Other countries have expanded into more assisted suicide for things like mental health etc, with people in the 20's able to take there own life. The Netherlands is possibly expanding into a right for anyone over 75 to take there own life next year.
So what?
Are people in their 20s "not real people" who don't get to choose? are they immune to life-ending conditions? Is mental health not a real illness?
For me, people in their 20s absolutely can and do suffer life-ending illnesses, and should have the right to go out on their own terms.
For me, mental health is a tricky one, and it should be pretty easy to prevent AD "on a whim" - we're not talking suicide-booths here; and long-term mental illness absolute can condemn someone to decades of absolute misery (and horrible suicides / suicide attempts).
So do you need assisted dying with good and competent palliative care, i don't know the answer to that.
Yes.
Having 1 choice is no choice.
Palliative care is absolutely the right choice for some, the wrong choice for others, and not even an option for another group.
I feel that there is enough evidence, and enough experience from other countries, that all the objections and questions should be able to be countered - I don't claim to have that familiarity, or to have those answers; just my own experiences, first, second and third hand, and decades being supportive of AD.
We already have the right to take our own life. We should have the right to do less horrifically, and to assist someone in taking their own life.
Worth bearing in mind, that that's what we're talking about here - assisted suicide, NOT person A killing person B