-snip-
That's not what I'm talking about, no. Not even remotely.
What I'm talking about is that shit happens and people die. That doctors and patients are often faced with impossible choices like a late-term abortion or a slow and painful death, and the whole time we have an entire
country worth of cheerleaders who refuse to accept that sometimes people die calling them murderers for taking on a burden that they don't have to. Or in this case, being provided hypothetical legal coverage so that they will not be
prosecuted as murderers for being the one to take on that burden. The same could be said for those who are terminally ill and suffering, who themselves or by proxy often have to play a cat-and-mouse game of metaphor to receive effective palliative care when that care verges on the tripline of "suicide" that will bring out the cheerleaders. And outside of the states that permit medically-assisted suicide, that's the
best case scenario. The worst is the patient stripped of the right to direct the end of their life, being subjected to the full force of medical science by an emotionally insolvent family and their lawyers.
It is good that your brother had a chance to live. As many people should have that chance as possible, which does not conflict with my position, that being that the law should not entrap people who are already facing great hardship.