Well I guess I have seen what the logical extreme of libertarainism is. The only reason someone should be allowed to end their life is in the case of extreme health issues.
I'm literally working off of everyone's favorite authoritarian philosopher:
Rousseau Thomas Hobbes. Hobbes wanted you to obey the government in all circumstances, and that the very definition of moral was what the Sovereign wanted. But even Hobbes had a catch: if your life is under threat, then you are released from your obligations because all of your obligations ultimately flow from the state protecting your life in exchange for all the crap we let it do. When it fails that in a real and immediate way, the law is gone. But when you don't value your life? Then the social contract ceases to matter. Poof. Hobbes laughs and leaves with a twirl of his hat. Heand his twin Pain leave the premises.
I bring up the example of the five year old child because you were saying that your relatives *deserve* immense pain and trauma if you're suicidal because they didn't help enough. Because a tiny kid who just barely understands what death even is would *totally* know how to help you.
My point is that your relatives don't deserve shit. Your kid deserves a minimum level of respect, but given that adoption exists there are ways around that; after all, not everyone does agree to have children, but it still happens. Unplanned pregnancies, people who refuse to get abortions but don't want to raise a child, etc.
I disagree that giving your child to foster care or an orphanage is always okay. Once you have a child, it is your responsibility, that you cannot back out of. It is incredibly selfish to give your child trauma because you don't feel quite ready yet to accept the consequences of the thing that *you* created. If you physically cannot care for the child, in that if they continued to live with you they would have an even worse life than if they were in an orphanage, then giving them away is somewhat justified. But when you are doing it just to restore your own personal freedom it is not okay, when you consider the effect it would have on the child.
Talking about what your responsibilities "should" be is silly. Yes, in ideal circumstances one should take responsibility for their child, but if you can't, that's not the end of the world. Again: Anyone willing to trade out their child just to get their personal freedom back is probably not someone you want raising a child anyway! No, I don't think letting a child being raised by a parent who resents their existance is a good model.
My point is that suicide can indeed be selfish in some cases, and overall it would be better to try to prevent it instead of going "eh, it happens." There are some cases where it's preferable, but those are extremely rare. A very big fraction of the suicides in this country can be easily prevented with therapy and other measures.
And I'm trying to rehabilitate it. Yes, therapy, etc. Therapy is great, etc. But people have this stupid knee-jerk "Oh but your family/friends/kids/dog/acquaintances/some-hobo-you-gave-a-sandwich-too-once will never move on, they will always have a hole in their heart!" It's a thoroughly stupid response for three reasons:
1. You may just not have people who care. What happens if your parents are dead and you have no kids? Would you then say "Ah well, suicide is alright then?" Probably not, and I suspect that a lot of people just have this ridiculous notion that someone
must care about you even though that is objectively false. What if no one cares? No one anywhere in the damn world?
2. What if no one actually cares? Again, just because you have a family, you're assuming that they'd automatically be
devestated by this, which is quite possibly the thing which most directly goes against my experience of anything anyone has ever said to me. Believe me, not everyone cares.
3. Finally, even if there are people who exist and do care: why must you? Why is it absolutely necessary that because it does bother them that you
must take it into an account? I'm sure that neither of you really believe you must give your "loved ones" an absolute veto on the rest of your life; and if you do, that's stupid.
Leading to the real point: my theory is people just don't like suicide. They don't like the idea of it, they don't like the sound of it; they've got the same prejudice against it that pro-lifers have against abortion, in that it's an instinctual reaction which uses all these justifications which they don't use in other situations because it's only suicide that they really find that uncomfortable. weird has been bringing up the uncomfortable point that is the center of my argument: sometimes there's nowhere to go but down, people know it, and forcing them to prolong the inevitable because you find it uncomfortable to let them make their own decisions is really the crueler thing to do. No, it's not because they're going to die (although, hey,
everyone is going to die, why can't we choose a time and place?). It's just that things are bad and they're going to be worse and only worse and then they'll die. And sometimes that is just the Objective Point of View, not the depressed Point of View, which the optimists find themselves unwilling to accept for some reason.
Refusing to accept a place in the world that isn't at the absolute center coupled with an inability to take joy in living a life for something other than oneself are traits of another legit illness we ignore: Donaldus Trumpfluenza Clinical Narcissism. I'd be 100% unsurprised to find that a person suffering from this condition could become severely depressed. The whole world serves to remind them that they are wrong every day, and there's not really any hope between getting help (hard to impossible) or just mentally shattering.
This is cart before horse though. From my experience, people like that aren't usually just born like that. They're made into it. Clinical narcissism is a reaction to being broken in some way. And since it's based on a fundamentally warped view of reality, the fact that reality is proving them wrong is already not a problem. In fact, malignant narcissism, the worst kind, is probably treatment-proof, since they'd never accept help from a therapist since they'd never allow anyone to cure them but themselves.