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Mental Health Experts Seek To Block the Paths To Suicide

HughPickens.com writes: Experts and laymen have long assumed that people who died by suicide will ultimately do it even if temporarily deterred. Now Celia Watson Seupel reports at the NY Times that a growing body of evidence challenges this view, with many experts calling for a reconsideration of suicide-prevention strategies to stress "means restriction." Instead of treating individual risk, means restriction entails modifying the environment by removing the means by which people usually die by suicide. The world cannot be made suicide-proof, of course. But, these researchers argue, if the walkway over a bridge is fenced off, a struggling college freshman cannot throw herself over the side. If parents leave guns in a locked safe, a teenage son cannot shoot himself if he suddenly decides life is hopeless.

Reducing the availability of highly lethal and commonly used suicide methods has been associated with declines in suicide rates of as much as 30%–50% in other countries (PDF). According to Cathy Barber, people trying to die by suicide tend to choose not the most effective method, but the one most at hand. Some methods have a case fatality rate as low as 1 or 2 percent," says Barber. "With a gun, it's closer to 85 or 90 percent. So it makes a difference what you're reaching for in these low-planned or unplanned suicide attempts." Ken Baldwin, who jumped from the Golden Gate Bridge in 1985 and lived, told reporters that he knew as soon as he had jumped that he had made a terrible mistake. "From the instant I saw my hand leave the railing, I knew I wanted to live. I was terrified out of my skull." Baldwin was lucky to survive the 220 foot plunge into frigid waters. Ms. Barber tells another story: On a friend's very first day as an emergency room physician, a patient was wheeled in, a young man who had shot himself in a suicide attempt. "He was begging the doctors to save him," she says. But they could not.

498 comments

  1. Maybe in a different country by damn_registrars · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If parents leave guns in a locked safe, a teenage son cannot shoot himself if he suddenly decides life is hopeless.

    People have been proudly campaigning for irresponsible gun ownership in the US for a very, very, long time. Suggesting things like locking up guns - even in the gun owner's home - will be quickly shot down by people claiming you are impeding on their constitutional right to overthrow the government.

    I really, really, wish I was exaggerating or kidding on this one.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    1. Re:Maybe in a different country by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There's a big difference between promoting gun safety at home, and putting it into law. The latter comes with regular, mandatory police inspections of gun owners' homes, to ensure guns are kept according to the rules. This is what we have in the Netherlands, where it's hard to get a gun license in the first place. Now I am not against such rules and inspections personally, but I can see how "freedom loving" gun owners in the US would object to that. However, the few of such gun owners that I know do voluntarily practise and advocate safe gun ownership, especially around kids.

      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    2. Re:Maybe in a different country by damn_registrars · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There's a big difference between promoting gun safety at home, and putting it into law.

      Which would make it political suicide to even propose here in the US.

      However, the few of such gun owners that I know do voluntarily practise and advocate safe gun ownership, especially around kids.

      The overwhelming majority of actual gun owners are responsible. There are a lot more guns than gun accidents in this country, that is clear. However every single day there is at least one innocent child in this county who is shot as a direct result of an irresponsible owner. And those irresponsible owners are the ones whose "rights" we see so much time and money spent to protect.

      --
      Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    3. Re:Maybe in a different country by Ihlosi · · Score: 2
      You don't need a gun at your nightstand, it's never going to be a matter of seconds that saves you.

      If you're paranoid and don't lock every single door in your house, including the bedroom door, before you go to sleep, you're doing it wrong.

    4. Re:Maybe in a different country by AqD · · Score: 0

      How is it irresponsible? If a teenage boy wants to shoot himself, give him a gun! It's the least thing we can grant people - to leave the world where they have never volunteered to come.

      Life has always been, and always will be, hopeless. People you meet everyday don't realize it because those who did are already dead.

    5. Re:Maybe in a different country by Charcharodon · · Score: 5, Informative
      However every single day there is at least one innocent child in this county who is shot as a direct result of an irresponsible owner.

      That statement is about worthless until you define what a "child" is. For a long time the gun haters like to quote statistics that defined a child as someone under 21 and as high as 24, and in their numbers. The also included "children" who were criminals that were shot by either the police or citizens defending themselves.

      As it is far fewer actual children, as in those under the age of 14. A child as someone that cannot be put in prison as an adult.

      So if defining a child as someone from 0 to 14 years of age
      Firearm homicide (murder) of those under 14 was around 230
      Firearm accidents barely made it onto the chart I was looking at with 22 unintentional firearm deaths for the 10-14 year old category. It was the only place it was in the top ten causes of death for any age group all the way up to the 65+ category.
      vs.
      1170 for being run over by cars
      708 for drowning
      1182 unintentional suffocation
      408 being murdered by a parent/family member
      58 dying from exposure (cold)
      228 from burning to death
      69 accidental death from beatings
      116 bicycle accidents
      Source 2012 statistics form the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. in 2012.

      Firearm deaths are hardly the "low hanging" fruit on things killing children in the US, and it hardly happens "every single day" Hence why most "gun nuts" get more than a little agitated when it is used as a reason to take away their rights.

      Firearm deaths and suicides do not start kicking in as a large result of death until the ages 15-24, but cars and alcohol/drug over dose kill more people by a factor of 3-5 times as many of all adults.

    6. Re:Maybe in a different country by Charcharodon · · Score: 0, Troll
      In the US when they police can show up and go through your home without a warrant we call that Fascism. So is having a license in order to exercise a right that is yours by simply being alive.

      Unlike the rest of the sheep, we for some odd reason do not like that.

    7. Re:Maybe in a different country by damn_registrars · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Firearm accidents barely made it onto the chart I was looking at with 22 unintentional firearm deaths for the 10-14 year old category.

      First of all, they are dramatically underreported, as has been shown numerous times. Second of all, I mentioned shootings, not just deaths. Fortunately a fair number of the shooting victims manage to survive, but that is only by luck (usually aided by the fact that the accidental shooter is often a child as well).

      Firearm deaths are hardly the "low hanging" fruit on things killing children in the US, and it hardly happens "every single day"

      Read the news. It is not hard to find an accidental shooting every single day in this country that involves a child. Hell, there were three accidental shootings in Houston involving children over the weekend. It does happen every day, and it is the fault of irresponsible gun owners.

      Hence why most "gun nuts" get more than a little agitated when it is used as a reason to take away their rights.

      Did I say anything about taking away rights? No, I did not. I even said that most owners are responsible. I just want people to be responsible. We have a lot of irresponsible shit-heads leaving loaded unlocked weapons sitting around like they are toys, and this is the result.

      And your bit about the age of a child is a straw man argument. I follow the standard definition of a child being under 18. And even at that the accidental shootings that I pay the most attention to are the ones involving kids under 10.

      --
      Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    8. Re:Maybe in a different country by damn_registrars · · Score: 0

      Put down your Ayn Rand for a moment and consider that teenage boy is someone's son. Someone will miss him if he takes his own life. As a society we have a responsibility to help those who find themselves in that situation. Leaving deadly weapons in easy reach is not the answer. If you leave the gun laying around for him there is a very real chance that he will take down someone else before turning the weapon on himself.

      --
      Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    9. Re: Maybe in a different country by briancox2 · · Score: 1

      So those people who care for that "someone's son", should live and die by their bad decisions to leave our guns. Not the rest of society.

      --
      We should learn what we need to know about issues, before we decide what we need to feel about them.
    10. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If someone really wants to die, they will find a way. Lock up the gun, they will step in front of a train instead. Why do things the hard way by actually screening for mental problems in schools and treating them when you can just blanket ban a tool or try to fence off the whole world. Might as well have us all live in plastic bubbles.

    11. Re:Maybe in a different country by dwillden · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Great points, and as demonstrated in Australia after their firearm ban and confiscation, removing firearms does not remove suicides. After the ban yes firearm suicides nearly vanished. But the overall suicide rate did not drop. In fact it spiked significantly the two years immediately following but then returned to the exact same level and gradual downward trend it had been running at in the years prior to the ban. But now suicide by firearm was a fraction of the occurrence that it had been before the ban and confiscation of most handguns and many rifles.

      Guns do not cause suicide. They are a convenient method when available, but if not available those determined to exit this sphere of existence will find a way to do so.

      --
      I'm too lazy to compose a creative sig.
    12. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The latter comes with regular, mandatory police inspections of gun owners' homes, to ensure guns are kept according to the rules."

      I call BS. Our law states you have to keep guns behind locks. No random police searches and inspections included. All it means it's actually an offence to not do so. Surprisingly most people keep guns locked in. This also discourages burglary in order to get guns, because they are usually pretty well locked away. It's not hard to get a gun permit around here, in fact we are in worlds top 5 in private gun ownership.

      If, during some other inspection or for some other reason it's found out you keep your gun on your windowstill or something it's enough of a reason to take the guns away from you. Also, if your kid, say, shoots himself with your gun that wasn't behind lock you'll get a punishment for that on top of your kid shooting himself.

    13. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow you are a completely biased asshole.

      What part of the 2nd Amendment is irresponsible?

      The fact is you are advocating for less responsibility, not more. Take power from people and hand it to the government, whether it be whose life is ok to end (abortion, suicide, euthanasia) or whether one can protect oneself.

      You, fool, are part of the problem and certainly not on the path to a solution

    14. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with guns is that they provide a very easy way to commit suicide. Someone with easy access to a gun only has to suicidal for a few moments. This is one of the reasons military suicides are higher than the general population, even after taking into account the differences in their mental states.

    15. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, sure is a good thing that it's not a bill of "needs" then isn't it.

      You don't NEED to post a comment stating that you don't believe that having a firearm at the ready during a home invasion will make a difference. But you did, because it's your right to speak.

      Locked doors do not stop criminals. Just like "no gun" signs don't stop criminals with guns.

      You say I am paranoid for owning a firearm, yet you lock your bedroom door? That sounds paranoid to me.

    16. Re:Maybe in a different country by TapeCutter · · Score: 5, Informative

      How is it irresponsible? If a teenage boy wants to shoot himself, give him a gun!

      If you're old enough to type, and you really have to ask that question, you simply don't have the level of empathy that's required to understand the answer.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    17. Re:Maybe in a different country by dcw3 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      How on earth are firearm deaths underreported? I'm gonna call BS.

      Yes, you can read the news, which isn't a good statistical reference since it's mainly about capturing eyeballs, and selling ads.

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    18. Re:Maybe in a different country by itzly · · Score: 1

      If you lock every single door in your house, including your bedroom door, the risk of dying in a house fire because you can't get out quickly enough probably outweighs the benefit of the extra protection.

    19. Re:Maybe in a different country by hodet · · Score: 1

      I knew, I just knew that after reading the summary and it contained the word 'gun' that the whole first thread would be another useless gun debate with "second amendment" being brought up and people questioning each others parentage.

    20. Re:Maybe in a different country by redcaboodle · · Score: 1

      I have always wondered about that. So someone who finds their life unbearable is pressured not to end it because it may cause grief to other persons. If a child has stopped wanting to live, chances are the people who are close to them may have something to do with that. Yet still their feelings are so much more important than those of the suicidal child.

      That may explain the victim blaming in mobbing cases. It would hurt the bullies, but the victim's existence is already screwed, so who cares if he/she gets an extra kick or two in the head.

      --
      -- Put crudely, the world is an extremely large problem instance. (Russel/Norvig Artificial Intelligence)
    21. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you're saying the authorities regularly inspect every gun owner's home to make sure their guns are stored according to the rules? That's ludicrous. Do they inspect everyone's homes to make sure they haven't committed murder, tax fraud, etc, as well?

