Originally Posted by
Warb
Devils Advocate, again:
Everyone living in the developed world at this time has been brought up to believe that life expectancy is, what, 80 years or so (give or take a bit for different countries, male/female etc.). 100 years ago, it was 55 or so, that's a 50% increase, attributed to lifestyle, living conditions, medicine etc.. The western world has also developed the attitude that death is bad, and must be delayed as long as possible. Perhaps both these concepts need to be rethought? Staving off death at all costs can, in my opinion, be an awful thing - when you watch someone fade over a period of years, to the point that they are just skin stretched over bones, completely uncommunicative on a bed and fed through a tube, is keeping them alive really an act of "love"? Perhaps it's just selfishness, not wanting them to die because of the impact it will have on us? Unfortunately in our "enlightened" politically correct society, discussing such concepts is largely unacceptable and risks being labelled a ghoul or heartless. Maybe nature, in the form of covid, is pointing out that people relying on armfuls of pharmaceuticals every day, or being grossly obese, diabetic, or just plain old, is not a natural state of life? Maybe we should start to consider whether our current attitudes towards death and many other things are actually sensible or sustainable?
(DARFC...)