M
MBG
Specialist
- Jul 14, 2023
- 350
What a selfish woman!
Those other Swiss suicide clinics don't offer drop in suicides. You usually have to submit a written application, copy of all your medical and mental health records, be interviewed by their medical doctor wait for a decision and then wait for an opening. All this usually takes months. Did she do all this while deceiving Nitschke into thinking she'd use the Sarco?
Nitschke should make applicants put down a deposit that is refunded (to whoever the user wishes), only after use but forfeited if they back out. (But that probably raises coercion issues similar to the one the other Swiss clinics avoid by requiring a round trip ticket.)
What a can of worms this selfish woman opened! Who chose her, especially for the maiden launch?
Those other Swiss suicide clinics don't offer drop in suicides. You usually have to submit a written application, copy of all your medical and mental health records, be interviewed by their medical doctor wait for a decision and then wait for an opening. All this usually takes months. Did she do all this while deceiving Nitschke into thinking she'd use the Sarco?
Nitschke should make applicants put down a deposit that is refunded (to whoever the user wishes), only after use but forfeited if they back out. (But that probably raises coercion issues similar to the one the other Swiss clinics avoid by requiring a round trip ticket.)
What a can of worms this selfish woman opened! Who chose her, especially for the maiden launch?
US woman due to be first person to die in 'suicide capsule' has died
Jennifer McLaughlin, 55, had been due to use the 'Sarco' - which creators say allows its occupant to push a button and trigger their own death. But its inventor says her planned death was 'postponed'.
www.dailymail.co.uk
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