Los Angeles Times

The option to end one’s life

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Re “Governor signs end-oflife act,” Oct. 6, and “The right to die in California,” Editorial, Oct. 6

I’m very pleased to witness this in my lifetime. I’m a senior and my years are numbered, and I want the choice to end excruciati­ng pain, if I’m suffering it. Simple as that.

My view is that suffering pain is not noble; it is absolute hell for the sick person and for the caregivers.

If you have beliefs that you should and need to suffer, then you can — no one’s stopping you. But don’t force me to suffer. Thank you, governor.

Patricia Mace

Los Angeles

Whether or not we opt to end our lives with physician-prescribed medication, we need that option.

Assisting one’s death is not considered treatment and thus is opposed by many. The major theologica­l reason people oppose euthanasia is that they believe God is the creator and that ending a life is oversteppi­ng human responsibi­lity.

This is not necessaril­y the moral equivalent of suicide but rather an acceptance of the human condition. In making such a decision, the distinctio­n between morally ordinary and extraordin­ary means is crucial and based on the patient’s “total good.”

Ultimately, the patient has the right to decide whether life-preserving measures will be used. A “gentle passing” should be legally permitted on a case-by-case basis, and Gov. Jerry Brown (a former seminarian) understand­ably grappled with this issue. He arrived at a fair and reasonable decision.

Richard Boudreau

Marina del Rey

I could not help but think about what the governor went through to sign this bill. I have always supported him in his political life, knowing that he does the right thing at the right time. He does not just think about his own morals but about how people are affected by his actions.

Ed Sinderman

Laguna Woods

How ironic that many Republican­s in the Legislatur­e, who claim to be all about freedom, liberty and limited government, apparently were OK with using government to force people with no hope of recovery to suffer prolonged, excruciati­ng pain.

Surely a merciful God would not want his children treated that way. Brown did the right thing.

Steve Mehlman

Beaumont

Tim Rosales, a spokesman for California­ns Against Assisted Suicide, says Brown’s signing of the End-Of-Life Act is a “dark day for California.”

I disagree. And I think I speak for many California­ns against cruel and death-as-usual punishment when I say the day has never looked brighter.

Dennis Stone

Los Angeles

I didn’t even need to read beyond the subheadlin­e to understand the governor’s motivation to sign the act: It makes him feel good about himself. In typical progressiv­e logic, he asked himself: “Will I personally feel better after taking this action?” It’s the endgame of all progressiv­e thought.

David Pohlod

Oak Park

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