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Silvanus

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Lightknight said:
Forgive me but the kind of tabloids I think of are just garbage peddlers that don't actually do any investigative reporting on their own? Maybe the Daily Mail really is something above tabloid but below mainstream legitimate journalism?

Sort of. We have the 'pure' tabloids like The Sun, The Daily Star, and The Mirror; ones which make no effort to hide sensationalism, and fill themselves with celebrity gossip and rubbish like that. The Daily Mail isn't quite like that, and does do investigative journalism, though it's often of the muck-racking kind. Wiki describes it as "middle-market"; I would describe it as having pretences in that direction.


Lightknight said:
So then you are providing a qualification in which harm really isn't relevant because it is "in the public interest"? I seriously doubt that how a person votes (individually) or what causes they support are truly in the public interest unless they're throwing large numbers at it. Don't you consider it somewhat dangerous rhetoric to trivialize the social and financial forms of harm in pursuit of justifying causing harm to some but not others? I'd consider a far more internally consistent philosophy to be against unnecessary harm of all rather than just some.
Professional consequences are really indivisible from professional actions. What actions one takes (politically or professionally) must have consequences if people are to be accountable, and it's pretty fundamental to a free market that we may choose to whom our money goes. It's understandable and right that we need not support somebody we do not wish to.

Lightknight said:
There's potential danger in anything involving one's identity and affiliations. If Lily was presenting in public, was she not already taking on said danger? The idea is that if it was already happening in public then the subject is already assuming the risks/responsibility. Again, that's the point of if it is done in public then it is fair game to report. Can things go wrong? Yes. But society has changed a great deal and most of the ignorant assholes that would cause her harm are too dumb to read any paper and would likely only attack if she were presenting (poorly), not just because they read something some time. At least that's how things seem to go, not someone planning to go somewhere and do someone harm just because they heard about them on the news or whatever.
That's difficult to judge-- people may recognise her (in the street, even) after media attention, whereas they wouldn't have done before.

There's more than one public sphere. One's workplace is one thing; the country another, and both involve uniquely different risks and threats. You may (rightly) say that if you take on one, you risk the other, but the risk of that is low without media interference.

Lightknight said:
It's a bit more tricky of a situation than that, to admit fault could open them up to liability. If they consulted a lawyer they would have advised them to not talk about it and if they had to to not admit guilt which could be used against them later.

But sure, they could be total social bottom feeders. I don't know if you feel like we could benefit from continued discourse, it seems like both our stances have been made but I don't want to waste your time if you've begun to find this tedious. I have appreciated your effort and input throughout.
I've appreciated yours, too. I haven't found it tedious, but I do think we've probably put across our thoughts as well as we're going to at this point.
 

Something Amyss

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Corey Schaff said:
Well the red pill wasn't in "We can remember it for you wholesale", it was a product of Paul Verhoven's adaptation. He's still alive afaik, so we've still got a shot for it to happen.
You know, I actually considered looking that up because I barely remember the original story. Probably should have run with that.

Anyway, good to know there's still hope!
 

happyninja42

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Amaror said:
Happyninja42 said:
Were did I say anything about "putting a person at risk"? It's not about putting anyone at risks.
I didn't say you did, but multiple other people in this discussion have brought up the point of "if publishing it puts the person at risk of harm, it's unethical". I was pointing out that your 3 points didn't include that as a reason for it to be illegal to publish pictures of someone. And while it might be unethical to risk someone's life like that, that doesn't mean it's illegal.

Amaror said:
You have the right to your likeness. That means that any picture that's mainly of yourself belongs to you, not the person shooting it. So publishing it without your consent is illegal. Think of it as copyright. They are copying your likeness onto a picture. But it's still your face and body, so it still belongs to you.
Tabloids get away with celebrity pictures, because celebrities constitute as persons of public interest and thus loose the right to their likeness somewhat.
And, as I said, if you just happen to be in the picture somewhere in the background, the picture also doesn't belong to you, because that would be a legal nightmare.
And, yeah, the sisters, I can't remember the name right now, would constitute as persons of public interest. Pretty much any somewhat famous person is a person of public interest.
And also note that It's only infringing on your right if it's published publically. Really publically. If a friend of yours took a photo of you and sent it to another friend of his without your consent, that wouldn't be illegal, since it's still only available in a closed group. If he posts it on the internet without any access restrictions it would be illegal.
However he could also post it on the internet and not have it be illegal by simply restricting the access to it. It doesn't matter how large the group of people is that has access to the picture, as long as it's restricted in any way it's not published publicly.

