Brexit and the waning days of the United Kingdom

Started by Josquius, February 20, 2016, 07:46:34 AM

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How would you vote on Britain remaining in the EU?

British- Remain
12 (12%)
British - Leave
7 (7%)
Other European - Remain
21 (21%)
Other European - Leave
6 (6%)
ROTW - Remain
34 (34%)
ROTW - Leave
20 (20%)

Total Members Voted: 98

Tamas

QuoteI honestly find it weird this is such a big issue for you two. It's just not engaging to me at all.

It's a combination of emotional connection and self-interest. Seeing loved ones and acquitances suffer and experience dehumanising degradations when all they wished for is to die and go on their own terms cuts deep.

And the selfish part is to have this option available by the time I may want to use it.

The Brain

It's a somewhat weird situation when a person is in a condition where, had they been a housepet, it would have been illegal NOT to kill them, and it's illegal to help them die with their consent. Do the people behind the rules care more about pets than humans, or less? It's not obvious to me.
Women want me. Men want to be with me.

Gups

Quote from: Sheilbh on November 23, 2024, 07:26:56 PM
Quote from: Tamas on November 23, 2024, 05:43:18 PMThere is nothing to convince opponents with. Concerns over minutea is an excuse. For example Sheilbh you as one of the more reasonable opponents of it can you give actual examples of what would convince you to switch and start supporting a bill like this? Not stuff like "better projections" but an example of what thst convincigly better protection would be.
Again the Health Secretary voted for assisted dying last time it came up. He's changed his mind and now opposes it. Diane Abbott has shifted from unsure to opposition. I don't think opinions on this are very fixed.

For me, better protections is key. There are fewer and weaker safeguards in this bill than for live organ donation or getting a mortgage. I don't think that's right. I say I think it should looked at as a policy in the context of a royal commission or something similar addressing social care, palliative care and assisted dying. So there is a wider reform to improve death for people and within that context consider assisted dying.

But to be honest the biggest change would be self-administered which I believe is the case in Austria, Switzerland and a few US states around effectively physician supported assisted suicide, not assisted dying which is where the fatal drugs are administered by a physician. Because the moment of decision is in the individual's hands and not within a process which (particularly in the NHS) can inexorably go on to its conclusion.

Edit: And, on support, as I say the assumption at the start of this parliament was that this would easily sail through - opinions have changed even in the time we've been having the debate in public and I actually suspect some MPs will have their mind made up in the debate in the chamber.

QuoteTo stay fair, this hypocrisy I think applies to the pro-dignity side as well, or at least it applies to myself. I will not want assisted suicide to stop at this level. I want it to reach the canadian/Swiss levels where essentially I am given assistance to check out like a fucking human being when existing becomes unbearable.
Yeah. So this is one of the issues I have with the current bill. Leadbeater today said it would not in any circumstance be possible for anorexia to be a condition where assisted dying is available - problem is that has happened, through regulatory and legal process (not legislation), in Oregon, which is the jurisdiction with the closest safeguards in the bill.

And I think we have to be very, very careful about the circumstances when assisted dying is allowed. For example one of the Dignity in Dying patrons has said that in his view it should be expanded beyond this bill (also the Economist's position) and in particular said it should be available for "the wheelchair bound" and people with mental health issues. I think that has profound implications for the dignity and worth our society places on people with disabilities and mental health problems. Which again goes back to the slippery slope and need for a very robustly drafted law and solid safeguards.

QuoteOh, and Brown's argument freaked me out. I am sorry about his personal tragedy but to let others suffer because his newborn daughter wasn't able to convey to them what she was going through while they had this emotional copium of witnessing her dying as the only time they spent with her (which is a heart-wrenching thought), is just twisted.
I think that's an insanely uncharitable reading of his article.
Quote from: Sheilbh on November 23, 2024, 07:26:56 PM
Quote from: Tamas on November 23, 2024, 05:43:18 PMThere is nothing to convince opponents with. Concerns over minutea is an excuse. For example Sheilbh you as one of the more reasonable opponents of it can you give actual examples of what would convince you to switch and start supporting a bill like this? Not stuff like "better projections" but an example of what thst convincigly better protection would be.
Again the Health Secretary voted for assisted dying last time it came up. He's changed his mind and now opposes it. Diane Abbott has shifted from unsure to opposition. I don't think opinions on this are very fixed.

For me, better protections is key. There are fewer and weaker safeguards in this bill than for live organ donation or getting a mortgage. I don't think that's right.

Really? You need two separate doctors' opinions and approval from a high court judge to get a mortgage?