    22. Re:Maybe in a different country by tinkerton · · Score: 1

      Yeah right. Now put it differently, suppose a number indicates your desiring to die at any given moment. The number fluctuates all the time. Then you can distinguish between a function with a few dangerous peaks and one with a dangerous level for the baseline. Making access harder for those who are just having a difficult period is bound to have results.
      What you then get is a tradeoff. To what extent are you willing to restrict someone's freedom by just making some things harder, to build in delays here and there, just to get them past the dangerous period. I think compromises can be made there. The two groups i don't like here at both sides of the spectrum, those who never interfere and those who want to decide for you what's best for you and don't even realize they're compromizing other values.

    23. Re:Maybe in a different country by Imrik · · Score: 1

      Most locked doors will open from the inside without any time lost.

    24. Re:Maybe in a different country by GarethIwanFairclough · · Score: 1

      The problem with guns is that they provide a very easy way to commit suicide. Someone with easy access to a gun only has to suicidal for a few moments. This is one of the reasons military suicides are higher than the general population, even after taking into account the differences in their mental states.

      I think one could make a similar argument about knives, or just about any other weapon. Heck, throw in cars or bridges while you're at in.

    25. Re: Maybe in a different country by O('_')O_Bush · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It is largely a cultural thing as well. If you look at a ranking of countries by suicide rate, no country in the top 10 are guns easily and legally acquired. Some, like Japan and South Korea, gun ownership is nearly impossible. But countries like the U.S. and Switzerland, having the highest gun ownership, rank 30 and 44 respectively.

      --
      while(1) attack(People.Sandy);
    26. Re:Maybe in a different country by moeinvt · · Score: 2

      How the hell is having loaded and easily accessible firearms in your own home "irresponsible"? What good is a firearm for defensive purposes if you have to open a safe before you can get to it?

      I'll proudly stand up to authoritarian a$$holes like Michael Bloomberg who want to tell me what I can and can't do with my firearms in my own home. You seriously want police going around serving warrants and arresting people for the "crime" of having unlocked firearms? If they start doing that, maybe it IS time for a revolution?

      It's "irresponsible" to pass a law telling criminals that it's open season for burglaries and home invasions because citizens won't be able to get to their firearms in time to defend themselves.

    27. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The same can be said about making cars safer. I want drivers licenses to be harder to get and harder to keep, yet most of the people that suck at driving whine that it's their god given right to drive 3 feet from my back bumper at 80 while they text.

      Far more people die because of bad drivers than guns. Yet we wont fix this.

    28. Re:Maybe in a different country by johnlcallaway · · Score: 2

      And we could also stop accidental death by automobile by banning all cars except those the government gives permission to drive. Don't stop there, but a stop to DUI deaths by banning alcohol AND cars.

      100% of the population should not have to give things up for the irresponsible or bad decisions of a very small minority. Or do you only think that if it affects people other than yourself??? As long as you don't have to do anything you don't want to do, it's OK to force other people.

      It is not irresponsible to have a loaded gun that is unlocked in a house, guns never shoot anyone by themselves. It can be irresponsible in some instances.

      On the other hand, a gun in a locked safe is useless for home defense if no one knows the combination. And there are many news stories of responsible children stopping threats in a home because they knew where their parent's guns were. So, what's the use of locking it up to prevent suicide if we don't also make it illegal for anyone under the age of 18 (21??) to know the combination.

      The only irresponsible people that I see here are those that think they can create one rule for everyone and think there won't be unintended consequences that might actually be worse. And expect the government to somehow enforce it.

      --
      I rarely read replies, it's my opinion and if you thought about your opinion a little more, I'm OK with that.
    29. Re:Maybe in a different country by moeinvt · · Score: 1

      If that law ever gets enacted in my country, I will hang a rifle from the ceiling in front of my bay windows and report myself to the authorities.

      Molon Labe

    30. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kids do die from it, and it is easily preventable. Is one child's life not worth at least some reasonable regulation? We have our cars inspected, why not gun safes and individual firearms... which are far more lethal? The US needs to man up and do like Venezuela where they banned all citizen ownership and sale of firearms... and their crime rate is 1/1000 what it used to be before the ban went into place.

    31. Re:Maybe in a different country by Megol · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yes one can make such an argument. It would however not be based on reality and would be easily disproved by research data and statistics.

      Most people that are suicidal don't want to suffer a painful death.
      Most people have their darkest moments while at home.

    32. Re:Maybe in a different country by quenda · · Score: 1

      The latter comes with regular, mandatory police inspections of gun owners' homes, to ensure guns are kept according to the rules.

      Reg is not at all necessary. We have lots of rules for home safety without inspection, except when a home is first built. Perhaps when someone gets a gun licence it could require proof that they have secure storage. After that, education and publicising prosecutions (e.g. kids or burglar finding gun) might be enough to make a big difference.

    33. Re:Maybe in a different country by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 3, Insightful

      First of all, they are dramatically underreported, as has been shown numerous times.

      Well, it depends on what you mean by "dramatically." For example, the New York Times investigated this and estimates that about half of accidental gun deaths of children may not be properly reported or classified. A USA Today report said the actual numbers were 61% higher than the CDC numbers, perhaps getting up to 100 unintentional deaths in the year studied there.

      And that latter report was by an organization promoting gun safety, so I don't think they are lowballing the figure. On the other hand, that latter report doesn't define "child," so I'm not sure what age range is involved.

      In any case, while these gun deaths are deplorable and may be somewhat underreported, even organizations who are desperately looking for gun deaths don't seem to agree with your statement that "It is not hard to find an accidental shooting every single day in this country that involves a child." Maybe a couple times a week on average. But hardly "every single day."

      The CDC's numbers may be low. But your numbers are too high.

      And your bit about the age of a child is a straw man argument. I follow the standard definition of a child being under 18.

      The problem here is again a shift from possible underreporting to vastly overreporting that is characteristic of the other side of this argument.

      The unfortunate reality -- as is the case with many polarized topics in U.S. politics -- is that both sides lie and mislead. Gun advocates want these numbers to appear as low as possible. People who are anti-gun want them to appear as high as possible.

      And the anti-gun side has a strong tradition of including all sorts of misleading numbers involving teenagers to jack those numbers up -- trying to lump suicides, homicides, and accidents all into one category for example. Of course, most people recognize that teenagers below the age of 18 often are smart enough and competent enough to realize what they are doing, so you can't just lump all these things together.

      Anyhow, clearly you have your own biased perspective and are intent on exaggerating your data. Clearly GP has his own as well. The reality is probably somewhere in the middle.

    34. Re:Maybe in a different country by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

      And someone called *me* a real dick earlier today...

      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
    35. Re:Maybe in a different country by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 5, Informative

      You don't need a gun at your nightstand, it's never going to be a matter of seconds that saves you.

      You do realize that when you make a statement like that, it takes only a single counterexample to prove you wrong?

      Like this: The mother tells 7 Action News she "didn't have time to get scared." When she heard the door to her home on Woodrow Wilson being kicked in, she immediately warned the three teenage intruders and then opened fire.

      Or this: "Apparently the homeowner has been the victim of burglary recently so he was on alert, he was on edge, and as soon as he heard glass breaking he armed himself to protect himself and his 11-year-old child who was in the home."

      Or this: "Police said Henry broke into the house and began to attack Moreno until her daughter, Jayda Milsap, 11, shot Henry twice with a handgun." Now there's a story about kids and guns you probably didn't see on the news. If this mom had kept her gun locked so her daughter couldn't get to it, they both might be dead now.

      So I'm sorry to inform you of this, but when it comes to violent crime the world does not work the way you think that it does. When an armed person is suddenly and without prior warning in your home, you are in a combat situation. And in a combat situation, seconds matter.

      Whether the risk of being prepared for such a situation does or does not outweigh the risks of having an unlocked gun around depends on your risk of home invasion, who lives in the house, who visits the house, and so on. A universal assessment is impossible. But in making the choice you need to be aware that there is a tremendous selection bias in the stories that are covered in the media: defensive firearms use does not receive nearly the coverage that the accidental shooting of a kid does, but is orders of magnitude more common.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    36. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But what about the gun nuts' Constitutional right to bear arms irresponsibly and kill their pregnant wives without consequence? Thank ALEC, the NRA and Jeezus that here in the land of the free and the home of the brave that gun nuts have a license to kill so long as they "feel threatened". I'm sure they "feel threatened" whenever some legislation comes up with respect to gun rights... Better get your arsenal in order!

    37. Re:Maybe in a different country by moeinvt · · Score: 1

      ".... every single day there is at least one innocent child in this county who is shot as a direct result of an irresponsible owner."

      I assume you're talking about "irresponsible" but otherwise law-abiding citizens, not criminals.
      What's your definition of "child"? Anti-gun groups will frequently define anyone under 21 as a "child" to pad their data. As if an 18 year old gang-banger is a "child".

      Let's suppose anyone under 14 y/o is a "child", which makes it convenient to analyze CDC data:

      http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/n...

      For 2013. Deaths by accidental discharge of firearms:

      Age : Number
      0- 1 : 3
      1-4 : 27
      5-14 : 39

      Doesn't exactly square with one "every day" and I think that even age '14' is a bit of a stretch in defining a "child".

    38. Re:Maybe in a different country by pipingguy · · Score: 2

      "...regular, mandatory police inspections of gun owners' homes..."

      Why stop at just "gun owners'" homes? Mandatory police inspections would have to be performed at all homes, since people not on the list of gun owners could have undeclared firearms as well. I think you can see where this is going...

    39. Re:Maybe in a different country by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      No. One child's life is not worth imposing a police state.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    40. Re:Maybe in a different country by Malizar · · Score: 1

      Kids die from a lot of preventable things. Based on CDC data, more kids commit suicide using suffocation than guns in the US. Does that mean we need to ban all plastic bags? And a lot of the deaths are over-inflated because they consider a 19 year old to be a child for their statistics.

    41. Re:Maybe in a different country by RKThoadan · · Score: 1

      > There's a big difference between promoting gun safety at home, and putting it into law.

      Tell that to Florida, who wrote a law forbidding doctors from even asking if people have guns at home, much less recommending that they keep them secure.

      http://www.theatlantic.com/hea...

    42. Re: Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please see the other story this morning on /. It seems to imply that this is BS. Easy access to guns results in more successful suicide attempts.

    43. Re:Maybe in a different country by tibit · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As someone who has attempted suicide and just barely made it, I think that the so-called mental health experts are a bit stuck up in seeing things from nobody's perspective but theirs. The freedom to lead your way the way you choose to must include ending your own life at any time of your choosing. It is true that quite often people who attempted suicide are happy with making it out alive, and being able to live their lives. I certainly am!! On the other hand, the thought that some "expert" who is not in my frame of mind would have the ability to, essentially, take over my ability to take my life - is downright scary. Just because I'm happy with the life I have now doesn't mean that I'd be happy about someone preventing me from attempting to take my life when I did so. Two decades later, I'd consider it a gross invasion of privacy, and a horrific, slippery slope takeover of basic human liberty.

      There is a very fine line between truly helping someone, and "helping" someone by - as you unashamedly admit - putting someone else's feelings over your own. Yes, as a society we have an obligation to give as much help as we can, but that help IMHO should not extend to overriding the decision of someone who wishes to take their life away. I find it, actually, completely incomprehensible that people think that preservation of human life over all else should be forced down everyone's throat. I also find it not all that clear that suicidal thoughts should be treated like a malaise in all cases. My attempt at my own life made me into a person that I am now, and who are you, or anyone else for that matter, to say that I'd be better off not having tried it? It's quite possible the worst case of "what if" imaginable, because you're not merely hypothesizing, you intend to take action.