I don't promise that my list is complete, though. The course I took was mainly about the basic law regulations you need to know as a computer scientist. There could and likely are a lot of intricaties in the law that it didn't cover.
And that's what I was trying to point out with this. I would like to see if it actually is illegal, or just skeezy. Because based on what I've seen in this article, the tabloid guy hasn't done anything wrong. So while we might not like what he did, we can't really get onto him for doing it. Assuming it's pictures of her going around town as a woman. it's a messy situation sure.
 

Silvanus

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Happyninja42 said:
And that's what I was trying to point out with this. I would like to see if it actually is illegal, or just skeezy. Because based on what I've seen in this article, the tabloid guy hasn't done anything wrong. So while we might not like what he did, we can't really get onto him for doing it. Assuming it's pictures of her going around town as a woman. it's a messy situation sure.
The only existing mechanism for press oversight in the UK is the Independent Press Standards Organisation [https://www.ipso.co.uk/IPSO/index.html], which has no legal muscle, and functions only with the sufferance of the newspapers themselves. This is the only authority to which press complaints can go, and the papers are not beholden to it.

In effect, using legality as a bar is really using no bar at all. The papers may print demonstrable slander, but even if it is against the law, there is no legal body in place to uphold the complaint with legal backing. I wish I was joking.
 

MrFalconfly

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MarsAtlas said:
If you're in a mental state where suicide seems like a valid option, then your judgment of everything, including how you think others are treating you, is suspect.
Really? How do you think they get to that point in the first place? Do you think magical elves into their bedroom while they were sleeping and covered them with depression-causing glitter? People get to this point because assholes are being assholes to them. When these assholes are your coworkers, your neighbours, your friends and your family it wears down on you. Its not complicated. Nobody just becomes suicidal for no reason.
He has a point though.

We're talking about people who's in a mental state where they're considering permanent (that is irreversible) solutions for temporary problems (problems which some times can be solved by having a chat with a friend). At that point everything indicates that they should be kept away from any kind of dangerous implement.

But I admit that I generally look down at people who commit suicide, because generally it's a selfish act, and as previously mentioned, it's an irreversible pseudo-solution to a temporary problem.
 

KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime

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MrFalconfly said:
MarsAtlas said:
If you're in a mental state where suicide seems like a valid option, then your judgment of everything, including how you think others are treating you, is suspect.
Really? How do you think they get to that point in the first place? Do you think magical elves into their bedroom while they were sleeping and covered them with depression-causing glitter? People get to this point because assholes are being assholes to them. When these assholes are your coworkers, your neighbours, your friends and your family it wears down on you. Its not complicated. Nobody just becomes suicidal for no reason.
He has a point though.

We're talking about people who's in a mental state where they're considering permanent (that is irreversible) solutions for temporary problems (problems which some times can be solved by having a chat with a friend). At that point everything indicates that they should be kept away from any kind of dangerous implement.

But I admit that I generally look down at people who commit suicide, because generally it's a selfish act, and as previously mentioned, it's an irreversible pseudo-solution to a temporary problem.
While suicide is a selfish act, what leads to it are a series of selfish, if not outright hateful acts committed by others. This is especially true when it relates to GSM/LGBTQIA+ folk, where we tend to lose friends, get disowned, get denied medical help, employment, and housing after we come out. There's two sides to every story, one person making a foolish and selfish choice doesn't erase all the foolish and selfish choices made by others that lead to that end.
 

