Shocking: Are Gas Chamber 'Death Pods' Now Coming to Scotland?
Right to Life UK : Nov 11, 2022
LiveAction News
According to the Scottish Daily Express, Nitschke has written to Liam McArthur, the Liberal Democrat MSP who has launched an assisted suicide Bill in Holyrood, urging him to adopt his 'DIY death pods'.
[LiveAction.org] The creator of 'suicide capsules', which gas the user to death, is lobbying members of the Scottish parliament to make use of his machine should Scotland make assisted suicide legal. (Image: Unsplash-Benjamin Lehman)
The capsules, dubbed 'DIY death pods', are called 'Sarco' pods. They were created by former physician, Dr Philip Nitschke, and were launched in Switzerland where assisted suicide is legal. In an interview with SWI swissinfo.ch given in 2021, Nitschke said "It's a 3-D printed capsule, activated from the inside by the person intending to die. The machine can be towed anywhere for the death."
"The person will get into the capsule and lie down ... They will be asked a number of questions and when they have answered, they may press the button inside the capsule activating the mechanism in their own time".
Describing the actual manner of death, Nitschke said "The capsule is sitting on a piece of equipment that will flood the interior with nitrogen, rapidly reducing the oxygen level to 1 per cent from 21 per cent in about 30 seconds. The person will feel a little disoriented and may feel slightly euphoric before they lose consciousness. Death takes place through hypoxia and hypocapnia, oxygen and carbon dioxide deprivation, respectively".
Nitschke is not the first person to invent and promote the use of a suicide machine. In the 1990s, Jack Kevorkian built a "death machine" in his van and helped over 100 people commit suicide using it. In 1999, he was convicted of murder.
'DIY death pods' coming to Scotland?
According to the Scottish Daily Express, Nitschke has written to Liam McArthur, the Liberal Democrat MSP who has launched an assisted suicide Bill in Holyrood, urging him to adopt his 'DIY death pods'.
However, Chief Executive of Care Not Killing, Dr Gordon Macdonald, was deeply alarmed by this proposal saying "Ordinary people will be shocked and appalled at Philip Nitschke's attempt to lobby for the use of his personal gas chamber should Scotland legalise assisted suicide and euthanasia".
He also said that this "shocking" suggestion was "not the most worrying part of the debate" pointing to countries like Canada where assisted suicide can "spin out of control".
He said "You can now have your life ended if you are suffering from mental health conditions such as treatable clinical depression, PTSD, disability, diabetes and a combination of other ailments.
"Indeed last year, 1,700, mainly elderly, people cited loneliness as a reason for their euthanasia, while we have seen applications from disabled people who are struggling to pay for the cost of their care, even a homeless man who no longer wants to live on the streets."
Assisted suicide often fails
While Nitschke suggests that death would take five to ten minutes, physicians from countries that have already made assisted suicide and euthanasia legal tell a different story. Dr Brick Lantz, orthopaedic surgeon and state director of the American Academy of Medical Ethics, emphasised that it is not uncommon for an assisted suicide to go wrong.
"The failures are brutal when someone fails assisted suicide and the failures are not infrequent. In fact, there was one that woke up from a coma after multiple days. There was a nurse at the bedside of one who ended up putting a plastic bag over the patient to kill the patient because they weren't dying"... Subscribe for free to Breaking Christian News here
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