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whitefeather

whitefeather

Thank the gods for Death
Apr 23, 2020
518
March 8, 2021

March 8, 2021​

Liberation France – Profile on Philip Nitschke​

Julie Brafman, Liberation

The Australian Dr Philip Nitschke, the head of the global pro-euthanasia group Exit International, is the first doctor to legally assist someone to die.

He has also just completed his latest creation: a futuristic capsule that makes it possible to finish without medical assistance.

Perhaps he would have remained an unknown doctor at the hospital in Darwin, a small Australian capital that turns its back on the desert, if history had not interfered.

Still, today, Philip Nitschke, 73, is an active and controversial pro-euthanasia and assisted suicide figure at the head of Exit International.

Philip Nitschke in Liberation

He is the one the press have nicknamed "Doctor Death" – he is a man with white hair, pair of suspenders and round glasses, both creator of machines for the afterlife and thinker of the ultimate.

Convinced, according to a phrase he loves, that life is a gift that must be returned, he pleads that everyone, regardless of their state of health, can make the choice of a "good death".

Liberation first met the Australian in a cafe in Paris in October 2019, just after the wave of searches of activists from the French association Ultime Liberté and the seizure of Nembutal, a powerful barbiturate.

"There has never been a raid on this scale. Even in England, Canada or New Zealand, "he worried.

"In France, euthanasia is a subject on which there is absolutely no progress, it is very surprising. No doubt the influence of the Church … "

This inexhaustible and passionate man was once a taxi driver, tram driver, ranger in a national park before becoming … the first doctor to legally help someone die.

We have to go back to 1995. At the time, the Parliament of the Northern Territory authorized euthanasia under strict supervision for patients suffering from an incurable disease.

Despite fierce opposition from the Church and part of the medical profession, the law passed in extremis: 13 votes to 12.

Philip Nitschke was one of the leaders of the campaign. "I was told, since you wanted this law, go ahead, use it!"

This is what he did on September 22, 1996.

Bob Dent, a former carpenter, suffering from prostate cancer, ate one last ham sandwich and then sat down in front of a Toshiba big computer, connected to a needle. A series of questions appeared.

Do you understand that if you continue to the last screen and press the 'yes' button, you will receive a lethal dose of drugs leading to death?

Are you sure you understand that if you continue and press 'yes' on the next screen, you will die?


With one final click, he received a lethal dose of Nembutal.

It was Philip Nitschke who came up with the machine – dubbed "Deliverance" and now on display at the Science Museum in London – because he didn't want to "just give an injection" and "invade the personal space" of his patient.

Everyone must be the sole master of their own destiny, he believes.

Philip's work follows in the legacy of Jack Kevorkian, a Michigan doctor who helped a dozen people die (and ended up in prison), using a device called Thanatron.

But in Australia, only three other patients saw the black screen of the Toshiba, crossed out with the word "Exit" because, in 1997, the Federal Government backpedaled.

"People kept coming to me asking how to get Nembutal," says Philip Nitschke.

In particular this Frenchwoman, Lisette Nigot, who had been a professor at the University of West Australia. Her vision of things upset all that went before.

She had "decided to die in four years," Why he asked. "Because I'll be 80 and it's the right time to die."

At first, Philip Nitschke did not take her seriously, but she returned the following year with the same request.

"But why Lisette, you are not sick. Why don't you go write a book or why don't you go on a cruise?" She said "why don't you mind your own business?"

"She replied that she was not there for a sermon but for information, that I was not a judge and that I could not claim the right to choose who should live or die. And she was right!"

When he established Exit International in 1997 – "a public not-for-profit company with an online support base of over 30,000 people worldwide" – he made it a global struggle: every sane adult over a certain age should have the means to end his life when he wants to and whatever his reasons.

According to him, the ideal would be to buy a vial of Nembutal, store it for many years, "just in case", as "a safety net".

In his "best-seller", The Peaceful Pill Handbook, written with his wife Fiona Stewart and translated into several languages, he details fifteen other methods, depending on their degree of reliability and serenity, to end it.

A sort of Geo Trouvetou de la mort, it even offers tools of its own design such as an "exit bag", diffusing inert gases.

This is not to the taste of its detractors, who even include among them supporters of the right to die with dignity who accuse it of "glamourizing" or of encouraging suicide, by giving easier access to lethal means. . And inevitably, trouble quickly arrived …

In 2014, a depressed 45-year-old man, suspected of having killed his wife, ended his life by taking Nembutal.

The case caused a scandal in Australia. "I was considered a public danger and my doctor's license was taken away," said Philip Nitschke.

Finally, the justice system forbade me to speak publicly euthanasia.

