There are different perspectives on suicide. There's those who have thoughts of harming themselves, those who know someone who committed suicide and lastly those who only know what is suicide. And those who have thoughts to harm themselves: They were unable to think and reason clearly. They did not see any options, except to end their pain. As their advocate, I am speaking on their behalf. And I realize that old habits die hard, but I’m hoping that this habit of using the word choice and other judgmental words and phrases by the suicide prevention organizations’ speeches and literature will prove to be the exception. *10*According to this, those suffering want to stop what where they are going through and the only way they think they can solve their problems is by ending their lives which it's not true. Even if those who don't know what it feel like to go through a suicidal thought know it won't solve anything, they don't know what really those feel when they have hard thoughts. Some people are strong but some can't really take everything that comes in hand. That doesn't make them weak, that just shows they thought they had noone to turn to for help.
The central thesis of the book is that the liberty found in the U.S. Constitution’s Fifth and Fourteenth “Due Process” Amendments extends to Dudley Clendinen and other terminally ill competent persons’ right to choose to die with dignity—with the passive assistance of a physician—rather than live in great pain or live a quality-less life. *11* Stating that those who would are going through an illness and would rather die than live have the right to do so. That's I believe the only time someone can actually end their life. It is hard for those who are ill to live even if some families don't accept the fact that they don't like feeling ill and would rather end their life at the moment, they are actually in pain and no one nut them know the real feeling of pain.
The central thesis of the book is that the liberty found in the U.S. Constitution’s Fifth and Fourteenth “Due Process” Amendments extends to Dudley Clendinen and other terminally ill competent persons’ right to choose to die with dignity—with the passive assistance of a physician—rather than live in great pain or live a quality-less life. *11* Stating that those who would are going through an illness and would rather die than live have the right to do so. That's I believe the only time someone can actually end their life. It is hard for those who are ill to live even if some families don't accept the fact that they don't like feeling ill and would rather end their life at the moment, they are actually in pain and no one nut them know the real feeling of pain.