It is not YOUR place or right to decide for anyone but yourself. It's like the old adage of there are no atheists in a foxhole. Until you have experienced daily pain (or lived with someone who has) then really, who in the hell are you to decide for them. People like you are usually the first to scream for relief when that day comes.
So why does it matter to you if someone in excruciating pain wants to give up? Is it your position that they should suffer because YOU have a fear of death?
Let those in pain decide, NOT doctors or socalled do gooders.
I'm not deciding for anyone. That's the problem with these positions. If I don't drink the koolaide, accept AND condone this reprehensible act unconditionally, I'm somehow imposing my will on others. That's not my opinion at all. I really don't disagree with your position if there truly is no hope or options, but let's not bastardize the medical industry or condone contract-for-hire grim reapers to prey on
pathetic cowards in a
moment of despair in their desire to abandon life. If you want to end it, man-up, grow a set and do it yourself. Make sure you dive off a building, head first, that's at least 3 stories tall... Or, use a 357 aiming the barrel towards the roof of your mouth when pulling the trigger... Or, use a sharp knife with enough force to sever tendons and muscles along with some critical arteries...
I'm suffering too. Until I own a Bugatti, Ferrari or a Lambo, I'm just
existing... Oh, the pain...
And, I've known several who have experienced that excruciating pain at the end or
what was thought to be the end of their lives. Relatively recent, my grandmother was given
less than 3 months to live for nearly a decade. She suffered-on to experience and participate in her grandchildren's high school graduations, college graduations and even marriages. By the way, she also experienced two heart-attacks, two strokes and an aggresive resurgence of a metastasized breast cancer that spread throughout her body. To rob or deny herself of those experiences, even the bad ones, was never an option. Fear of death has less to do with this than the coward's fear of life.