Jane Stannus

Prepare for the National Suicide Service

A campaigner against the assisted suicide bill in Westminster, UK (Credit: Getty images)

Tragically, British lawmakers voted on Friday in favour of a bill legalising medically assisted dying. Despite all the talk of ‘safeguards’ and determination to make it ‘the best bill it can be’, the horses are out of the stable now. Once assisted suicide is enshrined as a moral good for even the tiniest, most carefully screened subset of the population, pro-euthanasia campaigners have won the war. It’s all over but the shouting.

There will be more battles to come, of course, as the inevitable attempts to expand the subset of those thought to be ‘better off dead’ moves from terminally ill adults, to suffering adults, to ‘mature minors’, to infants and the mentally incompetent. But the most important thing, from the pro-euthanasia standpoint, has been achieved: the shattering of a principle.

Legalised euthanasia promotes a culture of death as a solution to suffering

This is a tragedy for the people of Britain, something that will hurt everyone but especially the most vulnerable.

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