Euthanasia dates back to the early 19th century and advocates use the same arguments today to justify it. They believe that people suffering from an incurable and fatal disease should be allowed by law to substitute for the slow and painful death, a quick and painless one. Advocates rationalize the latter by arguing that if it's legal to curtail the duration of pain with medication, "the same reasoning that justifies a minute's shortening of it, will justify an hour's, a day's, a week's, a month's, a year's". It is seen not only as a moral right, but also as an act of humanity.
Those who oppose euthanasia argue that legalizing it would result in abuse. One opponent claimed that physicians could use its legalization to "get rid" of an objectionable relative. As a result, the public would eventually question the trust of the medical profession. Opponents say it would also leave a patient pressured into requesting euthanasia to