MrFalconfly

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KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime said:
MrFalconfly said:
MarsAtlas said:
If you're in a mental state where suicide seems like a valid option, then your judgment of everything, including how you think others are treating you, is suspect.
Really? How do you think they get to that point in the first place? Do you think magical elves into their bedroom while they were sleeping and covered them with depression-causing glitter? People get to this point because assholes are being assholes to them. When these assholes are your coworkers, your neighbours, your friends and your family it wears down on you. Its not complicated. Nobody just becomes suicidal for no reason.
He has a point though.

We're talking about people who's in a mental state where they're considering permanent (that is irreversible) solutions for temporary problems (problems which some times can be solved by having a chat with a friend). At that point everything indicates that they should be kept away from any kind of dangerous implement.

But I admit that I generally look down at people who commit suicide, because generally it's a selfish act, and as previously mentioned, it's an irreversible pseudo-solution to a temporary problem.
While suicide is a selfish act, what leads to it are a series of selfish, if not outright hateful acts committed by others. This is especially true when it relates to GSM/LGBTQIA+ folk, where we tend to lose friends, get disowned, get denied medical help, employment, and housing after we come out. There's two sides to every story, one person making a foolish and selfish choice doesn't erase all the foolish and selfish choices made by others that lead to that end.
And I'm not saying that those people aren't arseholes.

In my experience however, people who commit suicide forget about their friends (that is, their true friends, not the pricks who make their life hell and are mislabelled friends).

For every suicide I see this.


Heartbroken mates whose life just took a turn towards Satan's wine-cellar.

Innocent people who would've like nothing more than to help them, being left feeling "why didn't I see this? Why didn't I stop this? I'm at fault, it's my fault that they're dead".
 

zelda2fanboy

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MarsAtlas said:
Really? How do you think they get to that point in the first place? Do you think magical elves into their bedroom while they were sleeping and covered them with depression-causing glitter? People get to this point because assholes are being assholes to them. When these assholes are your coworkers, your neighbours, your friends and your family it wears down on you. Its not complicated. Nobody just becomes suicidal for no reason.
That's a gross oversimplification. What about people with paranoid schizophrenia hearing voices in their head and suspecting the world is made of robots plotting against them? Did that person just happen to run into a group of evil scheming robots or are they sick? Having emotional responses to what happens in your life is normal and acceptable. Murder is not. I don't think saying that someone who is rationalizing suicide is mentally ill is a particularly controversial stance. I'm pretty sure modern medicine and the law is clear about that as well. If you tell a police officer or a doctor that you feel that way, then they will do everything in their power to prevent you from hurting yourself. There's no "well maybe that's the only way out for him/her." Believe me, I want to be on your side on this issue (and trans people in general) as I'm pretty socially liberal on most things. I just want that one piece of the conversation on trans or gay people to not be given as much credence. And if it is a part of the conversation, then it be treated more seriously and not act as though it's always "everyone else's" fault that it happens or that it's a logical move for a discriminated trans person to make.
 

Erttheking

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zelda2fanboy said:
Perhaps a minority group that could possibly be dismissed as "mentally ill" shouldn't subtly threaten suicide as an option when its members are not accepted. A lot of people live in poverty and it's horrible. Do you think society would look well upon a poor person who enters a bank with a gun to his head demanding money?

Suicide doesn't help anyone. It just means one less person. If being trans is a absolutely essential to who you are as a human being, then suicide isn't martyrdom. It's a self inflicted hate crime. If you're in a mental state where suicide seems like a valid option, then your judgment of everything, including how you think others are treating you, is suspect.
Way to downplay the crap LGBT people have to go through. People kill themselves because they just want the pain to stop. Very rarely to make a point.

Please show a little respect.
 

zelda2fanboy

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KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime said:
When somebody commits suicide, it's not about helping anyone, it's not about being a martyr, it's not even really about hurting friends and family, and it's not even about being unaccepted by society. It's about making unending misery, fear, and pain stop, it's about escaping a situation of pain, terror, and depression the only way the suicidal person sees possible. Also calling peoples judgment into question, calling a trans suicide a self inflicted hate crime... You know what, that shows a shocking lack of empathy from someone whose claimed to have battled suicidal thoughts and been personally effected by a suicide.

