Euthanasia is the Best Option

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Euthanasia is the Best Option

Euthanasia is a very controversial topic. People argue as to whether or not a

person who is terminally ill, or handicap, should have the right to die by euthanasia.

People say that dying by euthanasia is to die with dignity, instead of living an

artificial life on respirators and other life support machines. If a person is

terminally ill, and there is nothing

anyone can do for them, why should they have to suffer? Not only do they suffer

but their family does also. They will watch as their condition gets worse, and

then the vision in their head of the loved one who has finally died many months

after they were diagnose as terminally ill, is a memory of a person lying there

helpless, not able to feed themselves, get out of bed, or talk to you.

One notable euthanasia case would be Sue Rodrigous. She had a disease known as

Lou Gehrig's disease or ALS, which is a rare incurable disease of the nervous

system. ALS gradually destroys the nerves that control the muscles. The results

of which are weakness, paralysis, and eventually death. That is what Sue

Rodrigous was suffering from for well over a year. Knowing that her condition

was only going to get worse, and eventually, after the pain and suffering, would

result in death, Sue wanted to die. She wanted people to remember her as a

lively healthy woman, not just a body lying helpless in a hospital bed. With

that thought in mind, Sue went to court to fight for right to die by euthanasia.

The courts did not agree with her though.

Dr. Jack Kevorkian, proposed the creation of a new medical specialist, the

"obitiarist," who would assist terminally ill patients to take their own lives,

subject to strict guidelines.

His patient also suffered from Lou Gehrig's disease. She was in bad shape,

struggling to hold her head up, could not talk, and had to communicate using a

computer keyboard. She was deteriorating quickly. "She was very smart," he

said, a note of sadness entering his voice. Kevorkian built a machine called

the "mercitron," a jumble of tubes and bottles that would allow patients with

little mobility to inject themselves with a lethal cocktail of drugs.

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