Law in Contemporary Society

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EthanSingerFirstEssay 5 - 02 Apr 2021 - Main.EbenMoglen
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 The best way to eliminate the right to state-assisted for convicts is to eliminate the possibility of it all together. This means eliminating the death penalty. The timing is ripe for this, as for the first time in 34 years of polling by Gallup, a majority of Americans prefer life imprisonment without parole as a punishment for murder to the death penalty. Not just a slight majority, but 60%. Proponents of the death penalty may see the death penalty as a just form of punishment for those who commit horrendous crimes, but with a painless lethal injection and 10% using the punishment as a right to state-assisted suicide, it may be time to reconsider whether the punishment is even a punishment at all.
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How does it make the discussion of doctor-assisted suicide any more productive to analogize it to execution, which is isn't? How will I think more clearly about the end of my father's or my mother's life, both of which involved their exercise of choice in dying, by considering them in terms established by Timothy McVeigh? ?

If there is a real reason for this analytical turn, it can't be based on a series of rhetorical questions. If there isn't a better reason than juxtaposition of extremes with family realities, the premise should go.

Nor is it clear why discussions of choice in dying should be seen as discussion about state-assisted or state-directed killing. Obviously there are many conditions under which palliative care gives way to conscious withdrawal of treatment that shades into passive encouragement of family compliance with dying relatives' wishes all of which neither puts the state (nor would contemplate putting the state) in the role of decision-maker or executioner.

Which is why there isn't any inconsistency between wanting for myself what my parents in different ways had, namely the right to choose when in the process of dissolution to die, and opposing completely the existence of capital punishment.

I think therefore that the best route to improvement is to write about the right to die, not the right to state-assisted suicide, and to leave the murderers out of it, unless there is additional good cause shown.

 

‘I knew my objective was a state-assisted suicide and when it happens it’s “in your face, motherfuckers.” You just did something you’re trying to say should be illegal for medical personnel.’ – Timothy McVeigh

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 Works Cited
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Why aren't these just links in the text? You're writing for the web, so why not make your writing as easy as possible for people to read there?

 https://www.walb.com/story/1083665/double-murderer-gets-his-wish/ https://web.archive.org/web/20100614074106/http://archives.cnn.com/2001/LAW/05/11/mcveigh.evidence.06/index.html

Revision 5r5 - 02 Apr 2021 - 18:08:01 - EbenMoglen
Revision 4r4 - 24 Mar 2021 - 04:37:44 - EthanSinger
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