The only certainty in life is that every single one of us will eventually die. But, the people who await there's are ones who are bare to tubes, needles, and expensive machines. Let's take a moment and step into this life where a time stamp labels you. In this tragic life, perhaps you're suffering consist sensations like suffocation. Maybe, your symptoms entail the constant urge to vomit or the inability to control bowel and bladder function or you may even occasionally have uncontrollable seizures. The fatal disease that you carry, leaves you malnourished, depressed, confused, and sometimes even unconscious.Yes, death is inevitable, but shouldn’t these sick, suffering patients that are withering away, and near their deadline have at the very least a choice when too Flatline? That's why I wrote this bill for the people who are terminally ill and should have the legal right to assisted suicide because it would then end their agony, reduce medical financial complications, and give them the right to determine their own fate.
“An assisted suicide occurs when one person gives another person the …show more content…
It should be your right to die on your own terms. Paul Silva identifies in his article, “For the Terminally Ill, Freedom from Pain Is a Human Right”, how “Human rights generally brings to mind some basic fundamental freedoms and protections: Freedom from torture. Freedom of opinion and expression. But what about a person at the end of [his or] her life who is left to die in excruciating pain [?] Is there a human right to be free from this suffering?”. When needed most, the choices we should have aren’t there. Ask yourself, are we truly free because then, how come we aren't when we decide how and when to die. According to Debate.Org, about 80% of people agree that its freedom of choice that should dictate a person's life and death. With all that said, shouldn’t demands be fulfilled? Their voices