sarco alongside Dutch designer Alexander Bannink. At the event, people also had an opportunity to don virtual-reality glasses that give users a sense of what sitting in the pod might look and feel like. Attendees at the Westerkerk event lined up to try on the glasses, AFP reported.

The inventors said they hope to have a fully functioning pod by the end of the year. Nitschke then plans to put the design online and allow anyone to download it. “That means that anybody who wants to build the machine can download the plans and 3D-print their own device,” he said, according to AFP.

The machine has been controversial since its inception.

One critic, Georgetown professor of biomedical ethics Daniel Sulmasy, told Newsweek that it's “a bad medicine, ethics, and bad public policy.”

“It converts killing into a form of healing and doesn’t acknowledge that we can now do more for symptoms through palliative [care] than ever before,” Sulmasy said.

Nitschke, 70, has been a euthanasia advocate for decades. As a medical student, he said, he was inspired by Jack Kevorkian's work. (Kevorkian, an American pathologist nicknamed Dr. Death, has said he helped at least 130 patients commit suicide.) As a young man, Nitschke created the “Deliverance,” a computer program hooked up to an IV that would trigger a lethal injection of barbiturates after a patient confirmed he or she wanted to die. Later, he developed something called an “Exit Bag,” a breathing mask that funnels carbon monoxide.

Nitschke used the system on four patients before Australia's euthanasia law was rescinded. In 1997, he founded Exit International, a euthanasia advocacy group. Newsweek has called him the “Elon Musk” of assisted suicide.

Euthanasia is not legal in most places, but it is legal in several European countries and in parts of the United States. Nitschke told AFP his machine will allow those interested in euthanasia an easier path forward. “In many countries, suicide is not against the law, only assisting a person to commit suicide is,” he said. “This is a situation where one person chooses to press a button ... rather than, for instance, standing in front of a train.”

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The person who wants to die presses the button, and the capsule is filled with nitrogen. He or she will feel a bit dizzy but will then rapidly lose consciousness and die

So press the button feel dizzy and die. Just like 1-2-3 WTH!
 
I used to be against euthanasia but havinf witnessed grandparentsnfro through pain and embarrassment in their final days and going into a vegetative state before they die, i think this is the best option. However it should only be used in terminal patients at a very old age (>80) and should be by their consent.
 
I used to be against euthanasia but havinf witnessed grandparentsnfro through pain and embarrassment in their final days and going into a vegetative state before they die, i think this is the best option. However it should only be used in terminal patients at a very old age (>80) and should be by their consent.

I don't think we should decide who can die and does wants to live anymore or not. A persons life is their private matter and as long as they don't harm anyone else they should be able to do with it whatever they want.

Just because "we" feel bad about someone committing suicide does not give us the right to impose these rules on them and I consider the height of selfishness.
 
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I don't think we should decide who can die and does wants to live anymore or not. A persons life is their private matter and as long as they don't harm anyone else they should be able to do with it whatever they want.

Just because "we" feel bad about someone committing suicide does not give us the right to impose these rules on them and I consider the height of selfishness.
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Could say the same about suicide being selfish due to not caring about loved ones being grief stricken for quite a while. Suicide is a defeatist approach to life imo, lack of hope probably due to lack of belief in God to help you out in dire situations
 
Some of these European countries have a complete disregard for life. It is alarming to observe.
 
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Could say the same about suicide being selfish due to not caring about loved ones being grief stricken for quite a while. Suicide is a defeatist approach to life imo, lack of hope probably due to lack of belief in God to help you out in dire situations

There is a lot of things that are selfish in this life that people have a right to do. For example reproducing with overpopulation. You may not agree with it but it doesn't mean it should be illegal.
 
There is a lot of things that are selfish in this life that people have a right to do. For example reproducing with overpopulation. You may not agree with it but it doesn't mean it should be illegal.

Haven't said it should be illegal though have I?
 
Haven't said it should be illegal though have I?

No but its a twisted view. You haven't suffered the physical ailments some of these people are currently suffering so you judging them on that is strange.
 
No but its a twisted view. You haven't suffered the physical ailments some of these people are currently suffering so you judging them on that is strange.

Not talking about terminally ill people, more about people with money/love/family problems. Should've made myself clear, sorry
 
Belgian Paralympian Marieke Vervoort has ended her own life through euthanasia at the age of 40.

Vervoort, who won gold and silver at the London 2012 Paralympics, and two further medals at Rio 2016, had an incurable degenerative muscle disease.

Euthanasia is legal in Belgium and in 2008 Vervoort signed papers which would one day allow a doctor to end her life.

A statement from her home city of Diest said Vervoort "responded to her choice on Tuesday evening".

Vervoort's disease caused constant pain, seizures, paralysis in her legs and left her barely able to sleep.

In an extensive interview with BBC Radio 5 Live's Eleanor Oldroyd in 2016 she said: "It can be that I feel very, very bad, I get an epileptic attack, I cry, I scream because of pain. I need a lot of painkillers, valium, morphine.

"A lot of people ask me how is it possible that you can have such good results and still be smiling with all the pain and medication that eats your muscles. For me, sports, and racing with a wheelchair - it's a kind of medication."

Vervoort won gold in the T52 100m wheelchair race at London 2012 as well as silver in the T52 200m wheelchair race.

At the Rio Paralympics she claimed silver in the T51/52 400m and bronze in T51/52 100m.

Asked about the fact she had signed euthanasia papers, after the Rio Paralympics she told the BBC: "It gives a feeling of rest to people. I know when it's enough for me, I have those papers."

The city of Diest said a book of condolence will be accessible in its town hall from Wednesday.

Marieke's major medals
2012 Paralympics: Gold (T52 100m) and silver (T52 200m)
2015 World Championships: Gold (T52 100m, 200m and 400m)
2016 Paralympics: Silver (T51/52 400m) and bronze (T51/52 100m)

Source: https://www.bbc.com/sport/disability-sport/50145393.
 
Some of these European countries have a complete disregard for life. It is alarming to observe.

It’s more to do with choosing to go with dignity, rather than carrying on in wracking pain and no quality of life.

Should only be available to people who are chronically ill, after much counselling.
 
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