It is always interesting to watch the debates that roil a nation. So far as I can see, the current debate in parliament mainly consists of trying to work out whether the NHS is competent enough to kill people or not. This week one of our greatest Home Office ministers – Jess Phillips MP – was asked about the question of ‘assisted dying’. She said that, naturally, she is in favour of this ‘progressive’ policy. But one qualm held back her support. In Phillips’s estimation the NHS is ‘not in a fit enough state’ at present to kill patients on demand.
Many people whose family members have gone through the NHS might beg to differ with Phillips on this point. In my own observation, as well as the evidence of neglect on care wards, cancer waiting times and much more, the NHS strikes me as being exceptionally well-placed to kill its patients.
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