richardm said:This reminds me of the old immuring technique that the church used to use on nuns they wanted to kill. They didn't want to spill their blood, so they walled them up and let them get on with dying.
Yeah, that was the policy of Pope Edgar Allan Poe VII. Crazy bugger, he was. I second the call for a little backup on this one.
Fundamentally, what's the difference between giving someone a fatal injection and letting somebody die that you could otherwise keep alive? Don't they boil down to the same thing?
One is terminating a life, the other is allowing the expiration of life. It's almost impossible to draw lines here, I admit, but as I stated before I find a solid, functioning foundation in the distinction between ceasing to artificially extend life (living wills, DNR requests, etc.) and ending life through positive, deliberate actions. The more religious would call this leaving it in God's hands, perhaps, others might call it letting nature run its course. However you define/justify it, that's the only reasonable distinction I can make.
Natural causes may be a broad definition of ways to die, but I don't think you'll find lethal injection among them.