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Клубове Дирене Регистрация Кой е тук Въпроси Списък Купувам / Продавам 02:49 27.04.24 
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Тема An Update From Terry Pratchett.  
Автор Hellen (...is back.)
Публикувано05.04.10 20:49



...Публикуван в извънредно издание на Discworld Monthly от втори април.

~~~~

Folks,

Thursday. A moment of unexpected peace and quiet which allows me to
get on and do the mail. It's a little bit difficult to do even that.
My mother is dead, but not yet cremated. It is an uneasy period,
feared all down the years, with rituals to ward off evil influences
and keep the soul of the dead safe. It is a time of loss but not
closure, and it makes me almost genetically uneasy.

At least the mail concentrates the mind. The mail mountain has been
huge for years, but since the Dimbleby lecture it has become
Himalayan in nature. A great many of the letters and e-mails from
fans are easy to deal with; it's the new ones that summon my
attention now, like the one here from the elderly lady who says
"when people say that organisations for the disabled are against
assisted suicide, who have they asked? No one has ever asked my
opinion! Personally, I hope for a quick and painless death however
it comes, but I think I am far too old to be dictated to."

Next, I'm sent a URL to rant about the Liverpool Care Pathway (LCP).
The LCP is, in short, a means of allowing the dying to die in
comfort when all medical intervention has failed. It is a tick-box
system, perhaps rightly so, but I spend some time following the
dreary trail of objections from those, who, I swear won't be happy
unless we all die praying. It could be euthanasia by the back door,
you see, or assisted dying by stealth or, for all I know a holiday
caravan for Satan and his little imps.

Of course, this is the Internet, and these people love the Internet
because you don't get challenged and it doesn't matter if you make
things up. You can scare and assert to your heart's content, without
qualification or come back.

To me, innocently, it seems that since it is inevitable that some
people will die in hospital, a formalisation of the process fits
these idiotic bureaucratic times.

The day brightens a little with a genuine crackpot; I don't get as
many of these as some people might think. But this one is rather
nasty. There are about eight pages of very small writing in a tone
that we have all come to know. In so far as it can be read, I will
go to hell because God loves me.

That's funny. What isn't is the fact that several times on the pages
there is a hand drawn picture of what appears to be Jesus, not just
crucified but eviscerated. Rob grabs it and puts it on the fire.

And now there's another one from a former nurse who was appalled to
see elderly ladies being force-fed in a hospice, against their
feeble protestations. I get quite a few letters from former nurses.
Seldom is their purpose to tell me about the wonders of care homes.

This sort of thing is interspersed with, of course, news of snake
oil cures for Alzheimer's, requests for signed book (the full range
of signed Discworld paperbacks is now available HERE) and
invitations to come and talk to schools hundreds of miles away on
the basis that it will only take half an hour of my time. It's
standard fare.

But here is a new one, ostensibly from a doctor, saying that doctors
and hospitals know what they are doing and discussions for things
like assisted dying only complicate the issue. I can't reply,
firstly because he has wisely left of his name and address and also
I would rather prefer that the issue remained complex.

There are three states in the US and four countries in Europe where
some sort of assisted dying is legal. I know something about them,
but not enough. I intend to know a lot more. To the best of my
knowledge the practices, in some at least, usually involve only the
prospective patient and the medical profession. I think that a
properly working society requires more than that and this brings me
to another letter which various people send to me, and which leads
me to believe that there is a kind of person who does this sort of
thing for a hobby. Alison Davis is a lady with a number of
debilitating conditions, all unpleasant. She has been quoted as
saying that many years ago she was so depressed that she might have
opted for assisted suicide had it been available, and now is glad
she did not.

This is regularly hurled forward as an argument against assisted
dying, put forward by people like the Care Not Killing Alliance. In
fact it is not an argument against assisted dying, it is an argument
against unthoughtout and unregulated assisted death. All those I
know who are serious about this believe that assisted dying should
only be available to people who are of a sound mind (perhaps, at
least, rather sounder than the author of the eviscerated Christ
letter) and possessed of a terminal and untreatable condition.
Therefore Ms Davis' request for an assisted death would have been
politely but firmly rejected by the tribunal as proposed despite her
feelings at that time. It has always been part of the thinking in
this matter that the tribunal system would have, as an important
part of its remit, the urging of alternatives as well as proposals
for a cooling off period and whatever else wise people can suggest.

You probably don't know any of this, because there is no actual
debate on the subject given that the other side disappear into the
distance screaming "Slippery slope! Slippery slope!" and generally
doing their best to suggest that we might as well march the elderly
and infirm into the gas chambers.

My anonymous doctor, rather testily, finished "why are you getting
involved in this? You've got, surely, enough money not to have to
worry."

Well, I hope that's true; it certainly isn't true for everyone.
Besides I'm not in it for that reason. I recognise the opposition.
It's the opposition to legalise votes for women, abortion, the
extension of the franchise and once upon a time the opposition to
giving painkillers to women in labour, on the basis that they should
pay for 'the sin of Eve'. Queen Victoria, famously fecund, put a
stop to that evil stupidity. I recognise their tone of voice; it is
the headmaster enraged because the fifth form are being cheeky.
There is no shame because they know they are right even if, in some
cases, they are on the right. Jeers, sneers and smears and, of
course, repeatedly, adhominom arguments are all, therefore, fair
enough.

