Friday, October 25, 2019
Euthanasia And The Robert Latimer Case :: Free Euthanasia Essay
 Euthanasia and the Robert Latimer Case    Euthanasia is undoubtedly an issue that plagues the minds of those living with  children or adults who are severely disabled. Rarely is one found to have a ââ¬Ë  neutral' outlook upon it; that is, a side must be chosen, for or against. It is  too delicate a topic to be ââ¬Ëin the middle' about. Over the years, cases  involving euthanasia have caused massive controversies as to whether or not it  is feasible to take the life of another human being in order to ââ¬Ëput them out of  their misery'. One of the strong questions raised in my mind is: Does the killer  really want to put the victim out of their misery? Or is it the killer who is  under the extreme pressures of living with the victim, and is it their own  lifestyle that they are truly fed up with?    In the Robert Latimer case, as in many other cases of euthanasia, it can never  be proven whether or not Latimer killed his young daughter Tracy to ââ¬Ësave' her,  or to save himself. While I have never experienced living with someone who is  severely disabled, I have had the chance to discuss the issue with many friends  and associates. From what I have learned, it is, indeed, an extremely tough  matter to deal with. While no-one I have spoken to has been suicidal over the  matter, they have seen the true pain and misery that some severely disabled  individuals are forced to deal with every day of their lives. Still, many agree  with myself on the point that a human life is just that, a human life; and that  everyone alive has the right to live, no matter whether or not it is under  tougher circumstances than another person. Nobody has the right to take the life  of another person, and technically, the law states that nobody has the right to  take their own life as well.    A severely disabled person may have to deal with much pain in their lives, but  they are entitled to the right of simply enjoying being alive, and denying them  that right would be an infringement upon their freedom. Latimer should have  taken the law into deeper consideration before taking his daughters life. He may  have seen the suffering that she went through, but it is evident that he had  some sort of strange love for his daughter. Indeed, he did want ââ¬Ëwhat was best'  for Tracy, but possibly what he was after was what he thought was best. He  valued her rights as his daughter, unfortunately he did not value her rights as    					    
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