In a theatrical movement, he burned his license, taking Twitter as a witness, and went to Switzerland, before settling in the Netherlands.

Today, while the pandemic has put a halt to the pro-euthanasia lectures he gives around the world, he continues the fight online, through his studio in Amsterdam.

Nitschke has just completed his last – and more resounding – creation which will be used in Switzerland (where assisted suicide is authorized), from next summer, he hopes.

The "Sarco" is a futuristic-designed, 3D-printed coffin that takes you to eternal sleep thanks to the decrease in the oxygen level.

Transportable, it will allow a person to choose the landscape of their choice before settling down for a final trip.

Death in the meadow, by the lake and it is "quick, soothing and elegant," boasts Philip Nitschke, indicating that there is "already a long waiting list."

Beyond that, on the sensationalist side, it is above all a matter of removing this moment from any medical framework.

Would he ever use his own capsule? He doesn't know, he just wants "the choice".
 
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SuicidalSymphonies

SuicidalSymphonies

I think I'll take a dirt nap.
Oct 13, 2019
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A true hero.
 
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EmbraceOfTheVoid

EmbraceOfTheVoid

Part Time NEET - Full Time Suicidal
Mar 29, 2020
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I don't see him as a humanitarian but I'm sure he has convinced himself that he is one. I also don't see him as pro-choice, his products are aimed to assist old people with a peaceful death or the terminally ill. If he was a humanitarian and a pro choice advocate then the information in the PPH would be freely available to everyone.
 
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SuicidalSymphonies

SuicidalSymphonies

I think I'll take a dirt nap.
Oct 13, 2019
1,028
I don't see him as a humanitarian but I'm sure he has convinced himself that he is one. I also don't see him as pro-choice, his products are aimed to assist old people with a peaceful death or the terminally ill. If he was a humanitarian and a pro choice advocate then the information in the PPH would be freely available to everyone.
Damn, is that really the case? Guess I better age up real quick. That's really too bad. People of all ages want a peaceful departure. Elderly are not the only people who suffer. Grrrrr.

Things like this giving me hope and then disappointing me. Happens all the time!!!
 
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EmbraceOfTheVoid

EmbraceOfTheVoid

Part Time NEET - Full Time Suicidal
Mar 29, 2020
689
Damn, is that really the case? Guess I better age up real quick. That's really too bad. People of all ages want a peaceful departure. Elderly are not the only people who suffer. Grrrrr.

Things like this giving me hope and then disappointing me. Happens all the time!!!
The PPH and access to their forums is behind a paywall as well as age restricted. From what little I know about him it seems like he's still profoundly ignorant to the idea that people with mental issues can have a far worse quality of life than those who are old, terminally ill, or have chronic physical pain conditions.
 
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NotHuman

NotHuman

Member
Jul 8, 2018
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Don't know too much about him, but I wouldn't be surprised to learn that the reasons the service is limited to the elderly and terminally ill are entirely political.

It's no secret that he's already faced extreme pressure everywhere he's gone with enemies constantly on the lookout for the slightest thing they could blow up into a scandal to prove once and for all that assisted suicide is inherently evil and a slippery slope. A beloved celebrity going through a messy divorce or a rape victim or a child using these services would be red meat for his detractors, but even the most starry-eyed pro-lifer would struggle to defend prolonging the suffering of someone with one foot in the grave.

I think the smartest approach for an underdog issue with politically powerful opponents is gradual and incremental gains. First implement the process and let people check opponents' rhetoric against the reality for themselves, then explore expansion once acceptance is achieved. The alternative would be giving critics enough ammunition early on to smother it in the nest.
 
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it's_all_a_game

it's_all_a_game

I remember...death in the afternoon...
Nov 7, 2020
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Philip supports the right of all to die; he only focuses on the elderly & terminally ill for PR reasons. He even supported the right of a 27 year old mentally ill man in Canada to die.
 
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Meretlein

Meretlein

Moderator
Feb 15, 2019
1,199
I don't see him as a humanitarian but I'm sure he has convinced himself that he is one. I also don't see him as pro-choice, his products are aimed to assist old people with a peaceful death or the terminally ill. If he was a humanitarian and a pro choice advocate then the information in the PPH would be freely available to everyone.

I saw an interview in which he said he believed all adults should have a right to death but that his enthusiasm was curbed by other members of Exit. I sympathize with restricting access to people over than 50. Exit International has faced many attempts by the Australian government to throttle it, from banning his books to blocking his website. In addition to government attempts to shut him down, they are continually harassed, often by Christians or crypto Christians who believe that no one has the right to die.

If Exit International was open to all adults, I don't think it would exist today. The world isn't ready for it.
 
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