sixtyandaquarter
Member
The idea has been around for a long time, if you cause the death of someone else it is murder. Courts and society have separated murder into various degrees, here in the U.S. for example there are more than one degrees for murder alone.
Murder one, murder in the first degree, a deliberate and planned execution of someone's life. To go and decide, ahead of time, to kill someone. To execute a plan, and bring that person's life to an end. A premeditated and clear headed decision, that is with one's own faculties, to kill. While convoluted by state laws, religious laws, and all sorts of other laws around the world, it all boils down to the death of one person, by the willful and purposeful hand of another.
Now there's second degree murder, which is with malice - but more of a spur of the moment deal. You went not just to harm someone, but to kill them, without the need of a plan. You got angry, thought for a moment - hey, sounded like a good idea, you executed them, and boom. End of story.
And just so no one get's confused - cause I've seen it, manslaughter is separated from murder by the absence of both MALICE and PLANNING. You can not decide to kill someone, justify it without malice sincerely, and call it manslaughter - it doesn't work that way.
The question is, is a mercy killing murder?
But let's decide what a "mercy killing" is. A mercy killing is the act of ending's one life, in the hopes of putting to end a suffering, that is believed to untreatable and never ending, that would make life cruel. The idea being, someone in such a state that being forced to live itself would be a cruel and unusual punishment. It is euthanasia.
There's degrees here to.Voluntary Euthanasia, which is when euthanasia has informed consent from the patient. Not to be confused with "involuntary euthanasia", which is when the informed consent of the patient is not given. This is like vet's who put animals too sleep - the animal didn't understand, and agree, so that would be involuntary euthanasia. Much like an "angel of mercy/death" killer, or the family and doctors who "pull the plug" on coma patients. Dr. Kevorkian on the other hand, however, would be voluntary euthanasia, since the patience and he had an understand and the same goal.
Hell, some even - similar to the stated "angel of mercy/death", that what they were doing was for the good of the patient, the family - and society. By killing criminals, similar to the death penalty, and claimed it as a mercy killing.
It's been argued, non stop over time. What constitutes MURDER and what constitutes MERCY.
Assuming the following examples all ended the death of the theoretical patient by another:
If a man is sick, but can still live his life with drugs and treatment - is it murder?
If the drugs were against his faith, or made him ill - is it murder?
Is it just his shame and pride that should die, to let him live his life?
If a woman is clinically brain dead, and her family wish to move on - is it murder?
What if they simply can't afford to keep her alive?
If a dog has rabies, and is a danger - is it murder?
What about a dog who has killed?
What about a human who has?
If a man is in constant pain, is it murder?
If a man is paralyzed from the neck down, and must live off others?
What if he is unable to communicate - his brain lives but his body is unresponsive?
When is mercy an acceptable reason to end a life? And when is it murder?
Murder one, murder in the first degree, a deliberate and planned execution of someone's life. To go and decide, ahead of time, to kill someone. To execute a plan, and bring that person's life to an end. A premeditated and clear headed decision, that is with one's own faculties, to kill. While convoluted by state laws, religious laws, and all sorts of other laws around the world, it all boils down to the death of one person, by the willful and purposeful hand of another.
Now there's second degree murder, which is with malice - but more of a spur of the moment deal. You went not just to harm someone, but to kill them, without the need of a plan. You got angry, thought for a moment - hey, sounded like a good idea, you executed them, and boom. End of story.
And just so no one get's confused - cause I've seen it, manslaughter is separated from murder by the absence of both MALICE and PLANNING. You can not decide to kill someone, justify it without malice sincerely, and call it manslaughter - it doesn't work that way.
The question is, is a mercy killing murder?
But let's decide what a "mercy killing" is. A mercy killing is the act of ending's one life, in the hopes of putting to end a suffering, that is believed to untreatable and never ending, that would make life cruel. The idea being, someone in such a state that being forced to live itself would be a cruel and unusual punishment. It is euthanasia.
There's degrees here to.Voluntary Euthanasia, which is when euthanasia has informed consent from the patient. Not to be confused with "involuntary euthanasia", which is when the informed consent of the patient is not given. This is like vet's who put animals too sleep - the animal didn't understand, and agree, so that would be involuntary euthanasia. Much like an "angel of mercy/death" killer, or the family and doctors who "pull the plug" on coma patients. Dr. Kevorkian on the other hand, however, would be voluntary euthanasia, since the patience and he had an understand and the same goal.
Hell, some even - similar to the stated "angel of mercy/death", that what they were doing was for the good of the patient, the family - and society. By killing criminals, similar to the death penalty, and claimed it as a mercy killing.
It's been argued, non stop over time. What constitutes MURDER and what constitutes MERCY.
Assuming the following examples all ended the death of the theoretical patient by another:
If a man is sick, but can still live his life with drugs and treatment - is it murder?
If the drugs were against his faith, or made him ill - is it murder?
Is it just his shame and pride that should die, to let him live his life?
If a woman is clinically brain dead, and her family wish to move on - is it murder?
What if they simply can't afford to keep her alive?
If a dog has rabies, and is a danger - is it murder?
What about a dog who has killed?
What about a human who has?
If a man is in constant pain, is it murder?
If a man is paralyzed from the neck down, and must live off others?
What if he is unable to communicate - his brain lives but his body is unresponsive?
When is mercy an acceptable reason to end a life? And when is it murder?