
TheVanishingPoint
Member
- May 20, 2025
- 52
In a State that dares to call itself civil, the foundation cannot be labor, the market, the family, or the homeland. The foundation must be the absolute sovereignty of the individual over their own existence. Everything else comes after. Everything else is subordinate.
When a person is forced to live against their will, they are no longer a person: they are possessed. And when the State, medicine, or religion denies access to voluntary death, it exercises a form of slavery over both body and consciousness.
For this reason, Article 1 of a truly humane Constitution should be the following:
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Article 1 – Sovereignty of Existence
The Republic recognizes and guarantees the sovereignty of the individual over their own existence as a founding principle of the legal order.
Every person has the inalienable right to self-determination regarding the continuation or termination of their life, without conditioning, obstruction, or interference from public or private entities.
The State shall ensure, through adequate structures, appropriate pharmacological means, and procedural safeguards, the full exercise of this right, in respect of the dignity, freedom, and will of the individual.
A law shall regulate the methods of exercising this right, the related safeguards, and the liabilities in case of obstruction, delay, or violation.
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Law No. _/20 – Provisions for the Implementation of the Right to Voluntary Departure from Life
Article 1 – Access to Departure
1. Every citizen, regardless of age, physical or psychological condition, may at any time declare their will to depart from life.
2. The declaration may be made verbally or in writing and is to be recorded by public health entities or authorized facilities, with no need for justification, diagnosis, or external approval.
3. The right may be exercised in full anonymity, upon request.
Article 2 – Timing and Facilities
1. The designated facility must guarantee access to departure within 30 minutes from the registered request.
2. The following must be made available:
a quiet, protected, and non-medicalized environment;
personnel trained in non-coercive accompaniment;
safe, painless, and rapid pharmacological means.
3. The maximum waiting time is mandatory, except in documented cases of force majeure.
Article 3 – Violations and Penalties
1. Exceeding the time limit or intentionally obstructing the procedure constitutes a grave violation of existential freedom.
2. The following penalties apply:
for institutions and facilities: administrative fines ranging from €5,000,000 to €20,000,000;
for directly responsible individuals: imprisonment from 10 to 50 years, according to severity and proven intent.
Article 4 – Instigation to Survival
1. Any explicit or implicit attempt to induce a person to renounce voluntary departure, after they have formally declared their intent, is criminally punishable.
2. Penalties include:
fines up to €10,000,000;
imprisonment from 5 to 20 years.
Article 5 – Psychological and Pharmacological Support
1. If the person expresses fear, anxiety, or ambivalence, they have the right to receive non-dissuasive psychological support, aimed at making the passage humane and conscious.
2. They have the right to anxiolytics, sedatives, or other medications that enable a peaceful and emotionally pain-free death.
3. Any coercive or retraction-oriented intervention is considered abuse and is punished under Article 3.
Article 6 – Posthumous Provisions
1. The body of the departed individual is inviolable, unless explicit authorization was granted while alive.
2. All decisions regarding funerals, anonymity, donations, or ceremonies must be fully respected.
Article 7 – Registry of Departure
1. A Registry of Departure is established within the Ministry of Existential Freedom to preserve – on a voluntary basis only – the memory and testimony of individual choices.
2. Access to this registry is restricted and may not be used for statistical, judicial, or ideological purposes.
When a person is forced to live against their will, they are no longer a person: they are possessed. And when the State, medicine, or religion denies access to voluntary death, it exercises a form of slavery over both body and consciousness.
For this reason, Article 1 of a truly humane Constitution should be the following:
---
Article 1 – Sovereignty of Existence
The Republic recognizes and guarantees the sovereignty of the individual over their own existence as a founding principle of the legal order.
Every person has the inalienable right to self-determination regarding the continuation or termination of their life, without conditioning, obstruction, or interference from public or private entities.
The State shall ensure, through adequate structures, appropriate pharmacological means, and procedural safeguards, the full exercise of this right, in respect of the dignity, freedom, and will of the individual.
A law shall regulate the methods of exercising this right, the related safeguards, and the liabilities in case of obstruction, delay, or violation.
---
Law No. _/20 – Provisions for the Implementation of the Right to Voluntary Departure from Life
Article 1 – Access to Departure
1. Every citizen, regardless of age, physical or psychological condition, may at any time declare their will to depart from life.
2. The declaration may be made verbally or in writing and is to be recorded by public health entities or authorized facilities, with no need for justification, diagnosis, or external approval.
3. The right may be exercised in full anonymity, upon request.
Article 2 – Timing and Facilities
1. The designated facility must guarantee access to departure within 30 minutes from the registered request.
2. The following must be made available:
a quiet, protected, and non-medicalized environment;
personnel trained in non-coercive accompaniment;
safe, painless, and rapid pharmacological means.
3. The maximum waiting time is mandatory, except in documented cases of force majeure.
Article 3 – Violations and Penalties
1. Exceeding the time limit or intentionally obstructing the procedure constitutes a grave violation of existential freedom.
2. The following penalties apply:
for institutions and facilities: administrative fines ranging from €5,000,000 to €20,000,000;
for directly responsible individuals: imprisonment from 10 to 50 years, according to severity and proven intent.
Article 4 – Instigation to Survival
1. Any explicit or implicit attempt to induce a person to renounce voluntary departure, after they have formally declared their intent, is criminally punishable.
2. Penalties include:
fines up to €10,000,000;
imprisonment from 5 to 20 years.
Article 5 – Psychological and Pharmacological Support
1. If the person expresses fear, anxiety, or ambivalence, they have the right to receive non-dissuasive psychological support, aimed at making the passage humane and conscious.
2. They have the right to anxiolytics, sedatives, or other medications that enable a peaceful and emotionally pain-free death.
3. Any coercive or retraction-oriented intervention is considered abuse and is punished under Article 3.
Article 6 – Posthumous Provisions
1. The body of the departed individual is inviolable, unless explicit authorization was granted while alive.
2. All decisions regarding funerals, anonymity, donations, or ceremonies must be fully respected.
Article 7 – Registry of Departure
1. A Registry of Departure is established within the Ministry of Existential Freedom to preserve – on a voluntary basis only – the memory and testimony of individual choices.
2. Access to this registry is restricted and may not be used for statistical, judicial, or ideological purposes.