I've never seriously considered suicide, but one of my cousins did, and she succeeded in taking her own life. She wasn't even trans. Her husband divorced her and took custody of their child, along with her not having visitation rights. She lost her home in this process. She started drinking heavily at this point, then because of developing an alcohol problem, she lost her job. She was in her late 30s at this point, with no options, no future, and really burned bridges with her blood family well enough she had no support. She saw her life as being over, she saw her situation as hopeless, so she put her gun in her own mouth and she ended her life. I didn't like her, she was a self centered horrible person, the world is honestly a better place with her gone. I still loved her as family. I'm also sad she got to that point. Still I'm not going to condemn her for making that choice, especially because I can understand how awful and hopeless she felt.

The idea still at this point is to prevent people from feeling the need to commit suicide. Laying a guilt trip on people who feel worthless and miserable does not accomplish this goal.

Finally you talk about people thinking people are treating them some way because of something and that's suspect because the person is suicidal... When it comes to GSM folk, as in trans and gay folk... GSM people are not suicidal before being physically and mentally abused, thrown out of their homes, discriminated against, and thrown under the bus by their own freaking fiends and families. Blaming the victims who are driven into taking their own lives, while letting the people who contributed to that end skate, that's victim blaming. Which again shows a shocking lack of empathy.
Who am I laying a guilt trip on? Suicide victims aren't around to read message boards. If you can read this, then you're doing great. Secondly, suicide victims are also the perpetrators. They simply are. It hurts a lot of people and not being able to see that shows a "lack of empathy."
 

Erttheking

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zelda2fanboy said:
Someone was in so much pain they ended their life and you're more concerned with the people around them? The people who will mourn but eventually move on? I think you might want to reevaluate this stance.
 

zelda2fanboy

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erttheking said:
zelda2fanboy said:
Someone was in so much pain they ended their life and you're more concerned with the people around them? The people who will mourn but eventually move on? I think you might want to reevaluate this stance.
No, I won't. People who commit suicide aren't suffering anymore. Their families are and always will. That pain never goes away.
 

Erttheking

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zelda2fanboy said:
erttheking said:
zelda2fanboy said:
Someone was in so much pain they ended their life and you're more concerned with the people around them? The people who will mourn but eventually move on? I think you might want to reevaluate this stance.
No, I won't. People who commit suicide aren't suffering anymore. Their families are and always will. That pain never goes away.
They're not suffering? So what, they just decided to kill themselves for shits and giggles?

And tell me, do you think that the families of people who committed suicide would appreciate you acting like this towards their lost loved ones? Personally I'd be pissed. And people move on when loved ones die. It happens. Pain is temporary. Death is permanent. I know who's suffering more here.

Do you consider volunteer soldiers who die in war to be selfish too? What about fire fighters who die on the job? Policemen? Relief workers who go into dangerous areas?
 

zelda2fanboy

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erttheking said:
They're not suffering? So what, they just decided to kill themselves for shits and giggles?

And tell me, do you think that the families of people who committed suicide would appreciate you acting like this towards their lost loved ones? Personally I'd be pissed. And people move on when loved ones die. It happens. Pain is temporary. Death is permanent. I know who's suffering more here.

Do you consider volunteer soldiers who die in war to be selfish too? What about fire fighters who die on the job? Policemen? Relief workers who go into dangerous areas?
No, they aren't killing themselves. What you seem to be suggesting is that there's another dimension for suicides to go to and be in agony for eternity, which is a belief I do not subscribe to and is another discussion entirely.
 

KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime

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MrFalconfly said:
And I'm not saying that those people aren't arseholes.

In my experience however, people who commit suicide forget about their friends (that is, their true friends, not the pricks who make their life hell and are mislabelled friends).

For every suicide I see this.

[-video snipped-]

Heartbroken mates whose life just took a turn towards Satan's wine-cellar.