      The implication that all people with suicidal thoughts have a "very real chance" of taking down someone else is just an icing on the cake. You're nuts. I'm not a murderer, and can't imagine how attempting to take my own life would have ever made me take the life of someone else while doing so - other than indirectly, say by someone close to me dying of a stress-induced heart attack. I can't imagine that any sort of a majority, or even a significant minority of people who attempt a suicide are murderers and would take down others with them - not unless they were murderers to begin with, and suicial thoughts were just an enabler, like alcohol or drugs would be for others.

      TL;DR: You're nuts, you really are.

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
    44. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um no. That's just bathroom doors. It may not be much time to twist the lock open and then twist the knob, but it's time.

    45. Re:Maybe in a different country by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Put down your Ayn Rand for a moment and consider that teenage boy is someone's son. Someone will miss him if he takes his own life.

      Yeah, the same one that failed at parenting, obviously. Because that's what it means when your offspring decide to self-terminate. I don't really give a good goddamn who they will miss. With any luck, they will get the message, and not create any more people. They're bad at it (or the parts immediately following) and should stop.

      It's sad when people die, yes. I don't want to promote suicide. But I also don't want to make decisions based on how some failures as parents who have shit up the gene pool feel. They should have thought of that before they bred, and/or did a shit job parenting.

      If you leave the gun laying around for him there is a very real chance that he will take down someone else before turning the weapon on himself.

      Yes, and that's why in many places, if your gun is stolen and used to commit a crime and you haven't reported it, you may share liability.

      What I want most is a country where I don't feel I need to own guns, and where people don't try to steal and/or misuse guns. What I want second most is to have my gun close at hand when I need it.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    46. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Firearms deaths are "underreported." lolololololololol Cool story bro. "OH SHIT JOHN IS DEAD! Well, let's just sweep this one under the rug." hahahahahahahaha

    47. Re:Maybe in a different country by dj245 · · Score: 2

      Firearm accidents barely made it onto the chart I was looking at with 22 unintentional firearm deaths for the 10-14 year old category. It was the only place it was in the top ten causes of death for any age group all the way up to the 65+ category. vs. 1170 for being run over by cars 708 for drowning 1182 unintentional suffocation 408 being murdered by a parent/family member 58 dying from exposure (cold) 228 from burning to death 69 accidental death from beatings 116 bicycle accidents Source 2012 statistics form the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. in 2012.

      Firearm deaths are hardly the "low hanging" fruit on things killing children in the US, and it hardly happens "every single day" Hence why most "gun nuts" get more than a little agitated when it is used as a reason to take away their rights.

      It isn't a low hanging fruit. It is part of a multipronged approach, tackling all of the ways people die needlessly.

      Automakers spend billions of dollars making their cars more safe, going to great lengths to add features that increase survivability. The government sets standards that must be met if the car is allowed to be sold.

      Local governments and state/national governments spend millions of dollars making lakes, rivers and beaches more safe, by adding signage, marking hazards and swimming areas, hiring lifeguards, building lighthouses, etc.

      Just about every plastic bag is marked with warnings not to allow children to play with them. Lampcords and blinds have standards now that are supposed to make them safer and more difficult for young children to hang themselves.

      "408 being murdered by a parent/family member" How many of those were by gun?

      "58 dying from exposure (cold)" Governments all over the world, including the USA, have programs subsidizing fuel for the poor. Lots of effort and money is spent predicting the weather and issuing cold weather / winter storm warnings.

      "228 from burning to death" - The government spends a huge amount of money on fire education and local municipalities subsidize smoke detectors, CO detectors, and other fire safety items. Etc.

      So we do take action to try to prevent those causes of deaths. We spend billions of dollars a year on reducing them, and try to educate those in society about the dangers. The argument "accidental gun shootings are just another, of many common ways to die" only works if you are willing to treat it the same way as we treat other deaths. By education, regulation, and by using every other tool available. Gun advocates complaining about regulation and education is as absurd as a match or lighter manufacturer complaining about Smokey the Bear. The goal is to make the product more safe, and the public more educated, so it isn't as vilified.

      --
      Even those who arrange and design shrubberies are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
    48. Re:Maybe in a different country by tibit · · Score: 2

      Ah, so there are people out there who get it! Thank you for a voice of reason in this "I know better than you what's good for you" insanity.

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
    49. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Abortion and euthanasia is legal where I live. What difference does it make if they're teenaged? We already live in a society where life is cheap. Let people make their own decisions. I won't be surprised to see suicide booths a la Futurama in 50 years.

    50. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where is this anyone under 14 y/o is a "child" meme coming from? There's a very clear legal definition of a child in any jurisdiction and in most if not all US jurisdictions it's not 14, it's 18. Look up Age of Majority and stop doing the same thing you accuse your opponents on gun-rights of doing by making up your own definition (one that fits your statistics much better, btw) of "child".

    51. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      First of all, they are dramatically underreported, as has been shown numerous times. Second of all, I mentioned shootings, not just deaths. Fortunately a fair number of the shooting victims manage to survive, but that is only by luck (usually aided by the fact that the accidental shooter is often a child as well).

      Covering up deaths, even accidental ones is a felony. I very much doubt anyone comes home to find little Johnny has his brains blown all over the wall by daddy's Colt .45 he left on the coffee table, and says "Oh, you know, why don't we just bury him in the yard and pretend this didn't happen".

      It's completely implausible accidental firearm deaths are underreported. The only realistic scenario I can come up with is someone accidentally shoots themselves while hiking in the wilderness and falls down a crevass, never to be found again. Even if bizarre accidents like that happen, they must be so rare that they wouldn't meaningfully affect the statistics.

    52. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most locked doors that open by turning the interior handle can be broken with a single well placed kick.

    53. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      poor boiling frog

    54. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A child as someone that cannot be put in prison as an adult.

      No. A child is anyone who hasn't reached the age of majority in their jurisdiction and is generally accepted by almost everybody in the United States and large swaths of the world (except those on either side of the gun-control debate apparently) as 18 years old.

      The second you start re-defining things to mean something else and/or fit your statistics better, you lose all credibility. Just like the "gun haters" you sound so disdainful toward.

      It would be really nice if people on either side of an argument would step back and realize they lose the audience that hasn't already picked up their pitchforks and joined either side the second they start this kind of bullshit.

    55. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe the GP means that black kids' deaths aren't usually reported. I don't know if that's true, but it's always what I've heard about the USA.

    56. Re:Maybe in a different country by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Suggesting [gun control] will be quickly shot down by people claiming you are impeding on their constitutional right to overthrow the government.

      You say that as if it were a bad thing.

      Now, I'll happily agree with you that people who don't secure their guns properly are idiots. But I'd much rather tolerate the consequences of idiots than remove Americans' collective ability to resist tyranny.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    57. Re:Maybe in a different country by quenda · · Score: 5, Informative

      in Australia after their firearm ban and confiscation, removing firearms does not remove suicides.

      There was no "firearm" ban, but a restriction and buyback of rapid-fire weapons. Of course many people used the money to buy new legal weapons.
      A bolt-action rifle or standard shotgun is not so good for massacres, but perfectly effective for hunting or suicide. There is no reason to expect a decline.

      those determined to exit this sphere of existence will find a way to do so.

      Ok, too hard to RTFA, but at least RTFS. It is not about those who are sufficiently determined to find a way.

    58. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      First of all, they are dramatically underreported, as has been shown numerous times.

      [Citation needed]

    59. Re:Maybe in a different country by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      people claiming you are impeding on their constitutional right to overthrow the government.

      I really, really, wish I was exaggerating or kidding on this one.

      I really wish you weren't wishing that. It shows you haven't read your history.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    60. Re:Maybe in a different country by jjn1056 · · Score: 3, Informative

      " They are a convenient method when available, but if not available those determined to exit this sphere of existence will find a way to do so."

      You didn't read the article. What they are saying is that there is clear evidence that a lot of people that presently kill themselves with a readily available means, would not do it if that means required a lot more effort. Lots of people kill themselves on terrible impulse, particularly young people that are having trouble coping with there emotions due to simple biochemical forces. Those types of suicide would be reduced IF it was harder to act on that impulse. That is 100% clear.

      For people that are clinically depressed the story is a different matter. For those people simple reducing the means may not help so much (although I doubt it would hurt and might save some percentage).

      I don't know enough about all the facts in Australia to understand the stats you mention (you don't give a source so I can't evaluate it). This article does mention studies which indicate the opposite of what you are saying. We'd need to see all the studies together to review them to see which if any are more meaningful. We'd also need to consider any biases those sources may have...

      --
      Peace, or Not?
    61. Re:Maybe in a different country by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      I really really hope you're not that naive.
      I get it: a lot of people feel that guns are scary. I understand. I'd love to see the link to someone actually campaigning for 'irresponsible gun ownership' - could you provide one? ("Irresponsible" according to general definitions, not your personal one.)

      It IS frightful to concede to some bureaucrat somewhere the power to say "that dangerous such-and-such should be locked up* if it's in your house".
      *according, certainly, to some 50-page government rulebook about what "locking up" is deemed legally sufficient

      Chainsaws are dangerous, should we lock them up too?
      Knives: people have been killing themselves with knives for centuries, we need to get them put away "for the children".
      Glass, hell, anything glass could be used like a knife, we should ban that.
      You don't see the potential here?
      One of my parents' best friends was killed by a man who - as far as anyone can tell - decided to commit suicide by deliberately turning his steeringwheel about 10 degrees to the left. We should probably prohibit driving? How is operating a 2000kg vehicle driving 120kph even *faintly* less dangerous or potentially/impulsively self-destructive than a firearm sitting in a locker?

      Some people are ignorant, some people are self-destructive, some people are careless. As much as you might like, you're not going to be able to legislate that away.

      Be as patronizing as you want, but yes, sensible people will object to your drive to empower government just because you have a immature desire to cover your whole fucking life with safety nets and bubble wrap.

      --
      -Styopa
    62. Re:Maybe in a different country by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 1

      If parents leave guns in a locked safe, a teenage son cannot shoot himself if he suddenly decides life is hopeless.

      People have been proudly campaigning for irresponsible gun ownership in the US for a very, very, long time. Suggesting things like locking up guns - even in the gun owner's home ...

      Makes a gun of little value for self defense unless one has a quick open gun safe. Guns are used over a million times per year in this country for self defense. Suicides clock in at 1.5% of that (on the high end) and perhaps 1% of that. I know it's hard to understand but guns are very useful for self defense. Unfortunately, they're useful for suicide, too. The answer isn't statutory law.

    63. Re:Maybe in a different country by jjn1056 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Its a lot harder to kill yourself (or another person that is actively resisting) with a knife than with a gun. Having been in barroom brawls where knifes came out I can tell you that with certainty.

      People that kill themselves by cutting themselves typically have to do a lot to make it work (for example preparing a hot bath to prevent clotting, etc.). And they need to cut deep, and cut correctly (slashing up and down the wrist, not across for example, as typically shown in movies) to achieve the goal, which is rather painful unless again one takes the time to acquire pain medication and consume it. This increased preparation time increases the mental barrier one needs to overcome to order to actually complete the suicide attempt and the increased time required to perform the act makes it more likely that someone might catch you in the act and save you.

