kava

joined 1 year ago
[–] kava 34 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (8 children)

Never say anything you aren't willing to stand behind. Because it won't go away. And with authoritarian regimes coming to power... you gotta be cognizant of the potential consequences

But generally, I agree with you. The further we get away from groupthink the better we are for it. When we self-censor out of fear of disapproval we are perpetuating the cycle and making it more likely the next person doesn't speak their mind.

Just because everyone believes something is right, does not mean it is. The majority has been wrong in the past and it will be wrong in the future.

[–] kava 1 points 4 days ago

am i mistaken? are we on a website for discussion in a thread about the topic of conversation or are we in a hospice ward for terminal cancer patients?

i haven't made a single reply to someone unsolicited in this thread. again, you have nothing meaningful to say so you default to vague pearl clutching.

i will absolutely speak about abortion to someone if the topic of conversation is abortion. i will tell someone how i feel- if it is solicited. i support abortion, personally. i spent a good hour arguing with some religious people at an anti-abortion booth on my campus when i was in college.

[–] kava 4 points 4 days ago (4 children)

I think the smart move, from Trump, would be to announce he supports public healthcare. That the American people have spoken and bla bla bla, he's the voice of the people. He would immediately jump 15 points in popularity.

of course a lot of people would lose money and there's an ingrained power structure that will fight that tooth and nail. but Trump has dismantled and taken over powerful existing power structures before (ie the GOP).

this would help him if he really does want to radically change the country into a psuedo-fascist oligarchy thing which seems to be Musk's and Thiel's goal

[–] kava 5 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Those just glorify the military industrial complex

watching a soldier's legs get blown up by a drone with 3 dead soldiers around him pick up his rifle and shoot himself in the head isn't really what I would call a show of glory

[–] kava 10 points 4 days ago (2 children)

i feel privileged to be able to see war footage. this hasn't really been possible for most of human history. you can look and see the brutality of war and what it really means to "die for your country"

i don't agree with censoring war videos. i'm glad that reddit abstains from this. i'm certain they will be banning it in the future. in think in near future we will not get any media outside of a giant firewall much like China

[–] kava 1 points 4 days ago (2 children)

ok please enlighten me Freud. can you show me where I implied that my opinion should be law and what my biases are? besides the potential ones I mentioned such as potential religious indoctrination from growing up catholic and the fact that i may think differently should i be in that position. what other ones are impacting my thinking?

[–] kava 0 points 4 days ago (4 children)

MAID is the ultimate expression of bodily autonomy

shooting yourself in the head is the ultimate expression of bodily autonomy.

an institutionalized system of euthanasia is something else entirely. you are requesting that the government/healthcare institution kill you.

Except you are not. You haven’t actually discussed MAID itself other than saying it generally makes you feel icky

i've written near a dozen comments about this at this point. i haven't mentioned eugenics once except to make the comparison of the progressive appearance in the 1900s. you write yet don't read

Can you explain why you’re against MAID without referring to eugenics or any other historical issue?

read any of my dozen comments where i discuss this with people who actually address the conversation instead of nitpick on some imaginary offense. my primary concerns are two fold

  1. a system of institutionalized killing is necessarily bound to our institutions. it does not take much imagination to come up with scenarios where there are perverse incentives for the people involved to encourage or coerce people into agreeing to being euthanized. ever heard "there is no ethical consumption under capitalism"? it's because everything is bound up in profit-seeking and exploitation. whatever we bring into our society will be infected by this. are you prepared for there to be private healthcare practices (aka private businesses) encouraging people to kill themselves for financial gain?

  2. this is an ideological shift from "treating life as sacred" to "treating life as expendable" and that will come with consequences down the road. i believe when we as a society stop viewing life as sacred this will inevitably have knock-off effects down the road that result in a lack of human dignity. everything we do this decade determines what we will do in the next decade. you destigmatize something now and you shift the bounds of acceptable conversation in the future. we are playing with fire here so I think it's wise to tread carefully

[–] kava 0 points 4 days ago

First off, using the word “execution” is pretty loaded. I just wanted to put that out there, especially because you’re, “not trying to tell anyone they’re wrong.”