Innocent people who would've like nothing more than to help them, being left feeling "why didn't I see this? Why didn't I stop this? I'm at fault, it's my fault that they're dead".
The problem with that line of thought is kind of a glaring one in two parts. First it's pretty easy to feel horrible about something like this after the fact. People tend to hold themselves responsible when they survive a friend, or family member, regardless of the cause, survivor's guilt is always part of the grieving process. Bargaining and Guilt stages to be exact. The other part is that if they were as close to the person they lost as they claimed, they would have seen how their friend was in agony, or at least known something was wrong.

But you can't just put all the anger on the person who did see fit to end their life, they didn't do it explicitly to upset others, they did it to make the pain stop. That's the thing, when your pain is so bad you can't see anything else, you really also can't be expected to see how your choices will effect others. The thing is, I've seen people fall to those depths, I've been there and it's a state that's hard to miss. So those "true friends" might want to take a moment to realize that they might not have been paying hard enough attention.

zelda2fanboy said:
MarsAtlas said:
Really? How do you think they get to that point in the first place? Do you think magical elves into their bedroom while they were sleeping and covered them with depression-causing glitter? People get to this point because assholes are being assholes to them. When these assholes are your coworkers, your neighbours, your friends and your family it wears down on you. Its not complicated. Nobody just becomes suicidal for no reason.
That's a gross oversimplification. What about people with paranoid schizophrenia hearing voices in their head and suspecting the world is made of robots plotting against them? Did that person just happen to run into a group of evil scheming robots or are they sick? Having emotional responses to what happens in your life is normal and acceptable. Murder is not. I don't think saying that someone who is rationalizing suicide is mentally ill is a particularly controversial stance. I'm pretty sure modern medicine and the law is clear about that as well. If you tell a police officer or a doctor that you feel that way, then they will do everything in their power to prevent you from hurting yourself. There's no "well maybe that the only way out for him/her." Believe me, I want to be on your side on this issue (and trans people in general) as I'm pretty socially liberal on most things. I just want that one piece of the conversation on trans or gay people to not be given as much credence. And if it is a part of the conversation, then it be treated more seriously and not act as though it's always "everyone else's" fault that it happens or that's a logical move for a discriminated trans person to make.
First off, schizophrenia and depression are not comparable states. My mom had both, I've known many others with one, the other, or both, and they all will assert that they're incomparable to each other. So lets not try to make comparisons like that.

Second, suicide isn't murder, not technically. Ultimately a person's life is in their own hands, some people have given up on life to a point where they're perfectly healthy, being fed, but still just die due to lack of will to live. Which in it self is a type of suicide. Same thing can be said for people who drink themselves to death, that's also a type of suicide.

Now while there is a legal and medical stance against suicide, as in preventing it an anyway possible, there are still times where people emotionally break. There are times where people are in a particularly dark and painful place and they see death as the only escape. That's not to justify suicide, but it's important to understand that it's what happens to some people, along with that it's important to understand that it's stupendously difficult to pull a person out of that kind of mental state. Still we don't do anything constructive by vilifying people for feeling suicidal, or committing suicide, doing that doesn't help at all. That's something likely to make someone who feels bad enough to commit suicide, feel just enough worse about themselves to actually do it.

Finally when it comes Gender and Sexuality Minorities, the fact that this is such a common thing is evidence of a problem in society. For example, transgender people who transition are far less likely to attempt suicide, thus transition is generally considered medically necessary. Still we have these people with official power who deny us housing, employment, and try to legislate us out of existance. That kind of erasure does horrible to people. Still the answer isn't blaming the victims of things like that, the answer is taking the people who allow that discrimination and hatred's existence to task for how they allow others to be treated.

That's the whole point, when someone is in a broken mental state the why it happened part of the equation is extremely important. Vilifying the person driven to such extremes just makes others in the same sorts of situations feel even worse. That's not constructive, it's victim blaming and it helps no one, especially not the people current battling suicidal tendencies.
 