      People also tend to kill themselves in private, in their home, where they can't be interrupted and have had a lengthy time of isolation to deepen their depression. A handgun in the bedroom drawer "just in case" is a very easy way to attempt suicide and is in the ideal, private and quiet location that most people seek when trying to kill themselves. Other means that people choose in private, such as hanging themselves, typically have large mental barriers to overcome. Its not easy to correctly form the type of noose one needs, for example and also the death itself (by a possible lengthy suffocation) is a scary barrier to overcome. One must be very depressed to overcome that, and often when someone is that depressed they are not capable of the work involved to make it happen (and also there is a bigger chance for another person to notice how depressed they are, and offer help).

      Although it is easy to crash a car as you mention, typically this is not what people want to do to kill themselves (typically, but yes there are always going to be outliers). As pointed out most people seek privacy and a period of isolation. Driving on the highway at speeds enough to cause death is not private nor isolated. And bridges can be better secured such as to make it harder (using fencing for example) and we can place emergency help phones on the bridge as well, which have been known to save people by giving them a person to speak with when they need it most.

      The study is suggesting that people when deprived of an easy, private death in the convenience of their own home act on suicide impulses a lot less simple because its harder to do in the conditions one typically seeks.

      --
      Peace, or Not?
    64. Re:Maybe in a different country by khallow · · Score: 1

      I think the claim is that some firearm deaths are misreported. For example, I could see a religious incentive to claim that some suicides were actually accidents. But that would err in the wrong direction.

    65. Re:Maybe in a different country by nehumanuscrede · · Score: 1

      Because it's pointless.

      While away from home, fine. Keep your guns locked in a safe. It makes it harder for the local thugs to steal them. Folks don't normally claim " overthrowing the government " as a reason for not locking up firearms, rather those that do own them understand that, while at home, guns locked inside a safe are not very useful. The whole point of a firearm is to level the playing field as it relates to defense. If it isn't available to you, then you negate the entire reason for owning it to begin with.

      Teach your kids what they are so they respect them. If you do it right, you never have to worry about your kids safety when it comes to firearms ever again.

      If you fail at being a parent, then you should refrain from owning firearms or having children. ( or both )

    66. Re:Maybe in a different country by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      You don't need a gun at your nightstand, it's never going to be a matter of seconds that saves you. Storing the gun in a safe in the bedroom works just fine.

      I take it somehow you've never heard of home invasions?

      They kick in your front door and come in quickly, sometimes only a few seconds is all you have. Personally, I have several loaded handguns hidden around my house, all within arms reach. If I need one, I can get one quickly.

      If you don't want guns for home protection, that's fine, but don't hinder my wanting them.

      You just try it...with adrenaline pumping, nighttime, trying to not only remember the fucking combination of a gun safe in the dark, grabbing guns and then trying to figure which box of ammo to load them with (I assume you wish guns to be stored in a safe unloaded, right?).....

      I'm sure Mr. Criminal will be happy to give you plenty of time to get your firearm act together so that it is a more fair fight, eh?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    67. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However every single day there is at least one innocent child in this county who is shot as a direct result of an irresponsible owner.

      This statement claims nothing about deaths by shooting, it can not be refuted using stats about deaths by shooting.

    68. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I lock up my guns then the terrorists win.

      You'll eat those words when your gun loving neighbor saves you and your family from a home invasion or ISIS.

    69. Re:Maybe in a different country by jjn1056 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Because we know that many people that kill themselves do so because they are in the grips of simple biochemical processes related to a certain age, such as a teenager when their growth hormones are at full speed. This is something people don't have control over and its worse for some people than it is for others. These people have no rational reason to want to be dead other than they can't control their emotions. Typically the problems they have are not anything out of the ordinary, and certainly not a problem that one might rationally choose death to avoid.

      For example many young people just kill themselves because they don't feel they fit into the world, or because they fall in love with someone that doesn't reciprocate. These problems are common ones. These a solvable problems that no rational person would think are so terrible that death is truly a more desirable choice. They simple need help and support to get through that difficult time of life after which the vast majority go on to be happy and live meaninful lives and are glad that they didn't die at a younger age.

      On the other hand some people when faced with the certainty of a lingering, painful and undignified death (such as when someone is diagnosed with a fatal illness) might choose to rationally seek a death that they have control over, and that meets the criteria of suffering (or lack of it) that they desire. Personally I think that I'd rather die when I still have most of my wits about me and when I still have some type of control over what I am doing than to die strapped to some hospital machine, barely aware of what is going on. I don't think that people should feel forced to make that choice, but I do think I can understand the rationality behind it. On the other hand as someone that was very depressed and unhappy as a young adult, I a glad it was not easy for me to kill myself (my parents did not own a gun and I lived in a location with strict gun control laws, NYC) because now as a middle aged person I am very happy with my life and I feel I am making a contribution to society in the open source work that I do and in other ways.

      I don't think life is cheap, and I am sorry you feel that way :( I hope you also find happiness in some point of life

      --
      Peace, or Not?
    70. Re:Maybe in a different country by Charcharodon · · Score: 1

      Ugh my sentence structure is atrocious. That's what I get for responding at 3am after taking the dog out who was puking on the floor.

    71. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Great

        Why you want to kill your politicians when you coult vote for other ones? Because you live in a police state instead of a real democracy and you did not fight aganis it, even though you own GUNS?

      What did I miss?

    72. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a stupid comment. The NRA is a big proponent of gun safety. Safe handling, safe storage, proper maintenance, proper education. And your stupid little dig at the end of your comment about "constitutional right to overthrow the government" is asinine. It's about the constitutional right to own and carry a firearm to defend yourself, your family, and your property.

    73. Re:Maybe in a different country by nehumanuscrede · · Score: 1

      People of all ages die from all sorts of irresponsibility every day, yet many continue to focus on firearms even though other issues kill far more every year.

      In 2010, about forty thousand deaths by suicide occurred in the United States. Only about half of those were from firearms. ( 19,392 actually )
      The CDC states there are about eleven thousand homicides by firearm in the United States in the same year.

      While noteworthy, those numbers aren't even playing the same game as the issues that really kill us in large numbers:

              Heart disease: 611,105
              Cancer: 584,881
              Chronic lower respiratory diseases: 149,205
              Accidents (unintentional injuries): 130,557
              Stroke (cerebrovascular diseases): 128,978
              Alzheimer's disease: 84,767
              Diabetes: 75,578
              Influenza and Pneumonia: 56,979
              Nephritis, nephrotic syndrome, and nephrosis: 47,112
              Intentional self-harm (suicide): 41,149

      So, while the intentions are good, focusing on firearms as a high priority issue is a bit misguided when considering the numbers above. We would do a lot more by pouring money into medical research if saving lives is truly the goal.

    74. Re:Maybe in a different country by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately you are correct. There are far too many negligent firearm owners. I would also like to see better training for firearm ownership, even if it does end up being like drivers ed in the US it would be better. Personally I would prefer training more akin to the BSA shotgun or rifle merit badges but even something like hunter firearm safety certificate, even if it is lacking compared to the BSA merit badges, is better than the current nothing that is the status quo. I say this as a firearm owner who owns a few long guns and a side arm and keeps them locked up in a very nice heavy fireproof safe that is bolted into the poured concrete floor and poured concrete wall in my basement.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    75. Re:Maybe in a different country by Jiro · · Score: 1

      In this context, claiming lots of "children" are shot is used to imply that because they are children, they are innocent and the fault is of someone else who made the gun available or used it irresponsibly. It is dishonest to pick an age so high that they start getting shot because they are committing crimes rather than because someone left the gun out and it looked like a toy.

    76. Re:Maybe in a different country by nehumanuscrede · · Score: 1

      "Read the news. It is not hard to find an accidental shooting every single day in this country that involves a child. Hell, there were three accidental shootings in Houston involving children over the weekend [cnn.com]. It does happen every day, and it is the fault of irresponsible gun owners."

      By the same token, car accidents and medical illness deaths are so commonplace that we don't even bother reporting them in the news because if we did, there wouldn't be any room for anything else.

    77. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      All of those stories are rooted solely on testimony from the gunowner themselves. Brains that have been suddenly woken up and pumped full of adrenaline have horrible memory retention. Studies have repeatedly shown that "war stories" have little in common with reality. The brain invents its own narrative. You'll find similar accuracy rates from people drinking moonshine and reporting UFOs.

    78. Re:Maybe in a different country by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 0

      And that latter report was by an organization promoting gun safety, so I don't think they are lowballing the figure.

      The latter report was by two gun control groups. It would have been overestimating the figures to make their point more significant.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    79. Re:Maybe in a different country by Jiro · · Score: 2

      That happened because of the combination of 1) medical associations encouraging doctors to ask the questions (for guns alone, not for all things of similar dangerousness) and 2) doctors being mandatory reporters, so having a doctor tell you not to have guns is very intimidating because it's a half step towards losing your children.

    80. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe where you live, but in the parts of the midwest and the south that I've seen, having a flippant attitude about guns is as important as actually owning them. You'd have to be an idiot or a pussy to worry about accidentally shooting yourself, and besides, how are you gonna shoot home invaders if you have to unlock your gun first?

    81. Re:Maybe in a different country by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      These aren't war stories, they're local news reports. Obviously the mainstream media deliberately ignores these stories as they contradict The Narrative [tm].

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    82. Re:Maybe in a different country by BCtoo · · Score: 0

      Because the US is supposed to be a country where people are free to make their own decisions, not have some one-size-fits-nobody solution imposed upon them. Even if you disagree.
      It's not about guns, the issue is about the human right to life, which includes the right to self defense.

      Your idea of safety is not the same as everyone else's. Your situation is not the same as everyone else's either. It's the height of arrogance to think they are.

    83. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why doesn't such a study consider data such as that reported from Australia in other posts on this topic? Namely that withdrawal of guns from a populace did not reduce suicide rates? Or that countries like Japan have so much suicide in spite of very few guns? Such data is much more informative than a set of cherry-picked, emotional anecdotes.

      Like many others, my brother killed himself with the popular combination of a belt around his neck and a high spot to attach it. Unlike a recently deceased celebrity, who apparently used a doorknob and had to sit into his noose, my brother was able to find a structural beam and even kick himself off a chair for good measure. People even managed to complete this act in prisons where belts and shoelaces have been confiscated in advance, using scraps of clothing or bedding to form a noose.

      If you actually care about suicide victims, please consider the actual mental health, cultural, and public policy issues at play. Don't turn it into political grandstanding for your tangentially related pet project.

    84. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "And your bit about the age of a child is a straw man argument."

      Do you know the definition of a straw man? Because this statement seems to imply you don't. A straw man argument is a flimsy argument built in large part to be easily knocked down. The original poster was more obviously making the argument that a 15 year old is hardly an "innocent child" as was originally mentioned. Not to mention that gun violence statistics slant for older children due to gang violence, something outside the realm of the discussion of accidental deaths or even those where a locked up gun is going to help significantly. How a "child" is defined is relevant in this case when you're trying to trigger emotions with the image of "children" being accidentally shot by guns.

      The fact that you refute statistics with "but read the news, that stat is wrong" shows that you're not necessarily thinking straight. Or at least that you've built up an image that isn't holding up.