In every case there was a chorus that forecast, more or less the end
of the world. Well, here we are and if the world is ending it would
appear to be for other reasons. People, you and me, are not trusted.
The right doesn't like us because we don't do what we're told by our
betters, and the left doesn't like us because it secretly thinks we
would be on the right given half a chance and a lottery win. And
both think we should not make our own decisions, because we might
make the wrong ones.

Almost every decision to take one's own life is a bad decision.

Last night our local TV news dealt with the inquest of an elderly
couple who, fearful of their future, had decided to take their own
lives and meticulously gassed themselves. I suspect, given that they
were sensible people who had clearly thought long and hard about
their decision, no tribunal would have prevented that. Though if
they had qualified for an assisted death under a tribunal system,
they would not have had to resort to such desperate measures to end
their lives.

We are presented with a version G.K.Chesterton's game 'Fool the
Prophet'. Governments and religions make rules that the compliant
populous puts up with right up until they decide not to. Suicide and
assisted dying will continue to happen no matter what opponents may
hope and we know that by far the majority of people in this country
are in favour of it being available in the terms I have just
mentioned. Almost every politician pushes that fact aside. I must
say I am rather surprised at Ann Widecombe who, I always thought had
her head screwed on, but it turns out that it is against the thread.
For one thing, she doesn't seem to realise that it is legal to argue
for the legalisation of something that is currently illegal. If this
were not the case, there would be no such thing as politics.

Anyway, on a much lighter note and, oh boy, lighter notes are in
short supply right now, the words "The End" have been written on I
Shall Wear Midnight, but the last draft has been delayed, by what
might be called the circumstances of the human condition.
Nevertheless, we press on.

We've been to see the full-length adaptation of Going Postal on a
big screen at Twentieth Century Fox in London, which was excellent,
and I have to say that the clacks is beautifully done... and although
I promised not to give away too much, there's not long to wait as it
will be on your screens in May, but I don't know the exact date yet
- maybe someone at Sky tosses a coin and makes the decision? Though
please be aware that although we are getting a lot of enquiries,
there will definitely not be a premiere on this occasion, the money
is going to be spent on advertising rather than on booze; preferably
I would have preferred the booze, but marketing departments prefer
advertising. STOP PRESS: Sky have just sent us the new trailer so
click http://sky1.sky.com/going-postal-about and enjoy.

I am also getting lots of enquiries about my sword. Well, the sword
is finished and when we get the pedigree back from the blacksmith we
will write about it more fully.

More news: I was interviewed by Stephen Sackur for BBC HARDtalk. If
you're in the UK you can catch it on the iPlayer at
http://discworldmonthly.co.uk?redir=HARD156

And I have to say that although I thought the Seamstresses pin was
superb, the Thieves' Guild Crest
(http://www.pjsmprints.com/pins/index.html) is actually one of my
favourites, especially if you were one of the lucky ones to get a
glow in the dark variant. A nice touch.

There'll be more from me soon, I hope, once we've navigated our way
back down the mail mountain and returned from Cannes, where me and
Rob are off to in a couple of weeks.

All the best.

Terry Pratchett



Тема Re: An Update From Terry Pratchett.нови [re: Hellen]  
Автор petia8 (...)
Публикувано05.04.10 22:41



Благодаря, Hellen; слагай още такива писма - винаги ми е приятно да науча нещо актуално за Тери Пратчет (макар, че си го превеждам малко трудничко)!
Ето го трейлъра на "Пощоряване" - изглежда доста свежо:


(ако намерите филма някъде, обадете се!)

Мисля, че мисията на Пратчет е много благородна и го подкрепям напълно; доколкото съм чувала,той е първият, който дава такава гласност на деликатната тема за евтаназията (дори се питам дали засягането и в 6-ти сезон на "Доктор Хаус" не е провокирано точно от дебатът на Пратчет, но може би ставам прекалено конспиративна..). Според мен лично, в нашият географски район проблемът с евтаназията и нейното легализиране произлиза не от религиозни, или морални, а от някои чисто практични съображения - а именно - ако е позволена асистирана смърт на болни хора, то колко ли от тях ще бъдат асистирани, без самите те да са го поискали, и ако в крайна сметка, това се случи, как ще бъде доказано, че близките им не са се отървали от тях... Звучи жестоко, но всъщност е възможен вариант, който прави въпросът с озаконяването изключително сложен. Всички знаем какво е състоянието на съдебната система у нас, така че едва ли скоро ще дораснем за такива закони...



Тема Re: An Update From Terry Pratchett.нови [re: petia8]  
Автор glishev (Immoderatus)
Публикувано13.04.10 06:50



Много добре казано. Аз по принцип съм против евтаназията (знам, знам, крепя десницата, истаблишмънта, изсичането на джунглите и избиването на китовете), но и в частност смятам, че особено в България въвеждането й би било равносилно на убийството на много нежелаещи евтаназия хорица.



Тема Re: An Update From Terry Pratchett.нови [re: glishev]  
Автор petia8 (...)
Публикувано13.04.10 12:16



както казах - има такова нещо. Точно затова законът (не само у нас, а навсякъде) трябва да е съвършен; но по принцип всеки трябва да има право да взема решения за живота си сам - дори когато е прекалено немощен и не може саморъчно да осъществи това, от което смята, че има нужда...




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