A
54-year-old British man with an inoperable brain tumor has committed suicide at
a Swiss assisted suicide clinic even though his wife and three daughters
pleaded with him to stay alive.
The
father, Jeffrey Spector, said the following before his death: “My family
disagree, but I believe this is in their best interests. Friends and most of
all my family have urged me not to go through with it. Rather than go late I am
jumping the gun. I call it the least worst option. What I am doing is in the
best long term interests of my family- they disagree with that of course but
they do accept I have my own opinion.”
According
to the Daily Mail, Spector believed that his tumor was a ticking time bomb that
would leave him paralyzed and a burden to his family. However, Spector was not
given a terminal diagnosis; rather he was told that he would become a
quadriplegic as the tumor grew around his spinal cord. He said, “I wanted
control of the final stages of my life. I was a fit and healthy person and my
life has been turned upside down. What started as back ache in 2008 soon
developed into an illness which led me to having to make this most awful
decision.”
Now his
family says they are all in “a state of all consuming grief” but respect his
decision to die on his own terns. They said, “As a family we supported and
respected Jeffrey’s decision 100 per cent.” After his death, his 19-year-old
daughter Courtney said on Facebook, “To all who knew him, my dad sadly passed
away on Friday. I love you so much, my best friend forever & always. Rest
In Peace Daddy x X Thank you to everyone for the lovely messages.”
Spector
traveled to Switzerland for the suicide because it is illegal in Britain.
The British group, The Pro-Life Alliance, criticized the media’s coverage of
the story because they believe it uplifts a culture of death. In a statement
they said, “Another suicide in Zurich has been given publicity in British
media, in flagrant disregard of guidelines aimed against copycat suicides.
Those who want the law against assisted suicide weakened are fir They added,
“Every story of abuse of the elderly or disabled, in care homes or by their own
families, shows us who would be at risk. The “slippery slope” idea,
implying unintentional increase in euthanasia where it is legalized, is well
out of date. An “agenda of death” would be more accurate, when we see what is
happening abroad. Campaigners admit their demands would just be the
start, ‘baby footsteps’. At present the law strongly discourages abuse, but in
truly hard cases no punishment has been imposed. Let us back the disabled,
who overwhelmingly resist a change in the law which at present protects them.”The Independent reports that Lord Falconer plans on reintroducing assisted suicide legislation in the next Parliament since they ran out of time before the general election last year. The campaign director of Care Not Killing, Dr. Peter Saunders, commented on Spector’s suicide and the impact assisted suicide legislation could have on his country. He said, “The vast majority of people with cancer or quadriplegia – which was a risk but not a present reality for this man – do not wish to kill themselves but want support and care to go on living as comfortably as possible. Any change in the law to allow assisted suicide in Britain will inevitably place pressure on vulnerable people to end their lives so as not to be a financial or emotional burden.”m-minded independent people, with genuinely loving families. It is not they who need the protection of the law.”
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