    85. Re:Maybe in a different country by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I really hate the phrase "accidental shooting" and don't believe in them. Given every thing that I have ever been taught about how to handle and use firearms every "accidental shooting" really is a negligent shooting. There are so many thing that have to go wrong when a shooting happens that I would support charges of criminal negligence every time. Lets take a couple of common examples. First and most trotted out one is a small child finds the parents loaded hand gun usually in some place like a night stand or purse. In this case there are 3 things that have all gone wrong:
      1. The gun was kept where a child could find it
      2. The gun was not locked with a trigger or barrel lock
      3. The gun was loaded
      Avoiding any one of those things would have prevented the shooting but no 3 negligent actions all had to happen. Lets look at another common one, teenage kid shoots a fried with parents gun that was believed to be unloaded. Here again multiple things have gone wrong. In addition to the 3 mentioned in the previous example 3 more things have gone wrong. The first was that the individual who shot their friend was pointing a firearm at something they didn't intend to shoot. Second the individual handling the firearm was not handling it like it was loaded. Third the individual did not check and make the firearm safe upon picking it up. So in this tragic case we have a grand total of 6 negligent actions that if just one of them was avoided the tragedy wouldn't of happened.

      All of that said I do believe in accidental discharge of a firearm as I have had such a situation happen to me. While out hunting in rather inclement weather I had some sleet land on the bolt face and temporarily freeze the firing pin forward so when I closed the action after loading my SKS it discharged the round it chambered. In this case because I was practicing proper handling the only thing that happened was that the bullet went into the ground about 10 feet in front of me. Immediately after that I went back to my truck and tore down, inspected, cleaned and oiled my sks to verify that noting was wrong with it and was able to get the pin to freeze forward again to verify that that is what happened. I have never had that problem since and now when I am out with it know to check it before closing the action in addition to all of the other safe firearm handling procedures.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    86. Re: Maybe in a different country by the+grace+of+R'hllor · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Stop in vitro fertilization and medical treatment for everything except accidents too, then. After all, if you get a heart attack and we help you, we're just encouraging people with genes that provide medical risk factors to continue. In fact, we should probably take out your kids.

      Depression is an illness, not a choice, and you're arguing letting people die from a disease where it's possibly preventable.

    87. Re:Maybe in a different country by LordLimecat · · Score: 2

      And those irresponsible owners are the ones whose "rights" we see so much time and money spent to protect.

      It has historically been the policy of reasonable and just governments to punish people who have committed a crime, after they have committed said crime. Now alternatives have been proposed, most famously by Mr Orwell, but these are generally regarded as a poor choice for the populace.

      If the vast majority of the population has no trouble in following a loosely enforced law, and someone cries "for the children!" to attempt to impose strict policing for the entire population for the sake of stopping the remaining 0.05% of offenders, I would have a hard time signing on.

    88. Re:Maybe in a different country by Charcharodon · · Score: 2
      Sorry but quoting the legal age of adult hood for the 50 US States is hardly considered a straw man argument.
      The legal age of a "child" falls into two categories: Criminality or Consent.

      Depending on which State you are talking about that falls between 11 and 16 years of age. 11-13 for criminality and somewhere around 16 for consent.

      I'm going to report BS on your underreporting of children being shot, because what is little Timmy going to tell his teacher, "oh yeah I fell off my bike Ms Cranberry and landed on .45 ACP slug"?

      If anything the amount of children being reported as "shot" is over reported, because they count all the people killed/injured as children regardless of how and why they got shot. A 16 year old thug who has already killed 3 people (is NOT a child) and has been arrested 25 times, who is then gunned down by the cops during a felony stop, is reported just the same as little 12 year old Timmy who accidently shoots himself with the .22 he got for Christmas, and the same as the manic depressive 15 year old Emo kid that kills himself with a shotgun because "no one understands".

      We have a lot of irresponsible shit-heads leaving loaded unlocked weapons sitting around like they are toys, and this is the result.

      You want to talk about giant argument fallacies. There are NOT a lot of irresponsible shit-heads leaving loaded weapons lying about. You'd have to get rid more than a dozen other causes, including being murdered by a parent or family member, before you even got to firearms deaths for children under 10 as leading causes of death.

      Go look at the mortality tables at CDC.gov and the FBI.gov if you don't believe me.

      At the end of the day the grand bulk of people in the US killed by firearms are suicides and the grand bulk of people "murdered" with firearms are either criminals killed by other criminals (not murder in my book, let them kill each other as long as they leave the rest of us out of it) or by the police or armed citizens in justified shootings.

      So that brings me to how I feel about people that would use guns to harm themselves and others. Neither the protection of criminals nor the suicidal is justification for "reasonable" restrictions on anyone's rights. It's not that life isn't precious, but why should we protect those who do not value it at all?

      I get it that you were not calling for out right bans just people being held responsible, but the problem is that the supporters of this are gun haters whose end goal is not a reasonable nor responsible world where people can own guns, but a future where all weapons are illegal. This is why the pro-gun crowd is so venomous towards any restrictions. We are not stupid. We know our history of the "reasonable" crowd. They are anything but reasonable.

    89. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      apparently the core philosophical basis of the united states is now a "troll" idea.

    90. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The dictionary definition (and colloquial usage of "child") is likely where fourteen keeps coming from. It is pretty open-ended, though. In common use, the term "children" brings to mind very young humans, not seventeen year olds.

      child: a young human being below the age of puberty or below the legal age of majority.

      In non-legal parlance, "youth" is the term used to describe middle- to late-teenagers.

      youth: the period between childhood and adult age.

    91. Re:Maybe in a different country by Charcharodon · · Score: 1

      Go look at the suicide rate in Japan, where guns are illegal. It is 10x higher than the US, and yes lot's of knives, and jumping from things is common.

    92. Re:Maybe in a different country by Talderas · · Score: 1

      There's a number of "push button" door locks where pushing in the lock knob locks the door from the other side but twisting the handle causes the lock to release.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    93. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a big difference between promoting gun safety at home, and putting it into law. The latter comes with regular, mandatory police inspections of gun owners' homes, to ensure guns are kept according to the rules.

      Kinda like how there are regular, mandatory police inspections of peoples' bedrooms to make sure they aren't dishing out blowjobs, in the states where such acts are still illegal.

      Or maybe, just maybe, you're so scared of "teh gov'ment tekin meh guns!!!" that you are unable to properly assess the true dangers of such laws. Because there is a danger, just not what you describe.

      Yes, on the surface, it seems like a sane law. It can't be enforced regularly, but it can be used to assign blame in the case of accidental shootings. The problem comes from aggressive DAs who only care about furthering their own career, pursuing individuals who legally used their firearm in their own home to defend themself, but who hadn't been keeping it locked up.

    94. Re:Maybe in a different country by Charcharodon · · Score: 1
      Its a lot harder to kill yourself (or another person that is actively resisting) with a knife than with a gun. Having been in barroom brawls where knifes came out I can tell you that with certainty.

      FBI crime statistics would disagree with you on the "killing of other people". Knives are number 2 for all weapons types (handguns #1) used in murder.

      You are correct for suicides knives are only 1.5%. Then again most people who kill themselves are men and they tend to use guns/hanging which tends to be more lethal. Women on the other hand tend to do self harm for attention which tends to involve knives and drugs in a less than lethal way.

    95. Re:Maybe in a different country by damn_registrars · · Score: 2

      I'm sorry that mental health is a concept that so thoroughly escapes you. The kind of ignorance that you are so proudly putting on display is frightening. If you want to know why mental health is taken so lightly in this country, go look in the mirror. It's mentalities exactly like your own that encourage people not to seek the care they need.

      --
      Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    96. Re:Maybe in a different country by Talderas · · Score: 1

      I have always wondered about that. So someone who finds their life unbearable is pressured not to end it because it may cause grief to other persons. If a child has stopped wanting to live, chances are the people who are close to them may have something to do with that. Yet still their feelings are so much more important than those of the suicidal child.

      Not much different from arguments against assisted suicide.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    97. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      people questioning each others parentage.

      You're damn right, you bastard.

    98. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I wanted to move to Venezuela I'd move to Venezuela, but I don't want to live in a socialist shit hole, so no thanks.

    99. Re:Maybe in a different country by Charcharodon · · Score: 1
      So we spend all of these billions on preventing children from dying, and what do we get? Not a whole lot it seems.

      As far as the family member's murdering the child using a gun. The answer was zero. The firearms death category did not double count those deaths.

    100. Re:Maybe in a different country by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      Which he then illustrates by linking to news (reports). It's not true, it's complete bullshit. Actually, that's too soft, it's an outright lie. It would mean that those kids weren't even taken to a hospital or coroner, where gunshot wounds require mandatory reporting.

    101. Re: Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no country in the top 10 are guns easily and legally acquired

      Greenland should be an exception to this. Fending off polar bears and hunting seals is hard work without a firearm.

    102. Re:Maybe in a different country by Cederic · · Score: 1

      First of all, they are dramatically underreported, as has been shown numerous times.

      [...]

      Read the news. It is not hard to find an accidental shooting every single day in this country that involves a child.

      His 230 murders + 20 accidental shootings for a subset of the age group means he's already reporting the same magnitude of gun deaths as your 'One per day' anecdote.

    103. Re:Maybe in a different country by Cederic · · Score: 1

      People that kill themselves by cutting themselves typically have to do a lot to make it work (for example preparing a hot bath to prevent clotting, etc.). And they need to cut deep, and cut correctly (slashing up and down the wrist, not across for example, as typically shown in movies) to achieve the goal, which is rather painful unless again one takes the time to acquire pain medication and consume it.

      See, suicidal people just aren't efficient. Stab yourself in the heart, slit your jugular artery or go full seppuku and take the pain.

      Killing yourself with a knife is very very easy, unless you don't actually want to die, in which case you probably wont be picking up a gun either.

    104. Re:Maybe in a different country by Charcharodon · · Score: 2
      So going for the old Wikipedia post on the "age of majority". Good choice I love Wikipedia for a quick knowledge refresher. That being said go look up age of criminality, age of consent, and age of license as the traditional and not to mention legal ages of adulthood while you are at it.

      Applying the age of majority as a catch all for the definition of adulthood is a lazy and not to mention legally ignorant argument. So it would be really nice if people would step back and realize they loose the audience when the spout off about things they know nothing about.

      You can go to prison as young as 10 for murder in the US.
      You can declare your independence from your parents and quit school at 16 without a legal battle. You can do it even younger if you have the means to support yourself.
      You can drive at 14-16 depending on which State you are in.
      You can join the US military at 17.
      You can have sex and get married at 16 in most of the country.
      The only thing 18 gets you is the right to enter contracts, vote, and buy firearms.
      The funny thing that 18 is just to buy, you can own and possess guns (this includes handguns) at a much younger age. In some states that goes all the way down below the age of 10. In more than half a 12 year old can hunt anything, with just about anything and get this....do...it...by...themselves.

      Yes that means if little Timmy wants to go hunting for bear with a very large caliber rifle. He can. No problem. As long as he can pass the safety class and is strong enough to carry the rifle he is good to go.

      I'd have a second think about what the "age of majority" really means, and blow your highly uniformed opinion out your ass..

    105. Re:Maybe in a different country by Charcharodon · · Score: 2
      I've got oodles of Karma to burn. So please feel to get butt hurt over being called a Nazi, for acting like a Nazi and suppressing someone making a comment about police states.

      "In the US when they police can show up and go through your home without a warrant we call that Fascism. So is having a license in order to exercise a right that is yours by simply being alive. Unlike the rest of the sheep, we for some odd reason do not like that." Awww the National Socialists moded me a troll. Sorry but calling Nazis, Nazis is not being a troll. Sorry if the truth hurts.

    106. Re:Maybe in a different country by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Keeping a firearm for self-defense is not constitutionally protected. So by your own logic, lock the fucking thing up.