well that's one of the things i take issue with. the ideological approach we take to this. we start using nice sound names and acronyms - euphemisms- and it can sort of hide what we are doing. the words we use matter. unrelated tangent- they've done a study in the US. you ask people whether or not they support a "death tax" and a majority will say of course not. you ask them whether they support an "inheritance tax" and all of a sudden support is flipped. do you see what I mean? the language matters.

and the fact that everyone that we are coming up with these acronyms like "MAID" (which is new to me, by the way. I've only ever heard doctor assisted suicide up until this point) i think shows that as a society we are trying to avoid some of the conversation about this. euphemisms disguise what we are really doing and they disguise what we really feel. this may be for good intentions (empathy or what have you) but road to hell is paved with good intentions

It’s not just on the individual who is making this decision, but health care professionals who use their professional opinion on the mental state of the individual. If a person is suicidal, generally a mental health care professional is involved.

and doctors in the past have cleared the compulsory sterilization of individuals in Canada (and many other places). i have immediate family members who are doctors. some of the beliefs they hold would offend many in this thread. just because they went through medical school and trained and have above average intelligence- does not mean they will necessarily be on the right side of history.

I think these are all good reasons to be skeptical, but I also don’t think they’re reasons to completely prevent access.

i understand this. someone is suffering in pain in a way that life is unlivable. they are terminal so they are going to die anyway. I would not be able to deny them death if they is what they wanted. I wouldn't. So I'm not even saying we shouldn't have this policy. I just think if we do implement it, it needs to be limited to those types of cases specifically. Once we start moving into people who aren't terminal and people who are suffering from mental health exclusively, I think we would have opened a box we can't close.

especially because you’re, “not trying to tell anyone they’re wrong.”

i'm honest to God just trying to look into this at a deeper level. I try to be civil, I try to be empathetic with those who have suffering loved ones (I have also had suffering loved ones, in fact I have some going through something right now). I'm amazed at the level of response I've gotten to my off-hand comment. I've never gotten a fraction of the response on any lemmy comment I've written before.

I fear we are not ready as a society for this. that this may open the door for horrific consequences further down the road.

[–] kava 6 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (1 children)

my tip is just to greet people loudly with a smile. say good morning, talk about weather, whatever

i've found that most people will do as you say. just try and look away and go about their day. some people can even look mean with a face that is not inviting at all.

but if you say hi in a friendly way one day, they look at you surprised a mutter something back.

the next time you see them, they have a smile on their face and they greet you more warmly.

really this is the thing about human connection. someone has to bridge that gap. and it's not hard to do

[–] kava 0 points 5 days ago

It’s not like these perverse incentives don’t exist without MAID

sure but it doesn't take too much imagination to come up with some dystopian futures where human life is not treated with the sanctity that we are used to

i think maybe that's my key objection here. it uncorks this wine bottle that cannot be resealed. we are forever fundamentally changing our relationship with death and destigmatizing the act of snuffing out a life.

i think it's something most people have not really put much thought into the long term implications of this ideological shift

[–] kava -2 points 5 days ago (6 children)

… by comparing eugenics and MAID

Definition of compare: To consider or describe as similar, equal, or analogous; liken.

Nowhere did I say eugenics is similar, equal or analogous to euthanasia. You can go ahead and read the comments again, you won't find it.

What we are comparing is the societal perception of eugenics in the early 1900s and the perception of euthanasia now.

Why did you specifically pick eugenics as an example only to then say it isn’t like MAID?

To make the point that just because something seems progressive on its face doesn't necessarily mean it will stand the test of time. It is an example. I think it's a good example because of how relatively horrible eugenics seems today relative to how positively it was seen in the past. Perhaps you could find other examples, I'd be happy to hear them.

All I'm saying about euthanasia/assisted suicide/whatever acronym you wanna give it- is that it must be judged on its own merits outside of groupthink. That's what I'm attempting to do here, discuss the idea on its own merits. I think that's what you actually have an issue with, not the feigned pearl clutching about some comparison.

[–] kava -2 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (8 children)

I'm not comparing eugenics with euthanasia. I'm comparing the perception of what "progressive" meant back then to right now.

The point I'm trying to make is that just because something is considered progressive today does not mean it won't be considered barbaric tomorrow. This is why I don't immediately support something just because it appears to have a veneer of idealism. I think it through carefully.

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