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Society

Exit members

by Tamas Pataki
June–July 2005, no. 272

Killing Me Softly: Voluntary euthanasia and the road to the peaceful pill by Philip Nitschke and Fiona Stewart

Penguin, $32.95 pb, 354 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.

‘While some inventors concern themselves with creating the ultimate mousetrap,’ Philip Nitschke explains, ‘my aims are more modest. At the heart of all my efforts is a desire to fulfil the needs of Exit members.’

The members of Exit International – an organisation that has attracted 3000 members since its foundation by Nitschke in 1997, and that is now co-directed by Fiona Stewart – are mostly older and seriously ill people who ‘want a choice about when and how they die’. According to the argument of this book, the satisfaction of their needs requires easily accessible technology that will enable them to die at will, with dignity, painlessly and swiftly. ‘Dying with dignity is a growth industry,’ the authors declare. Exit hopes ‘to meet the needs of the baby boomer generation … [T]he most important of Exit’s current work is our research and development program. Focused upon a range of smart and simple technologies, this program offers some real and practical end-of-life choices for the future.’

 


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Killing Me Softly: Voluntary euthanasia and the road to the peaceful pill by Philip Nitschke and Fiona Stewart

Penguin, $32.95 pb, 354 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.


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