(Did you really need to create a new thread about this? You could have just revived the one you already stated.)
Concerning the topic, I'm so sorry to hear about the girl! Rest in peace! However, I doubt this will change my viewpoint.
Euthanasia is like all other forms of murders. It's intentional. Some methods of passive euthanasia are just cruel and inhumane; one such as the withdrawal of food and water needed to survive. Access to food and water is a human neccesity, and is declared a natural right. What gives a person the right to let a person dye from hunger and dehydration? Exactly, none. The same goes with the withholding of treatment.
About the oath, I'm sorry, but that's just how society works! Every elected president in the United States, all the cabinet secretaries, the judges on the Supreme Court, and several hundred lawmakers had to take an oath. There's even an oath to be taken for incoming immigrants to become U.S. citizens. Workers have to write their names in allegiance to their particular companies. To sum things up, I find the Hippocratic Oath fully justificable.
Above all, I am split on this issue. It all depends on what you consider moral and immoral. A person has the right to do whatever they want with their lives, but I do not feel assisted suicides are always the answer.