Sheilbh

#29943
Quote from: Gups on Today at 06:24:27 AMReally? You need two separate doctors' opinions and approval from a high court judge to get a mortgage?
Very little in the legislation of how to protect against undue influence or indeed any obligation to evidence the person isn't being pressured (and total civil immunity - including for negligence).

You can doctor shop and once you've found a doctor who agrees, they choose the second doctor (and if they disagree, the first doctor can choose another - I don't think there's any limit). If we assume similar take-up as in other countries every Family Division judge would be hearing 400 of these applications a year, so I'm not sure that's an effective safeguard - my guess is it would need to go to District Judges or just be a rubber-stamp.

Forms can be signed by proxy and, from what I've read, seem to have fewer formalities than a power of attorney (having recently had to be involved in my parents').

Shabana Mahmood, in her letter to constituents, has flagged that the provisions covering coercion are "particularly weak". This has also been the point made by former judges.

QuoteThere is nothing to convince opponents with. Concerns over minutea is an excuse. For example Sheilbh you as one of the more reasonable opponents of it can you give actual examples of what would convince you to switch and start supporting a bill like this? Not stuff like "better projections" but an example of what thst convincigly better protection would be.
Just to follow up on this again, I'd like a royal commission around reform and end of life in general. But a really basic thing is that the French legislation on this (being considered now) and I believe the Austrian legislation was part of a package. Assisted dying was brought in along with measures to protect rights, such as increased funding for palliative care and a requirement that one of the doctors signing off is a specialist in palliative medicine.

There's not one single thing but I think a number of different measures that would help get me comfortable.

QuoteI honestly find it weird this is such a big issue for you two. It's just not engaging to me at all.
A bit like Tamas, but the reverse. I think this goes to how we, as a society, treat and value some of our most vulnerable people. I think it's really core. Plus, in my view, our treatment of the elderly and disabled is already pretty shameful (see all the scandals in care homes, covid) which is an added concern if you then introduce this law.

Again I go back to the concerns being raised by disability rights activists, by Liberty (for non-Brits, like our version of the ACLU), by judges and people in the care sector about how this will work in practice - and I just don't think Leadbeater or others are even acknowledging there's an issue.

If we had vulnerable people who might be affected by this like disability rights groups saying they were confident that this legislation would increase their autonomy, then I'd be hugely more comfortable with it. They're not, they're saying it's a threat.

Edit: And also at a really basic level I look at infected blood, maternity safety, Alder Hey organs and Bristol heart scandals etc in the NHS alone and I think we need to be careful with this type of legislation.
Let's bomb Russia!

HVC

So there are safe guards, but you just don't trust doctors. That's veering pretty close to anti vax conspiracy land :P


How many division judges do you have that they would see 400 petitions each a year? Looking at canada 12k requests were made in 2022. So that means the UK only had 30 division judges? PS i don't know what a division judges is, for transparency.
Being lazy is bad; unless you still get what you want, then it's called "patience".
Hubris must be punished. Severely.

crazy canuck

Quote from: HVC on Today at 10:37:54 AMSo there are safe guards, but you just don't trust doctors. That's veering pretty close to anti vax conspiracy land :P


How many division judges do you have that they would see 400 petitions each a year? Looking at canada 12k requests were made in 2022. So that means the UK only had 30 division judges? PS i don't know what a division judges is, for transparency.

That's what opposition to this sort of legislation always boils down to.  We can't possibly trust doctors to carry out their ethical obligation.

But of course, we trust them every time we go in for treatment, take the medications they prescribed for us, and heck we even voluntarily get knocked out and go under the knife, trusting that they are going to do everything they're supposed to do ethically.

Are there outliers that don't comply with that high obligation? Yes.  But that doesn't stop us from doing all kinds of things that are beneficial to society as a whole.

Gups

The expectation is that there would be 400 applications a year in total. Not per judge. The idea that any single high court judge would deal with 400 applications a year is laughable for anyone with any familiarity with our judicial system.

Let's face it Sheilbh, there are no safeguards that would satisfy you. You are being (uncharacteristically) disingenuous in hiding behind alleged process deficiencies when in fact you object to the proposals in principle.

crazy canuck

Quote from: HVC on Today at 10:37:54 AMSo there are safe guards, but you just don't trust doctors. That's veering pretty close to anti vax conspiracy land :P


How many division judges do you have that they would see 400 petitions each a year? Looking at canada 12k requests were made in 2022. So that means the UK only had 30 division judges? PS i don't know what a division judges is, for transparency.

There were 12,000 requests for MAID. not 12,000 petitions to court.

I haven't found good data for you as to how many petitions were made.  But at least in this Province, there are few.

I have no idea where the number of 400 petitions per judge comes from.  That would be ridiculous.