Erttheking

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zelda2fanboy said:
erttheking said:
They're not suffering? So what, they just decided to kill themselves for shits and giggles?

And tell me, do you think that the families of people who committed suicide would appreciate you acting like this towards their lost loved ones? Personally I'd be pissed. And people move on when loved ones die. It happens. Pain is temporary. Death is permanent. I know who's suffering more here.

Do you consider volunteer soldiers who die in war to be selfish too? What about fire fighters who die on the job? Policemen? Relief workers who go into dangerous areas?
No, they aren't killing themselves. What you seem to be suggesting is that there's another dimension for suicides to go to and be in agony for eternity, which is a belief I do not subscribe to and is another discussion entirely.
Eternity? People don't live for an eternity. Phrases like that, and with "pain is forever" make me question how much you actually know about experiencing a loved one or a friend kill themselves, because instead of experience you seem to be saying things that sound dramatic? Tell me, do you know someone who's had a family member commit suicide? Or a friend? Because I do. And I tell you, they'd be absolutely furious at you right now.

Saying that someone is selfish for not being strong enough to live through pain is, ironically, selfish. You're more concerned about your own personally happiness than the fact that someone is dead.
 

zelda2fanboy

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KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime said:
First off, schizophrenia and depression are not comparable states. My mom had both, I've known many others with one, the other, or both, and they all will assert that they're incomparable to each other. So lets not try to make comparisons like that.

Second, suicide isn't murder, not technically. Ultimately a person's life is in their own hands, some people have given up on life to a point where they're perfectly healthy, being fed, but still just die due to lack of will to live. Which in it self is a type of suicide. Same thing can be said for people who drink themselves to death, that's also a type of suicide.

Now while there is a legal and medical stance against suicide, as in preventing it an anyway possible, there are still times where people emotionally break. There are times where people are in a particularly dark and painful place and they see death as the only escape. That's not to justify suicide, but it's important to understand that it's what happens to some people, along with that it's important to understand that it's stupendously difficult to pull a person out of that kind of mental state. Still we don't do anything constructive by vilifying people for feeling suicidal, or committing suicide, doing that doesn't help at all. That's something likely to make someone who feels bad enough to commit suicide, feel just enough worse about themselves to actually do it.

Finally when it comes Gender and Sexuality Minorities, the fact that this is such a common thing is evidence of a problem in society. For example, transgender people who transition are far less likely to attempt suicide, thus transition is generally considered medically necessary. Still we have these people with official power who deny us housing, employment, and try to legislate us out of existance. That kind of erasure does horrible to people. Still the answer isn't blaming the victims of things like that, the answer is taking the people who allow that discrimination and hatred's existence to task for how they allow others to be treated.

That's the whole point, when someone is in a broken mental state the why it happened part of the equation is extremely important. Vilifying the person driven to such extremes just makes others in the same sorts of situations feel even worse. That's not constructive, it's victim blaming and it helps no one, especially not the people current battling suicidal tendencies.
Fair enough. As a general message to everybody though, don't commit suicide. It hurts the people who love you more than anyone else.
 

MrFalconfly

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KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime said:
MrFalconfly said:
And I'm not saying that those people aren't arseholes.

In my experience however, people who commit suicide forget about their friends (that is, their true friends, not the pricks who make their life hell and are mislabelled friends).

For every suicide I see this.

[-video snipped-]

Heartbroken mates whose life just took a turn towards Satan's wine-cellar.

Innocent people who would've like nothing more than to help them, being left feeling "why didn't I see this? Why didn't I stop this? I'm at fault, it's my fault that they're dead".
The problem with that line of thought is kind of a glaring one in two parts. First it's pretty easy to feel horrible about something like this after the fact. People tend to hold themselves responsible when they survive a friend, or family member, regardless of the cause, survivor's guilt is always part of the grieving process. Bargaining and Guilt stages to be exact. The other part is that if they were as close to the person they lost as they claimed, they would have seen how their friend was in agony, or at least known something was wrong.

