Euthanasia Activist Philip Nitschke Hands of Lethal Assisted Suicide Drugs as Awards – LifeNews.com

Posted: April 25, 2017 at 5:35 am

Anyone who has ever sat on an awards committee knows well that there are standards to be met. Make the award too easy to attain or provide it to someone who has not met the criteria and the currency of the award is diminished. Raise the bar too high and no-one applies.

At Exit International they must have ridiculously low standards. Exit boss and former medical doctor, Philip Nitschke recently awarded his so-called Peaceful Pill Prize to an elderly Australian couple essentially because the woman concerned recently cried a patronising bullshit at Professor Margaret Somerville on an Australian National current affairs program.

Nitschke claimed that Mr & Mrs Fellows comments were forthright and a significant contribution to the Australian Euthanasia debate. Crass and undignified more like it!

There was a time when everyone understood that to raise ones voice or to swear in the context of a debate was to lose the argument. Maybe not so much nowadays; after all, the shows presenter, Tony Jones said that the bullshit comment was refreshing which seemed to me, at the time, to be a ringing endorsement of Mrs Fellows sentiment.

Nitschkes endowment upon the Fellows, it seems, was no accident either. He admits that the couple are members of his Exit organisation and exemplars, one suspects, of Exits new militant wing, Exit Action. Is it just me or does anyone else reason that Exit is synonymous with militancy; so why the need for tautology? If the Fellows have set the standard perhaps we can expect more of this revolting behaviour as other card-carrying Nitschke-ites vie for the same prize.

So, what do the Fellows gain for their inglorious moment? Steak Knives? Champaign perhaps? No. Two redeemable vouchers for 12mg packages of pure sodium pentobarbital (nembutal). I suppose an alternative might have been a lifetime membership, but I digress.

The award ceremony will surely raise the interest of Border Protection & Customs Police. But, of course, Nitschkes not stupid: As possession of this drug in Australia is illegal, the details of the delivery of the prize will be kept confidential. Delivery will be by unconventional means said Nitschke. He added that the prize would amount to a safety net for the Fellows how bizzarre.

The Fellows, by their own admission are not unwell but simply dont want to live in a nursing facility in their decrepitude. None of us does, really, lets be honest. Thats an issue that many of us will face; but few, I suspect would want to try to foister upon society a euthanasia regime with all its attendant and irretrievable risks simply for the sake of getting our own way. Thats tyranny clothed as autonomy.

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The Fellows may not have thought that through. Maybe they are unaware of the trail of grief created by Nitschkes collateral damage in the deaths of young people via Exit methods; young men like Lucas Taylor, for example.

But people who are used to getting their own way dont necessarily consider much else in the drive for autonomy. The well, well-off but worried have a very blinkered view re-enforced by the Nitschke mantra of rationality.

Such was the assurance given by Exits youngest member-now-statistic, Adam Maier-Clayton who died by suicide recently in Canada. 27 year old Maier-Clayton had some significant mental health issues yet claimed to be entirely rational.

According to one report, he suffered anxiety, mood disorder and obsessive compulsive disorder and tried all sorts of remedies and relief to no avail; difficulties that should not be discounted. He spent the last few months campaigning for the inclusion of mental illness within the scope of Canadas new death legislation, arguing that it is not only those who are near death suffer refractory symptoms.

In January he posted a picture of himself wearing an Exit T Shirt with an image of Nitschke emblazened across it, saying that he was, rocking his Exit International Official membership adding that he felt that he was absurdly rational and should not be excluded from Canadas death laws.

Notwithstanding Mrs Fellows expletive, just because someone can engage in a process of thought does not necessarily make them truly rational. It is not necessarily thought processes that suffer through depression, unremitting pain and the like; it is, in my own experience, the connection with others that diminishes the threads that bind us to each other. In other words, the context of ones life can seem strangely distant. Blurred by pain, remove the context of care, of family of future from the equation and thought even seemingly rational thoughts and logic becomes an untrustworth guide.

So explained columnist, Andrew Lawton recently in the Canadian Global News:

This idea that suicide is dignified and painless is a dangerous one. Take it from someone who tried and failed.

Nearly seven years ago I overdosed on dozens of pills causing multiple cardiac arrests and weeks in hospital on life support.

I survived, but only narrowly so.

Everything from the method to the date and time was meticulously thought out.

I picked the day because I didnt have any other appointments scheduled as though missing a meeting would have been the only problem with my plan any other day.

Suicidal people are irrational. This is true even when decisions appear to be made through logic and reason.

I saw suicide as the answer to pain I was convinced wouldnt abate.

It wasnt just about picking the easy way out of an unpleasant situation it was the only way. I saw no way my life would improve.

Spoiler alert: it did.

Like Maier-Clayton, I had tried myriad therapies, medications, and treatment throughout my years-long battle with depression. By the time I tried to pull the plug on my own existence, none had made an impact.

But after the attempt, that changed. Healing didnt happen overnight, but things that hadnt worked previously showed positive results.

My circumstances didnt change, but my outlook did.

It must surely be amongst the very last things that a society would want to have to someone like Nitschke telling suicidal people that their desire for death is rational. Its an endorsement. Like euthanasia & assisted suicide, it runs counter to suicide prevention.

Likewise, telling those who understandably fear their demise that they have a way out, that, effectively, they dont need to address their fears nor find a path through them to a fulfilling life inspite of them, is reckless.

But these are precisely the messages that euthanasia and assisted suicide laws send with the added weight of government approval. We need to learn not to reward bad behaviours and bad ideas.

LifeNews Note: Based in Australia, Paul Russell is a leading campaigner against euthanasia.

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Euthanasia Activist Philip Nitschke Hands of Lethal Assisted Suicide Drugs as Awards - LifeNews.com

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