    107. Re: Maybe in a different country by ultranova · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not trying to be mean, just thinking clinically.

      No you aren't, you're simply trying to appear tough by spouting sociopathic garbage. Such emotionally motivated behaviour is the very antithesis of "clinical", and not the least bit impressive. Please grow up.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    108. Re:Maybe in a different country by TemporalBeing · · Score: 1

      So that brings me to how I feel about people that would use guns to harm themselves and others. Neither the protection of criminals nor the suicidal is justification for "reasonable" restrictions on anyone's rights. It's not that life isn't precious, but why should we protect those who do not value it at all?

      While IANAL, in the US the legal issue is basically that you cannot remove a right (must less one specifically called out in the Constitution) to protect the minority, if only (at minimum) inconveniencing the majority.

      The Founding Fathers would not have allowed home inspections of firearms. In their minds, it was not the government's business how many or what kind of firearms you had. It was a civic duty to have a firearm to start with as that qualified you to be part of the militia (even if you didn't have a firearm you could still join, but then you had to find someone to give you one).

      --
      Truth is like the sun. You can shut it out for a time, but it ain't goin' away. - Elvis Presley (source: imdb.com)
    109. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or this: "Police said Henry broke into the house and began to attack Moreno until her daughter, Jayda Milsap, 11, shot Henry twice with a handgun." [newsok.com] Now there's a story about kids and guns you probably didn't see on the news. If this mom had kept her gun locked so her daughter couldn't get to it, they both might be dead now.

      Even though she successfully perforated him twice, it's a shame that little Jayda missed that asshole's skull. They need to take her to the range and work on her aim.

    110. Re: Maybe in a different country by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 0

      No you aren't, you're simply trying to appear tough by spouting sociopathic garbage. Such emotionally motivated behaviour is the very antithesis of "clinical", and not the least bit impressive. Please grow up.

      Grow up yourself. You might consider GP's ideas "sociopathic" but others might think the same of your opinions. You don't have an exclusive license to morality.

    111. Re:Maybe in a different country by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      There was no "firearm" ban, but a restriction and buyback of rapid-fire weapons. Of course many people used the money to buy new legal weapons.

      Semantics. Many people, perhaps most, would consider "restrictions" on "rapid-fire weapons" a ban.

      A ban only on specific types, to be sure, but a ban nevertheless. In fact many have described it as a "confiscation".

      In the United States a large part of the population, perhaps even a majority, would rather shoot the police who came to take their guns than give them up.

      And I, personally, have no problem at all with that.

    112. Re:Maybe in a different country by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Firearm accidents barely made it onto the chart I was looking at with 22 unintentional firearm deaths for the 10-14 year old category.

      Just to put that in perspective, more people in the U.S. die from lightning strikes in an average year.

      It's usally "all about the children". It makes the argument sound legit, even when it's mostly BS.

    113. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are a sanctimonious fucktard who is as full of shit as a porta-potty at a music festival. Age of majority is about *adulthood*. All those other "age of..." things you mention are about when society believes a child can be held responsible for specific acts/actions. Not about when they become adults, you rancid maggot-infested excuse for a human being. I'd call you retarded but it would be an insult to actual retarded people.

      You can go to prison as young as 10 for murder in the US. So? Still a child.

      You can declare your independence from your parents and quit school at 16 without a legal battle. You can do it even younger if you have the means to support yourself. And a judge legally emancipates you, making you a legal adult, but still a child to every person in society with a brain. You probably don't get that because you clearly haven't got one.

      You can drive at 14-16 depending on which State you are in.So, driving a car makes you an adult? My god your derp goes to eleven.

      You can join the US military at 17. Yeah, and you can see R-rated movies too but that doesn't make you an adult.

      You can have sex and get married at 16 in most of the country. Great, clearly the moment you start having sex you become an adult. Is that what your dad told you when he bought you those hookers?

      The only thing 18 gets you is the right to enter contracts, vote, and buy firearms. That, and you know, adulthood.

      The funny thing that 18 is just to buy, you can own and possess guns (this includes handguns) at a much younger age. In some states that goes all the way down below the age of 10. In more than half a 12 year old can hunt anything, with just about anything and get this....do...it...by...themselves.

      Yeah, kids are awesome that way. They can do a lot of cool things...by...themselves. Except magically become adults.

      How's about you blow your highly uninformed opinion out your own ass...

    114. Re:Maybe in a different country by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      FBI crime statistics would disagree with you on the "killing of other people". Knives are number 2 for all weapons types (handguns #1) used in murder.

      But knives are only #2 because they are less commonly used. Today, roughly 90% of civilians who are shot survive. As many as 90% of victims of knife attacks bleed out before they get to the hospital.

    115. Re: Maybe in a different country by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      Eh, propensity to suicide isn't genetic. It's far more based on upbringing and situation, and sometimes chemicals.

    116. Re:Maybe in a different country by OzoneLad · · Score: 3, Funny

      Guns do not cause suicide. They are a convenient method when available, but if not available those determined to exit this sphere of existence will find a way to do so.

      Especially in Australia, where almost everything is venomous or actively trying to kill you.

    117. Re:Maybe in a different country by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      Maybe the GP means that black kids' deaths aren't usually reported. I don't know if that's true, but it's always what I've heard about the USA.

      I'm afraid that's pretty much entirely bullshit. I hope that isn't what the GP was implying.

    118. Re:Maybe in a different country by sycodon · · Score: 1

      Ha!

      Many cities are banning plastic bags already, although for different reasons.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    119. Re:Maybe in a different country by sycodon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Automakers spend billions of dollars making their cars more safe, going to great lengths to add features that increase survivability. The government sets standards that must be met if the car is allowed to be sold.

      But the don't ban cars.

      Local governments and state/national governments spend millions of dollars making lakes, rivers and beaches more safe, by adding signage, marking hazards and swimming areas, hiring lifeguards, building lighthouses, etc.

      But they don't ban swimming.

      Just about every plastic bag is marked with warnings not to allow children to play with them. Lampcords and blinds have standards now that are supposed to make them safer and more difficult for young children to hang themselves.

      But they don't ban plastic bans...well, except for those at grocery stores.

      "408 being murdered by a parent/family member" How many of those were by gun?

      How many of hose were women protecting themselves from abusive husbands?

      "58 dying from exposure (cold)" Governments all over the world, including the USA, have programs subsidizing fuel for the poor. Lots of effort and money is spent predicting the weather and issuing cold weather / winter storm warnings.

      But they don't require everyone to own a coat and use it.

      "228 from burning to death" - The government spends a huge amount of money on fire education and local municipalities subsidize smoke detectors, CO detectors, and other fire safety items. Etc.

      But they don't ban matches.

      So we do take action to try to prevent those causes of deaths. blah blah blah

      Make no mistake, this not about Suicides. It's about control. In this particular case, control of guns. They wrap it all up in nice sounding platitudes, but in the end, their goal is clear.

      You can't Idiot Proof the world. And you shouldn't try.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    120. Re:Maybe in a different country by sycodon · · Score: 1

      Even a casual perusal of Google using the "Homeowner shoots intruder" will show your assertion to be absolute garbage.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    121. Re:Maybe in a different country by DocSavage64109 · · Score: 1

      To be fair, I don't recall seeing a news report about the friend of my coworker's two sons. They were playing playstation and their friend was twirling his gun around, and even dropped it. He resumed twirling the gun and then it managed to go off as it was pointed at his head. Luckily no one else was injured.

    122. Re: Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you want to go old school, the age of majority at the time of the founding was 21. So the parent is wrong when saying that who is "child" is clear cut.

      Anti-gun folks are using the "think of the children" strategy to evoke images of toddlers pulling a trigger. Gang-related violence among adolescents definitely skews the real numbers.

      Anyhow, personally I'm of the opinion that if you don't want a kid playing with a gun, then give him one. Once a kid learns that he can burn himself on the stove, he won't treat it as a toy. Kids can be taught to respect dangerous things so that they require minimal supervision. If kids had more hands on experience with guns things could be different.

      Of course, that state of affairs is even less likely to happen then the dumb gun regulations some people promote.

      The only way to debate gun policy is issue-by-issue and very narrowly. The relevant context of this slashdot article is gun suicide, which is a huge problem. Let's hear some novel suggestions.

    123. Re:Maybe in a different country by sycodon · · Score: 1

      So the articles are just lies eh? All made up. No truth there at all because moron AC says so.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    124. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I, for one, barely prefer being alive to suicide.

      I definitely see where all the suicidal people are coming from.

    125. Re: Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We, of course, make up for it with our murder rate. I'd imagine our murder+suicide rate is much higher as well since guns make this considerably easier.

    126. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In isolated cases it may save your life, but most murders aren't committed by strangers. So if you don't mind the greatly increased likelihood (relative to houses without) that you or another member of your family will die from being shot...

    127. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They have _actually_ studied this. People's experiences do vary, but there's quite a bit of evidence from the studies that suicide is often an impulsive act. In those cases, harm reduction approaches as simple as "you want to kill yourself and you have a gun. That's fine, but let's store your bullets with a friend, so if you want them you'll need to go get them." have been demonstrated to work because they introduce an extra barrier to immediate action. Logically, the person could just go buy ammo, but that still requires interacting with another human being and also requires time, and both of those things are important to helping suicidal people.

      In a more capitalistic vein: manufacturers provide rebates because they know that a large percentage of people will never claim them. Maybe we can use that same pattern to help people.

    128. Re:Maybe in a different country by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      It always amazes me how much liberals care about life, except when it is in a woman's womb. Somehow, the unborn (the least able to defend themselves) deserve no protection, but the teenager who WILL figure out the combo to the gun safe is somehow going to be protected from guns by a simple four digit code.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    129. Re:Maybe in a different country by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      The problem is that during puberty the chemical changes in the brain can often cause periods of intense depression. If we allow every hormone addled teenager the ability to kill themselves on a whim, not many people would make it through puberty.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    130. Re:Maybe in a different country by dywolf · · Score: 1

      Yep, when you fear for your life, seconds matter.
      Best not to ask questions or be sure of the situation first.
      Shoot first.

      Just ask Theodore Wafer.
      Or Easton MacDonald.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    131. Re:Maybe in a different country by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      Give me a break. This has nothing to do with guns, unless of course you plan to include bridges, knives, cars, drugs, razor blades, and tall buildings, ie pretty much anything. You know, people who want to kill themselves often wish to because they lack agency and autonomy in their lives. All this article's solution does is force them to fester in their misery. That's torture. A world sterilized to the point where it 'prevents' suicides by forcing miserable people to deal with hopeless situations is not a nice place for anyone to live in. I still vote for individual freedom and autonomy over my life, even if it means that a few more people decide to end theirs. It's their choice, just like it's mine to continue living.

      It's interesting that the left has this obsession with preempting risk by clamping down on agency yet supports dr assisted suicide. Apparently, it's ok to kill yourself as long as it's for an approved reason. Now that is sick.

    132. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you purchased a weapon that was banned after you bought it you are still legally allowed to own it.

    133. Re:Maybe in a different country by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      Yes one can make such an argument. It would however not be based on reality and would be easily disproved by research data and statistics.

      Most people that are suicidal don't want to suffer a painful death. Most people have their darkest moments while at home.

      There are many, many ways to kill yourself that don't involve a painful death, unlike guns, which may take out part of your brain but leave you alive and permanently handicapped.

      Got access to prescription meds for yourself or your family? A lot of them are lethal when overdosed. Insulin, for example. You can inject 600 units of NPH (slow-acting insulin) followed by 300-600 units of Novolin-Toronto (regular-actng insulin) and even if your body survives, you'll be brain-dead.