But you can't just put all the anger on the person who did see fit to end their life, they didn't do it explicitly to upset others, they did it to make the pain stop. That's the thing, when your pain is so bad you can't see anything else, you really also can't be expected to see how your choices will effect others. The thing is, I've seen people fall to those depths, I've been there and it's a state that's hard to miss. So those "true friends" might want to take a moment to realize that they might not have been paying hard enough attention.
Well, that is only how I see it.

I'm not saying it's absolutely the correct way of seeing it (I can't say that. The human experience, if anything, has told me that when human emotion are in play, there are never a clear answer. This is why I prefer to use statistics, because usually they get around the emotions by filtering them out using large numbers of individuals who may feel differently about the subject, but in this case I only have my own feelings, and therefore no clear answer), only that past experiences has coloured my view in this way.
 

KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime

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zelda2fanboy said:
KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime said:
First off, schizophrenia and depression are not comparable states. My mom had both, I've known many others with one, the other, or both, and they all will assert that they're incomparable to each other. So lets not try to make comparisons like that.

Second, suicide isn't murder, not technically. Ultimately a person's life is in their own hands, some people have given up on life to a point where they're perfectly healthy, being fed, but still just die due to lack of will to live. Which in it self is a type of suicide. Same thing can be said for people who drink themselves to death, that's also a type of suicide.

Now while there is a legal and medical stance against suicide, as in preventing it an anyway possible, there are still times where people emotionally break. There are times where people are in a particularly dark and painful place and they see death as the only escape. That's not to justify suicide, but it's important to understand that it's what happens to some people, along with that it's important to understand that it's stupendously difficult to pull a person out of that kind of mental state. Still we don't do anything constructive by vilifying people for feeling suicidal, or committing suicide, doing that doesn't help at all. That's something likely to make someone who feels bad enough to commit suicide, feel just enough worse about themselves to actually do it.

Finally when it comes Gender and Sexuality Minorities, the fact that this is such a common thing is evidence of a problem in society. For example, transgender people who transition are far less likely to attempt suicide, thus transition is generally considered medically necessary. Still we have these people with official power who deny us housing, employment, and try to legislate us out of existance. That kind of erasure does horrible to people. Still the answer isn't blaming the victims of things like that, the answer is taking the people who allow that discrimination and hatred's existence to task for how they allow others to be treated.

That's the whole point, when someone is in a broken mental state the why it happened part of the equation is extremely important. Vilifying the person driven to such extremes just makes others in the same sorts of situations feel even worse. That's not constructive, it's victim blaming and it helps no one, especially not the people current battling suicidal tendencies.
Fair enough. As a general message to everybody though, don't commit suicide. It hurts the people who love you more than anyone else.
See, it's that last part that is really kinda a kick in the nuts. A lot of GSM folk end up in a place where they can kinda rightfully say that they have no one that actually loves them. People who have been abandoned by, or had to abandon their own friends and families. That's still a shocking and heart shatteringly common scenario people face when they come out of the closet. For those people the best you can say to them is that, just because the people you thought loved you have abandoned you, doesn't mean you won't find others who love and support you. It also doesn't mean that your family and friends are lost, chances are better than not that eventually they'll come around.
 

zelda2fanboy

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Oct 6, 2009
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erttheking said:
Eternity? People don't live for an eternity. Phrases like that, and with "pain is forever" make me question how much you actually know about experiencing a loved one or a friend kill themselves, because instead of experience you seem to be saying things that sound dramatic? Tell me, do you know someone who's had a family member commit suicide? Or a friend? Because I do. And I tell you, they'd be absolutely furious at you right now.

Saying that someone is selfish for not being strong enough to live through pain is, ironically, selfish. You're more concerned about your own personally happiness than the fact that someone is dead.
I'm particularly concerned about the families of hypothetical people who I don't know. I suppose that is really selfish on my part. Really inward facing on this issue. I've known multiple people over the years who have committed suicide and I think about them regularly, in some cases decades later. Maybe that's just me. Maybe other people move on and don't blab about it to strangers on message boards when it seemed for a second like people thought it was ok.