TAW122
Emissary of the right to die.
- Aug 30, 2018
- 6,904
In a recent thread titled "Pro-lifers make suffering unbearable by one simply loophole they exploit!", one of the premises and talking points in that article was about how they used the premise of "one is not a reliable witness to oneself when it comes to making (permanent) decisions with regards to the right to die. In that particular article, I mainly focused on the three premises (including the not a reliable witness premise) and explained how they managed to abuse those things and cause us more suffering.
Anyways, the title of this article refers to when CTB preventionists, anti-choicers, pro-lifers often use that line to dismiss, gaslight, or otherwise invalidate one's suffering. More specifically (truncated due to title length), their claim is "you aren't a reliable witness to your own circumstances in which you could accurately predict what the future holds or what is best for you, therefore, you cannot make a [permanent] decision on the right to die!". This is, of course, not only infuriating and insulting towards the recipient (the person who wants their suffering to end, the right to die on their own terms), but also even more nefarious is how they (the anti-choicers, preventionists, etc.) cite how they do not feel comfortable and/or goes against their morals and ethics to allow for voluntary euthanasia, assisted suicide, and medical aid in dying. Therefore, effectively keeping most of us trapped in sentience and suffering, then leaving us to DIY with whatever risky, brutal methods that we find and most likely CTB'ing in gruesome ways, sometimes failing and ending up with permanent damage.
Anyways, in this article I'm going to go into detail and debunk this claim that preventionists, anti-choicers, pro-lifers like to use.
One of the circular logic that pro-lifers like to use is how if one is suicidal then they are irrational and cannot make decisions for themselves, which is far from the truth. It is like an unfalsifiable statement that cannot be disproven because the premise is the same as the conclusion. That is indeed not only a problem that bypasses logic, but also an invalidation tactic used to silence or otherwise dismiss any opposing viewpoints that may be presented.
Then there is a sense of hypocrisy with the argument as well, because outside of the topic of the right to die, many pro-lifers (even in self-help and other motivational topics or content), they often claim that only oneself knows themselves the best (implying that oneself is indeed a reliable witness to one's own life as it's obvious: Only the person living their life knows (and experiences) their life the most accurately). However, the anti-choicers/pro-lifers basically "conveniently" ignore this piece of logic and treat it like it doesn't exist when it comes to the right to die. This effectively becomes a matter of the anti-choicer/pro-lifer wanting to uphold their atavistic morals and beliefs rather than applying logic and seeking out the truth. It is not a quest for enlightenment nor truth and peace, but rather a quest for conquest, subjugation, and validation of the status quo.
Therefore, in conclusion, the "not a reliable witness (and thus one cannot self-report or self advocate)" is rather a banal argument often used to discredit, disempower, and/or otherwise relegate another to the status of an infant, unable to make decisions for oneself! Of course, that coupled with other anti-choice policies in tandem only create a hellscape that de-facto forces those who don't wish to live to be trapped in living by denying them the right to die. Which is the situation we face even in the most liberal countries in the world only reserve it for very narrow circumstances, namely terminal illnesses and those with severe, debilitating illnesses, and only after a long, arduous process with many steps and hoops to jump through.
Anyways, the title of this article refers to when CTB preventionists, anti-choicers, pro-lifers often use that line to dismiss, gaslight, or otherwise invalidate one's suffering. More specifically (truncated due to title length), their claim is "you aren't a reliable witness to your own circumstances in which you could accurately predict what the future holds or what is best for you, therefore, you cannot make a [permanent] decision on the right to die!". This is, of course, not only infuriating and insulting towards the recipient (the person who wants their suffering to end, the right to die on their own terms), but also even more nefarious is how they (the anti-choicers, preventionists, etc.) cite how they do not feel comfortable and/or goes against their morals and ethics to allow for voluntary euthanasia, assisted suicide, and medical aid in dying. Therefore, effectively keeping most of us trapped in sentience and suffering, then leaving us to DIY with whatever risky, brutal methods that we find and most likely CTB'ing in gruesome ways, sometimes failing and ending up with permanent damage.
Anyways, in this article I'm going to go into detail and debunk this claim that preventionists, anti-choicers, pro-lifers like to use.
One of the circular logic that pro-lifers like to use is how if one is suicidal then they are irrational and cannot make decisions for themselves, which is far from the truth. It is like an unfalsifiable statement that cannot be disproven because the premise is the same as the conclusion. That is indeed not only a problem that bypasses logic, but also an invalidation tactic used to silence or otherwise dismiss any opposing viewpoints that may be presented.
Then there is a sense of hypocrisy with the argument as well, because outside of the topic of the right to die, many pro-lifers (even in self-help and other motivational topics or content), they often claim that only oneself knows themselves the best (implying that oneself is indeed a reliable witness to one's own life as it's obvious: Only the person living their life knows (and experiences) their life the most accurately). However, the anti-choicers/pro-lifers basically "conveniently" ignore this piece of logic and treat it like it doesn't exist when it comes to the right to die. This effectively becomes a matter of the anti-choicer/pro-lifer wanting to uphold their atavistic morals and beliefs rather than applying logic and seeking out the truth. It is not a quest for enlightenment nor truth and peace, but rather a quest for conquest, subjugation, and validation of the status quo.
Therefore, in conclusion, the "not a reliable witness (and thus one cannot self-report or self advocate)" is rather a banal argument often used to discredit, disempower, and/or otherwise relegate another to the status of an infant, unable to make decisions for oneself! Of course, that coupled with other anti-choice policies in tandem only create a hellscape that de-facto forces those who don't wish to live to be trapped in living by denying them the right to die. Which is the situation we face even in the most liberal countries in the world only reserve it for very narrow circumstances, namely terminal illnesses and those with severe, debilitating illnesses, and only after a long, arduous process with many steps and hoops to jump through.