      Interestingly, many insulin suicides are by paramedics and non-diabetics.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    134. Re:Maybe in a different country by Charcharodon · · Score: 1

      This is true. Knives, especially knives over 3 inches long, tend to be more lethal than anything but the largest of bullet calibers or shotguns, since they tend to destroy organs when employed where as the bullets tend to make small wounds (hollow point bullets less so.)

    135. Re: Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it's not like external factors feature in the decision to commit suicide. No, external factors - bosses bullying people, stealing from them, and then blaming them for everything, or abusive and controlling partners, malicious pursuit by authorities (Schwartz, anyone?) or public groups, and mental or physical illness - have no impact on one's will to live.

      A friend of mine killed himself about 14 years ago. He felt that his life was of no consequence, and was extremely unhappy. That was his way of stopping the emotional pain.

      I've come close to killing myself on many occasions. I didn't, although I'm not sure why, and I've later discovered that there's a correlation between suicide and my particular form of brain injury/disability.

      For my particular disability, the reason behind it is because the brain injury reduces my ability to understand how other people think, and removes my ability to read body language. This means that, when other people are maliciously using me, I can't tell until it's too late. Naturally, I've become extremely jaded and cynical. I greatly dislike other people and simply do not trust them, particular managers (and the wealthy) because they are much more likely to be setting me up for something.

      I'm also significantly impaired for learning through written material, meaning that I need to do about three times the number of hours worked to achieve similar results. It takes me months to learn basic physical tasks, and then in the space of a day or two I can go from being barely competent and slow at a task, to as fast as the highest skilled person in the workplace.

      I did not know about this until I was in my mid-20s. I worked harder than everybody else, yet would only score around 50-60% in tests and exams, while others who did similar levels of work would do much better. I would work so hard that I would burn out after a few months, sometimes even weeks.

      This is, effectively, a real blow to self-esteem. You may think you have no ego, but you do: you are human. When you take blow after blow, and you are surrounded by people who take delight in raising themselves up by constantly belittling you, calling you slow, stupid, incompetent, or in the case of managers shouting and screaming at you, or disciplining you while breaching your basic rights, it all takes a serious toll on you. I didn't know why the hell I was working so hard and getting nowhere, why I wasn't understanding things the first few times through. Turns out it wasn't my fault, it was the brain injury that was inflicted by abusive parents. (Of course, they beat the shit out of me every time I didn't get a B or A, because by doing that they might teach me the value of hard work.)

      I'm sure that you now understand that people who want to "clean the gene pool" are actually simply fools who are deluded in their self-assessment of their abilities and place in society.

    136. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Orders of magnitude more common? Are you out of your fucking mind? Every time something like this happens it's a huge deal in the news (because as a culture, we're programmed to celebrate the self-defending gun owner). But it only happens once or twice a month in a country the size of US, while accidents and suicides are a daily thing that nobody really cares about unless it's a celebrity or there's something unusual or "funny" about the case.

    137. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The study is suggesting that people when deprived of an easy, private death

      My friend got himself committed to hospital, told the nurse he was tired, managed to steal a bottle of sleeping pills, and then discharged himself, went home, and swallowed the lot.

      Not sure how that's easy, and it certainly wasn't convenient.

    138. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many of hose were women protecting themselves from abusive husbands?

      Since 50% of domestic violence is perpetrated by women against men, and of that 50% in approximately 85% of incidents, the men are injured sufficiently to require medical by women who are armed, and of that initial 50% in about 75% of cases the woman is the aggressor against a man who is not engaged in violence or threatening behaviour, you may want to add this to your statement:

      and how many of those were abusive women shooting husbands who weren't doing what they were told?

      It's not hard to find the statistics. The police in my country (New Zealand) did a study of their callouts a few years ago. 48% were domestic violence incidents initiated by women.

    139. Re:Maybe in a different country by JonnyCalcutta · · Score: 1

      You should move - there can't be anywhere worth that level of paranoia and worry. I"m glad I live somewhere where home invasion is not on the list of realistic worries

    140. Re:Maybe in a different country by sycodon · · Score: 1

      Sucks to live there I guess. Sounds like most of the women want to kill you.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    141. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're never going to die by being struck by a meteor.

    142. Re: Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know about tough, but it does take a small amount of courage to express an opinion that you now is going to be unpopular. A large amount of courage if you have to own up for it in person... a small amount if you are just talking on a message board.

      How is his view point emotionally motivated?

      Why is it that as a species we could care less about the person suffering next door(I mean they brought it on themselves right) but we cannot bear the thought of people taking their own lives?

    143. Re:Maybe in a different country by iceaxe · · Score: 1

      I understand that you are a troll.

      However, on behalf of all the people on Earth who are currently living with the grief of losing a loved one to suicide...

      Nah. Never mind. You need help. Good luck.

      By the way, it ain't hopeless. Even losers like me, who spent years fighting the urge to suicide, can eventually find peace and joy and even success in life. Keep truckin' on, it will get better.

      --
      WALSTIB!
    144. Re:Maybe in a different country by s122604 · · Score: 2

      Today, roughly 90% of civilians who are shot survive. As many as 90% of victims of knife attacks bleed out before they get to the hospital.

      This is true. Knives, especially knives over 3 inches long, tend to be more lethal than anything but the largest of bullet calibers or shotguns

      No.. this is not true...
      Ex EMT here.. Had to deal with the aftermath of numerous knife fights, and knife attacks.. What you have, in the VAST majority of cases, was a bloody mess, but wounds that are survivable, in many cases not even highly emergent. Yes, there were some deaths, but they were rare

      With gunshot wounds (be they attempted homicides, suicides, or accidents) the outcomes are flipped. Modern emergency medicine is better than it ever was but you still see many cases where treatment of any kind was utterly futile, many "coin flip" type cases, and a smattering of superficial non-emergencies..

      Killing somebody with a knife is a lot harder than the movies make it out to be.. Killing somebody with a 00 Buckshot is ridiculously easy, a 9mm caliber handgun.. harder.. but not that hard..

    145. Re:Maybe in a different country by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      22 unintentional firearm deaths
      408 being murdered by a parent/family member

      So none of the murders were by firearm?

      Seems the statistics are manipuated, by both sides, to show the story they want. When everyone's lying to everyone else, you can't look at either side.

    146. Re:Maybe in a different country by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Just like it's impossible to commit suicide with a car in the US. The statistics may allow for that in "other", but the official federal statistics, FARS, refuses to include suicide as a cause of a fatal crash. If you write a suicide note, detailing how you'll drive the wrong way on the Interstate until you hit someone head-on, and you'll not wear a seat-belt, and want to die. If you have a beer or two to work up some courage (and are still within the legal limit), when you die, the cause of the crash will likely be listed as "speed related" and "alcohol related" while not acknowledging it was a deliberate act of suicide in any way.

      The statistics minimize suicide in the US. It's a Puritan thing.

    147. Re: Maybe in a different country by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      If you want to go old school, the age of majority at the time of the founding was 21. So the parent is wrong when saying that who is "child" is clear cut.

      And blacks, women, and children were all property. Do you really want to go back to that as some sort of "gold standard"?

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    148. Re:Maybe in a different country by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      I really, really, wish I was exaggerating or kidding on this one.

      except for you are. Talk to any legal gun owner and they will tell you about responsible gun ownership. talk to people who dont own guns, dont have guns and they will point out that single crazy person that their friend once met who did X instead.

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    149. Re:Maybe in a different country by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      and also there is a bigger chance for another person to notice how depressed they are, and offer help

      Don't bet on it. The usual reaction is some variant of "you just have to pull yourself out of it." Even when you tell them point blank that you can't stop thinking about killing yourself.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    150. Re:Maybe in a different country by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      those determined to exit this sphere of existence will find a way to do so.

      Ok, too hard to RTFA, but at least RTFS. It is not about those who are sufficiently determined to find a way.

      How many people would progress from a form of "impulse suicide because the opportunity presented itself" to "I can't take it any more - one way or another I'm outta here"? Certainly some will. Unless preventing the easy impulse methods is accompanied by better mental health care, all you're doing is kicking the can down the road.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    151. Re: Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck you goat fucker. The U.S. Supreme Court said otherwise. They also said that the police have no duty to protect the individual, only the community as a whole.

    152. Re:Maybe in a different country by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      Courts are making the determination that someone below the physical age of majority was of sufficient maturity at the time to be tried as an adult on a regular basis. Age is just an arbitrary number, which in many cases doesn't stand up under inspection.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    153. Re:Maybe in a different country by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      If that law ever gets enacted in my country, I will hang a rifle from the ceiling in front of my bay windows and report myself to the authorities.

      By the time the cops get there, someone will have probably stolen your rifle, since they know you don't have it within easy reach :-)

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    154. Re:Maybe in a different country by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      People don't kill themselves because they want to, but because they don't feel they have any other options left. Depression is depressing.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    155. Re:Maybe in a different country by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

      Unless preventing the easy impulse methods is accompanied by better mental health care, all you're doing is kicking the can down the road.

      Kicking the can down the road is still (very marginally) better than the US-endorsed strategy to date of pretending the can doesn't exist.

      Thank you for coming in to the discussion. It is good to see at least one other sane person responding to this.

      --
      Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    156. Re:Maybe in a different country by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      The Founding Fathers would not have allowed home inspections of firearms.

      Yet wrote and passed the Alien And Sedition Acts. Owned slaves, and did other things that he modern revisionists ignore when quoting WWtFFD

      It was a civic duty to have a firearm to start with as that qualified you to be part of the militia (even if you didn't have a firearm you could still join, but then you had to find someone to give you one).

      I've never seen that requirement in the definition of "militia". And your wording is odd. You must either have a firearm or have a firearm (by gift/loan) to join the militia. Seems it would be easier to say "must have a firearm to be a member of the militia." Though the current definition has no relationship to armament. And it's impossible to find a good 1776 definition, as they are all tainted by the modern gun rights war (one way or the other).

    157. Re:Maybe in a different country by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      A world sterilized to the point where it 'prevents' suicides by forcing miserable people to deal with hopeless situations is not a nice place for anyone to live in.

      There's a huge difference between hopeless situations such as people dealing with a terminal cancer that can't be cured no matter what, and people who feel that they have no other alternative but to kill themselves because they can't get the help they need to get their life back on track. Throw in the taboos, stigma, blame-the-victim-for-being-weak, and sheer reluctance to address the issues surrounding mental illness, and you've got a recipe for disaster.

      People will readily admit to having cancer, heart disease, COPD, and all other sorts of physical diseases ... but "mental illness"? To paraphrase Michael Landsberg, telling people you have to cut a meeting short to see your doctor or dentist - no problem. To tell them you have to cut the meeting short to see your psychiatrist ... not so good.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    158. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So both you and the GP's point about misreporting suicides couldn't lead to an underreporting of accidental firearm deaths, rather it would result in some firearm suicides being reported as accidents; increasing the statistic of firearm accidents.

    159. Re: Maybe in a different country by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      I think stopping people who dont want to live to be the sociopathic approach over allowing someone who wants to go to do so

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    160. Re:Maybe in a different country by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      the only uninformed one seems to be you disregarding the facts because it doesnt match your world view.

