Well I have bad news: they're already killing themselves, and the ones who were converted to not-killing-themselvesness are only there out of guilt! Amazing. We've somehow managed to make their life worse, and they already wanted to kill themselves!
This is not true. They are also there because they feel better, or killing themselves was too much trouble, or for any of several other reasons.
I'm referring specifically to all the people "saved" by the fear of hurting their families. My point is that the argument is stupid, since if you can't convince them to live for themselves, convincing them to live out of guilt is probably the worst possible option. The social contract already breaks down when someone no longer values their life; you can guilt them into continuing to follow the Social Contract, but it's entirely to their loss.
some process for ensuring as far as is feasible that people who elect to die wouldn't have regretted it later.
Well have any of the successful suicides complained about the post-suicide QoL?
Cooling-off periods are one way of doing that, as is psychological evaluation
But that's the point! Society would just say "Oh well no one sane would ever want to kill themselves anyway" and just de facto outlaw euthanasia by making it so there is no situation in which it is acceptable... and since when did we start protecting people from their own decisions? For a liberal capitalist democracy it's the height of hypocrisy. Caveat Emptor. We're allowed to ruin our lives, but not to end them?
The thing with the euthanasia argument is that it requires a person to be of sane mind for it to be a reasonable decision. By definition, someone suffering from a mental illness is not of sane mind. Medication and therapy can actually stop a person from being stuck in that depressed state of mind for at least most of the time, even if it's dipped into occasionally or it takes time to find that medication/therapy combination that works.
See? It's easy to go "Well we can fix it..." And what if we can't? How long does someone have to wait? One month, two, three, six? A year, two years, five? Why not just demand we never die and get it over with, don't just draw the process out.
but when someone can simply grab a gun and avoid the entire process, any attempts to modulate that process are moot, at least in that particular case.
Here's the thing: I'm actually not such a huge fan of guns. I actually don't like them very much (I do actually want one, as I've always wanted to hunt, but while that's firmly on my todolist, it's behind "become a megamillionaire and own my own summer home upstate") and agree with your premise, that increased gun control would lead to fewer suicides and that this would generally be a Good Thing
TM. But I also passionately believe that someone's right to life includes the right to end it without having to submit to a bunch of bureaucrats or anyone else who couldn't be bothered with you or your problems until you decided that you'd had quite enough of them yourself.
What if the suicidal person has children, hmm?
Depends. Are they grown? If they're out of the house, by all means. You did your job. Congratulations. Here's a celebratory game of russian roulette to celebrate.
Should they just forget about their own children's feelings and state of the mind and kill themselves anyway, because apparently it's their 5-year old kid's fault that they are suicidal?
I didn't say that, but parents have obligations. That said...
Why is running away and abandoning your child not okay, but you think killing yourself when you have children is?
Actually, running away
is already totally ok! It's called adoption! Fostercare! You can drop off unwanted babies at the hospital! All you need to say "I can't handle this." And hell, you may even be doing them a favor: if you're a decent person and you make sure your kid is adopted by a family that could raise them much better than you, I think you've earned the right to go off and do whatever. And if you're not such a decent person, then it's probably for the better that your kid was taken by children's services anyway...
And no, kids don't owe their parents because their parents gave them life, they owe them because their parents spent a fuckton of time, effort, and money just so they could have a decent life, while getting nothing in return.
I'ma slap a big ole [Citation needed] on this and end it with "Speak for yourself."
Yes, it makes children have to "grow up" sooner than is healthy, but what you are suggesting is not healthy.
It feels weird to have wierd on my side of an argument for some reason. Oh well, I'm not complaining.
Our efforts with mental health should be as disconnected as possible from gun violence incidents, since if it is I'm about 100% confident it will only lead to making treatment of mental illness even more criminalized and even more inhumane.
That's an excellent point I hadn't even considered. Fuck. Like we needed more
One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest in the world.