I don't know why, but looking at the picture of the pod makes me very uncomfortable. There's a certain uncanniness to it, like you're looking at a picture of an SCP, or something that you shouldn't be looking at, something that violates some unspoken law of nature.
It's a device with the sole purpose of facilitating the death of the person inside. It's not a gun, whose sole purpose is to destroy, but can also be used to defend oneself. This is an image of death in its purest expression, and yet it looks like a ship from F-Zero. It's a Maserati for dying. The ultimate product, in every sense. This is the end goal of capitalism, to turn even death into an expression of luxury.
Yeah, I was completely mortified by the actual design of the thing. PAD is good but there should be no bazinga "glory" aestheticized out of such a decision. It's revolting.
Having a Carl Sagan quote on the side is oddly demonic too, I know redditors used to get annoying about him like 10 years ago but I feel he wouldn't have signed off on this shit.
I don't know why, but looking at the picture of the pod makes me very uncomfortable. There's a certain uncanniness to it, like you're looking at a picture of an SCP, or something that you shouldn't be looking at, something that violates some unspoken law of nature.
It's a device with the sole purpose of facilitating the death of the person inside. It's not a gun, whose sole purpose is to destroy, but can also be used to defend oneself. This is an image of death in its purest expression, and yet it looks like a ship from F-Zero. It's a Maserati for dying. The ultimate product, in every sense. This is the end goal of capitalism, to turn even death into an expression of luxury.
I feel the same way. It's a plastic and boardroom-designed means to make the end of a life techbro culture compliant. It's disgusting.
Advocates say it provides an option not reliant on drugs or doctors, and that it expands access to euthanasia as the portable device can be 3D-printed and assembled at home.
Guys it reminds of me of an episode in old-person future cartoon so it must be bad.
Note how every criticism of this is purely on aesthetic grounds. The American who used it was in pain and a had a lethal diagnosis.
The grounds of this arrest is extremely problematic and could set a precedent effectively making assisted suicide illegal. If buying NOx violates dangerous chemical acts/laws, what is stopping any shithead conservative org from going after assisted suicide via barbiturates? Or opioids?
The aesthetics matter quite a lot. Physician-assisted death should be a medical procedure administered by a number of professionals all agreeing it's the right thing to do. "Hop in the bespoke space pod and all your troubles go away!" is not a level of accessibility anybody should be comfortable with.
I am far more worried about the opposite of assisted death being made illegal: normalizing it as a "treatment" for the outcomes of capitalism. It's happening in Canada right now, and it's messed up.
Physician-assisted death should be a medical procedure administered by a number of professionals all agreeing it's the right thing to do.
Oh gods no. Nonononononono. you need to have a horrific experience with the healthcare system before coming out with a take like that. The choice to kill yourself needs to rest soley with the person alive, doctors will straight up looking your crying arse in the face and say "Hmm, I don't understand why you're in pain so it's fake".
Safeguards to reduce the chance of people being pressured and impulsive decisions yes, but bodies can become prisons and every moment waking hell. People need the right to die on their own terms.
Also this is not physician assisted, you press a button and the chamber fills with nitrogen. The point of the device is that the choice to die rests solely with the person dying. Requiring no assistance (beyond access to the device).
No. I don't need a doctor's note to jump off a building, why should I need one to asphyxiate in a pod? I have never understood the Western weirdness about death. People are not immortal; they die in stupid and horrifying ways with no control or dignity, or they're forced to live in a state of living death well beyond their quality of life because their families can't let go (or, in the necropolitics sense, they're marked for "wearing out" by being in a precaritized class). Why should a medical board get a say? What could they know that a person ready to die doesn't?
This is a question of bodily autonomy. If you don't control your body, who does?
An American goes to Switzerland then gets into a 3d printed death pod that is in a "legal grey area" specfically because it isn't a medical device and then dies in that pod and your surprised that such a situation could lead to backlash?
If you knew anything about assisted suicide, you'd know that it has always been a "legal grey area" in Switzerland. Medication is much more regulated in Europe than in America to the point where you can't buy Cough syrup without multi-doctoral approval.
Assisted suicide is legal by non-enforcement in Switzerland if you can consent and commence the suicide by yourself. In the traditional case this has been via Barbiturate self-intake. In theory, giving someone barbiturates for the purpose of facilitating suicide may be a crime, but it has never been enforced. By criminalizing NOx-assisted suicide, your are effectively criminalizing any chemical assisted suicide.