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A British Columbia Supreme Court judge has declared Canada's laws against physician-assisted suicide unconstitutional. In a 395-page ruling released Friday, Justice Lynn Smith called the law discriminatory. In her judgment, Smith speaks directly to the situation faced by Gloria Taylor, a B.C. woman with ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig's disease, who was one of five plaintiffs seeking to overturn the legislation. Suicide itself is not illegal, and therefore, Smith ruled, the law against assisted suicide contravenes Section 15 of the Charter, which guarantees equality, because it denies physically disabled people like Taylor the same rights as able-bodied people who can take their own lives. "The impact of that distinction is felt particularly acutely by persons such as Ms. Taylor, who are grievously and irremediably ill, physically disabled or soon to become so, mentally competent and who wish to have some control over their circumstances at the end of their lives," Smith writes. "The distinction is discriminatory … because it perpetuates disadvantage."
Smith also says the law deprives both people like Taylor and those who try to help them of the right to life and liberty guaranteed under Section 7 of the Charter. She argues the legislation could force a person to take their life sooner than they want to in order to kill themselves while still physically capable.
And Smith says the risk of incarceration denies the right of freedom to relatives who assist by taking their loved ones to jurisdictions where physician-assisted suicide is legal.
The impact of the ruling will not be immediate. Smith has suspended the declaration of invalidity for one year in order to give Parliament time to take whatever steps it sees fit to draft and consider new legislation. But in the meantime, Smith says Taylor must have a constitutional exception to seek physician-assisted suicide if she chooses to end her life.
CBC News
Smith's ruling also addresses the risks raised by defendants in the case: "For example relating to the patients' ability to make well-informed decisions and their freedom from coercion or undue influence, and to physicians' ability to assess patients' capacity and voluntariness."
"The evidence shows that risks exist," she wrote. "But that they can be very largely avoided through carefully designed, well-monitored safeguards."
At the end of the decision, Smith also stipulates that her ruling only apply to "competent, fully informed, non-ambivalent adult persons who personally (not through a substituted decision-maker) request physician-assisted death, are free from coercion and undue influence and are not clinically depressed."
Originally posted by VoidHawk
This is a real tough nut for me because of the possibility of coercion by relatives and also THE STATE. However I do think the individual should have the right to say they've had enough and want to end it. It must be hell on earth for some people who're stuck in a pain racked body thats never going to get better.
for the judge.
Originally posted by Kharron
reply to post by knoledgeispower
I support euthanasia, but more than that I support human rights, whatever they may be. It's far more likely for me to side with the people who are making decisions about their own lives, on any matter, than with any organization or entity that tries to enforce its own ideas onto people.
But this made me wonder -- if there really is a world depopulation agenda, why won't they just let people die willingly if they wish to?
Khar
But this made me wonder -- if there really is a world depopulation agenda, why won't they just let people die willingly if they wish to?
They can't make it look like they have a world depopulation agenda. If it looks like they are fighting against things like this then no one is going to think that they are secretly smiling inside and helping push it their way. They have to appear to be trying to be conflicted about it but they will "cave into pressure" and allow for laws like this. Distract you with this hand over here while the other hand reaches into your pocket.