What's weird is that we're constantly hearing about all manner of things that can knock you off in the blink of an eye, from Tylenol to "safe and effective" vaccines to a whiff of fentanyl powder. And here they have to resort to a pillow? Is that supposed to make sense?
I have extraordinary reservations against suicide, but everyone's life is their own. In that case, what's wrong with a few hits of morphine? That's just a matter of how many, and will definitely take you out in a way you won't even notice.
Final bizarre twist: I thought pillows were supposed to muffle the screams of the victim. If they don't, I'll just... uh... note that down.
It's that time of year ghost stories get shared. There's one on r/highstrangeness from about a year ago asking people that work in the medical field to tell true ghost stories. This shit in this article makes me think that woman is going to haunt the shit out of that place, and I'll cheer her on.
"Unfortunately for Alexina, her death was anything but peaceful. After a cocktail of drugs failed to end her life, European media outlet Le Soir, reported that Alexina was suffocated with a pillow by nurses while her loved ones in another room heard her screams."
I just told you. You're in denial if you think that a botched attempt at murder without violence (the needle), which is what euthanasia is, didn't lead to murder with violence (the pillow).
Even taking your position as a given that it's not murder to kill someone who wants to be killed, the fact that they were in that position in the first place to botch it up, or that the person changed their mind at the last minute, is a direct result of euthanasia.
It's a connected as a ship sinking at sea instead of the harbor, because that's what ships are for, going to sea.
What's weird is that we're constantly hearing about all manner of things that can knock you off in the blink of an eye, from Tylenol to "safe and effective" vaccines to a whiff of fentanyl powder. And here they have to resort to a pillow? Is that supposed to make sense?
I have extraordinary reservations against suicide, but everyone's life is their own. In that case, what's wrong with a few hits of morphine? That's just a matter of how many, and will definitely take you out in a way you won't even notice.
Final bizarre twist: I thought pillows were supposed to muffle the screams of the victim. If they don't, I'll just... uh... note that down.
totally asking for a friend i assume
Um, yes. He or she is, uh... writing a novel.
Assisted suicide sounds horrifying...
"In fact, the lungs may fill with fluid, causing the patient to essentially drown while he or she is paralyzed."
What a fucking circus.
It's that time of year ghost stories get shared. There's one on r/highstrangeness from about a year ago asking people that work in the medical field to tell true ghost stories. This shit in this article makes me think that woman is going to haunt the shit out of that place, and I'll cheer her on.
Why not use nitrogen, CO, or fentanyl?
.....and No....it wasn't My Pillow. ___ Mike Lindell
The authorities have opened a murder investigation so this has nothing to to with legal assisted suicide.
"Unfortunately for Alexina, her death was anything but peaceful. After a cocktail of drugs failed to end her life, European media outlet Le Soir, reported that Alexina was suffocated with a pillow by nurses while her loved ones in another room heard her screams."
Oh?
Yes, that's why it's being investigated as murder.
Denial isn't just a river in Egypt.
What point are you trying to make?
I just told you. You're in denial if you think that a botched attempt at murder without violence (the needle), which is what euthanasia is, didn't lead to murder with violence (the pillow).
Even taking your position as a given that it's not murder to kill someone who wants to be killed, the fact that they were in that position in the first place to botch it up, or that the person changed their mind at the last minute, is a direct result of euthanasia.
It's a connected as a ship sinking at sea instead of the harbor, because that's what ships are for, going to sea.