Hey, I'm not claiming it doesn't happen. And i agree that it is
totally wrong to do so without consent. But it happened maybe ~3 times since it was legalized. Now compare that to the number of incidents where a doctor cuts out the wrong organ or leaves a 10 inch clamp in someone's abdomen.
Also, in the few cases that it
did happen, it was an act of mercy. In at least 2 of those few cases a doctor did it because;
- the patient only had 2 days to live at most.
- was mentally unstable
due to the pain - had no relatives or other legal guardians
The doctor made the call to euthanize the patient because it was pointless to make a person live on like that. I'm not condoning this action, but anyone who can't see why he made that descision is just kidding himself.
Untill you yourself stand next to a person in excruciating pain, screaming and all, and you have the power to make that pain go away, you have no right to judge.
It was even on the news here. As for the not punished part, he was. His liscence was revoked and was prohibited to ever practice again.
In short - just because very few times it goes wrong does that relly mean you must deprive the hundreds of others from the privilige to decide wether they want to live or die?
In the UK and US they can kill a person by no giving them nutrition and stopping the machines (pulling the plug) and having the person die on their own. This is essentially
THE SAME but it involves starvation and excruciating pain. It's quite friggin' hypocritical that people from such countries even have the guts to comment on our practices.



Now which is better? Quick and painless death with a little bit of integrity or die a horrible death in pain beyond imagination?