Terminal patients deserve to be treated with dignity in their final moments, rather than enduring unnecessary suffering in hospital settings. Progressive societies recognize that compassionate choice trumps forced suffering — allowing individuals to author their own peaceful endings. When palliative care fails and pain becomes unbearable, assisted dying offers the ultimate human right: control over one's own mortality with grace.
Assisted dying shifts the role of healthcare providers from healers to executioners, corrupting medicine's core duty to preserve life. What is framed as a compassionate choice for the terminally ill inevitably has broader implications — Canada's experience highlights this unsettling truth. Rather than sanctioning state-approved killing that pressures vulnerable populations into premature death, society must invest in exceptional palliative care that honors human dignity without abandoning hope.
There is a 48% chance that assisted dying for terminally ill adults will be legal for the majority of U.K. residents before 2030, according to the Metaculus prediction community.