Imagine feeling forced into suicide, not because you wanted to die, but because society failed to give you the support you needed to live.
Now imagine the government framing this as an act of compassion—helping you to die instead of helping you to thrive.
“I’d rather die than be disabled like you.”
Many of us have heard these words from strangers. They are cruel, but they reflect a wider, deeply ingrained belief: that life as a disabled person is unbearable. And this belief fuels the push to legalise assisted suicide.
This isn’t about choice. It’s about coercion. When people don’t get the palliative care, housing, and support they need, the so-called ‘right to die’ becomes a duty to die. That’s not compassion. That’s neglect.
The next reading of the assisted suicide bill is just weeks away. If we don’t act now, we risk irreversible harm.
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