1. Being able to choose when to die is a human right. This exact point is presented in the article “Perhaps I’ll say goodbye on Twitter”. According to Tony Nicklson, who is a 58 year old, patient who has been able to move only his eyelids since suffering a stroke in 2005, it is the most fundamental human right. He told the journalist and former nurse Nina Lakhani, that: “he was simply seeking the same right to die that able-bodied people were able to exercise independently”. However, if he is provided this right, it would be a change of law as Alison Pearson claims, in the article “Do any of us, however ill, have the right to die?” She believes in the exact opposite. She is oppose assisted suicide, and her article is kind of a response to the argumentations of Tony Nicklinson. She starts out her article by explaining how only a complete idiot would put cancer on their top of their wishlist: “Other than that you would have to be seriously warped, mad even, to choose a brutal, life-threatening illness. Yet Tony Nicklinson says he wants to get cancer. Cancer is Tony’s best hope”. If Tony cannot be offered the opportunity to commit assisted suicide, he would rather die by the hand of cancer, because Tony Nicklinson’s only desire is to leave this world of suffering. Alison Pearson is contradicting Tony Nicklinson by saying that it is wrong to give doctors the right to kill patients, and on the other hand, she devises other alternatives to die. For example she brings up the fact, that you could just refuse medical treatment, as it is legal, and she further explains that: “I certainly plan to have one of those handy when I’m old and at the mercy of our marvellous “care” system”, explaining that she might use this method herself without having to change the law.
2. In the article “I would help a relative on the final journey”, Vicki Woods has a powerful way to express her views on assisted suicide, by using her own personal