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    161. Re:Maybe in a different country by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      And nearly all business doors, where fire codes require that it open from the inside by pushing, regardless of whether it's locked from the outside. Not that I'd expect that in a residential bedroom, but there are plenty of situations with locks that are easy to open from the inside. The locks that can be twisted open from the inside are common. If you have two free hands, it adds 0 to the time to open it, and if you don't have two free hands, you aren't getting out easily. You have to unlock, and lock open the top lock (the one I'm thinking of is usually the top lock), then open the handle. Unless you lock it open, it auto-locks when closed.

      That you don't know what people use doesn't make it impossible, or even unusual.

    162. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do know that you need a permission from the government to drive a car (on public roads), right? And that the government very much regulates what safety features those cars must have in order to be sold?

    163. Re:Maybe in a different country by mjwx · · Score: 2

      There's a big difference between promoting gun safety at home, and putting it into law. The latter comes with regular, mandatory police inspections of gun owners' homes

      Not really and that's wrong.

      Codifying firearms storage into law does not require mandatory police inspections. We've got laws around gun storage in Australia and the cops cant search your home without a warrant. Even if you let them in for a chat and they notice an improperly stored gun, they cant do anything about it (besides saying "mate, you should probably keep that gun locked up").

      Even then, if you are found via a legal search to have an improperly stored weapon, it's just a fine (A$500 from memory). It only becomes a significant punishment when combined with another crime where easy access to a weapon that was not locked up was a significant factor.

      That being said, keeping guns and ammo secured mainly prevents accidental deaths. Guns are not common here in Oz, yet people still kill themselves. Easiest way to do it is to visit your local dealer and shoot a couple of hundred bucks up your arm. Beyond that you've got a variety of household items from razorblades and kitchen knives to plastic bags to various poisons available over the counter. Beyond that you have the classic example of the hose in the exhuast pipe (might be less effective on a BlueEfficency Merc these days though).

      As someone who's worked with suicide prevention services and has made suicide prevention their personal cause, you need to focus on why people kill themselves, not how. As I've said above, its easy to find a way to do it, if you really want to. Secondly, we need to stop demonising people who try to commit suicide, it only makes things worse.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    164. Re:Maybe in a different country by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      Who are you to say what is hopeless and what isn't? Unwillingness? How about an unwillingness to deal with the problem. To most people, the appearance of solving it is all that matters, so these would-be suicides just end up locked up and drugged in mental 'hospitals' or in section 8 housing where they fester in their misery (but yay we saved them!). It's like the old soviet union: they were so intent on keeping people in the country to maintain appearances of a healthy society that they were less motivated to fix the problems that were causing people to leave. If we had the tech to fix those who are neurologically ill, then you might have a point, but we don't. A lot of these treatments are hardly better than dentistry in the 1800s. Until then, it is self centered to force people to live when they don't wish to, for whatever reason. It might be sad to see people make that choice, but it should still be their choice.

    165. Re:Maybe in a different country by mjwx · · Score: 1
      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    166. Re:Maybe in a different country by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Guns are used over a million times per year in this country for self defense.

      That would work out to about 1% of households a year are defended with a gun. That seems high. It means that if you live ling enough, it's almost certain you'll defend yourself with a gun. With less than 50%of households with a gun in them, that moves more to a 5% of gun owners use a gun defensively every year.

      You should use the FBI numbers, they will generate much less laughter.

    167. Re: Maybe in a different country by countach74 · · Score: 1

      It's been a bit since I've read the constitution, but I don't believe that it ever defined what made someone a person or "property". The subsequent amendments which addressed blacks and women were necessary because at the time, it was the only way that the federal government could decree such a thing over the rights of the state. In other words, it wasn't that the constitution declared slavery legal or anything like that; such issues were up to the states to decide.

    168. Re: Maybe in a different country by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      Your exact words wore "at the time of the founding" - not what was written in the constitution per se. My point stands. :-)

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    169. Re:Maybe in a different country by quenda · · Score: 2

      Yes, semantics, but I found the words misleading in the context.
      GP implied people no longer had guns, but we actually have more guns than ever in Australia, millions of them in fact. Just far fewer semi-autos than before. Hunting is popular.

      I am not defending the buyback. We already had sensible gun laws, and it mostly replaced a lot of semi-auto .22s with manual-loading ones. At massive cost to the taxpayer. We never had a gun culture in Australia, and never had a big problem with gun violence. So I'm sick of Americans trying to use Australia as an example, good or bad, of gun control.

      It's not so long ago that police started routinely carrying handguns here. It happened after a spate of armed bank robberies. Armed robberies since declined, but we are stuck with the armed police now. (Or course they always had guns for emergency, just not carried routinely).

    170. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes it is you fucking homo cum guzzling queen fucking traitor piece of dog shit motherfucker pig. ASSHOLE.

      FUCK YOU TRAITOR.

    171. Re:Maybe in a different country by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      So I'm sick of Americans trying to use Australia as an example, good or bad, of gun control.

      I don't particularly blame you. But I hope you understand that pretty much the only reason anyone in the U.S. uses Australia as a "bad" example of gun control, is that they are often subjected to -- usually highly distorted -- propaganda about it being "good" gun control. Otherwise they wouldn't care. They only care because it's being falsely used against themselves.

      Some people -- particularly Leftists -- also like to paint gun control in Britain as some model to follow. But even the Brits deny their own government's statistics, which show that after the last big gun grab in '98 their firearms crime rate doubled... and stayed way up for almost 10 years. Of course said Leftists never mention that, or try to play it down, and often even flatly deny it, but those are the official government statistics.

      So... we here in the U.S. are pretty damned sick of distorted tales of other people's experiences being used as an excuse to try to take our rights away. But it's definitely not your fault. You can blame the lying U.S. Left.

    172. Re:Maybe in a different country by Maritz · · Score: 1

      One could make that argument, but it would be a seriously weak one. In terms of convenience of suicide, you equate guns with knives, cars and bridges? You keep a bridge you can jump off in a drawer next to your bed? lol... I don't have much opinion on gun ownership, I don't give much of a toss one way or the other, but this is such a clear example of motivated reasoning I couldn't help it ;)

      --
      I do not want your cheap brainburning drugs. They are useless for work. And I am a working man today.
    173. Re:Maybe in a different country by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      You should move - there can't be anywhere worth that level of paranoia and worry. I"m glad I live somewhere where home invasion is not on the list of realistic worries

      I dunno where you live, but anywhere I"ve lived, many states, you hear these type stories from time to time, and lately more occurrences.

      I've lived in TN, AZ, LA, AR, and a fair number of other states and you hear of these type home invasions on the local news quite often.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    174. Re:Maybe in a different country by quenda · · Score: 1

      They are not lying, just looking for data to support their pre-determined conclusion. The same as you are. Please try to avoid such partisan vitriol on such an important topic. How about calm down, admit there is a problem, your opponents have some valid points, but we don't have all the answers.

      Here is a good example of a sensible moderate view:
      http://people.howstuffworks.co...

    175. Re: Maybe in a different country by countach74 · · Score: 1

      I didn't write the original message. I actually misread; I thought the author was talking about the constitution.

    176. Re:Maybe in a different country by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      The militia was every white male between the ages of 18 and 45 who was a landowner. You weren't eligible to serve in the militia if you weren't white, weren't a property owner, weren't male.

      You were required to keep your firearm stored at home (none of this open carry stuff).

      It's probably a good example of how "male white privilege" has been around for a long time.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    177. Re: Maybe in a different country by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      Don't sweat it :-) Guns is a better Godwin than Hitler. With Hitler, everyone can agree that the only good thing he ever did was kill Hitler. With guns, there will never be any agreement in a large homogenous group. In the US, they quickly divide themselves into two camps - those who think anyone should have a gun, and those who think only certain special people - including themselves, of course - should have a gun.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    178. Re: Maybe in a different country by countach74 · · Score: 1

      Yeah. Actually I think that was some of the wisdom to creating "united states." The smaller the group, the more likely for that group to consist of like-minded people (especially if one can rather easily change groups.) Too bad that didn't last... Frankly, I think it was doomed to fail, though.

    179. Re: Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No you aren't, you're simply trying to appear tough by spouting sociopathic garbage. Such emotionally motivated behaviour is the very antithesis of "clinical", and not the least bit impressive. Please grow up.

      Letting someone kill themselves is "sociopathic" ?

      You are insane.

      Your attitude is emotionally motivated, and the very antithesis of "clinical"

      clinical: scientifically detached, unemotional

      Please grow up yourself. You don't own ANYONE. The world, does not belong to you.

      People are not here to serve you. Noone owes you the fact they should stick around
      and suffer until you say it is okay for them to leave.

      Spoiled brat. Are you paying anyone to stick around? Have you signed contracts with everyone in the world, they must stick around until you say so?

      Or are you just talking out of your ass? Emotional indeed.

      Where do you get off, that ANYONE owes you they will live until you say they can die?

      Show us your evidence. You did an ad hominem, nothing more. Attacked the person, not their arguments.

      You are not "God" and you are not in charge of the world.

      Show us your evidence that you are, as you claim to be. Show us your credentials, that everyone should live as long as you say they can, because you are king of the universe I guess.

    180. Re:Maybe in a different country by AK+Marc · · Score: 2

      And most of that didn't end until the '60s or later. Sure, the first Colored regiment was in the Civil War, but they weren't equals. It's not like anyone from that regiment, no matter how decorated, would be moved to a position in a white regiment. As the Supreme Court said (eventually) "separate is inherently unequal" (or something to that effect). Integrated army didn't hit all military organizations until 1973 (or later, that's the last I know of, but they could have been other hold outs). And that's just blacks. Women are still not fully equal in the US armed forces.

      But Blacks have fought in every war (as part of the "militia") and women have been part of the militia since before the country began. It wasn't until a standing army when cooks were enlsited. Woman cooks in the early wars were common, and part of the militia. As well as nurses and other non-combat positions. Some of those persisted, but a member that can't use the members-only washroom isn't really a member, are they?

      You couldn't vote unless you were a white landowning male (the rules generally that you be a landowner, and the laws would prevent non-whites and non-males from owning land). But anyone could join the militia.

      And open carry was common. Where do you think the term "riding shotgun" came from? The driver would drive the horses, and anyone else in the front seat would be holding a shotgun.

    181. Re: Maybe in a different country by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      So what in the final analysis caused it to fail? As originally conceived, it was more like a federation.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    182. Re:Maybe in a different country by RespekMyAthorati · · Score: 1

      Semantics. Many people, perhaps most, would consider "restrictions" on "rapid-fire weapons" a ban. A ban only on specific types, to be sure, but a ban nevertheless. In fact many have described it as a "confiscation".

      Right.
      Same with the "confiscation" of bazookas, RPG's and Claymore mines.
      In fact, the framers of the constitution clearly intended to protect the private ownership of nuclear weapons.

    183. Re:Maybe in a different country by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

      If I was going to go fucktard on such a large scale as you I would have been AC too

      --
      The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
    184. Re:Maybe in a different country by cwsumner · · Score: 1

      Also note that the statistics said by the "Gun Banners" are rather suspect, since several of them have said in public that is is necessary to lie about the data in order to convince people of their claims. 8-{

      And of course, most of thir claims have been disproved many years ago, but they continue to claim them anyway...

    185. Re:Maybe in a different country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most people that are suicidal don't want to suffer a painful death.
      Most people have their darkest moments while at home.

      There we have it: clearly banning painkillers and homes is the answer!

    186. Re:Maybe in a different country by JimSadler · · Score: 1

      Firearm deaths are rare in most places and I do not include suicide in my conclusions. But we do have places in which there are waves of violent outbreaks among young men. In those situations we do need to be able to throw a blanket over an area and restrict just about all normal activity until the causes of the violence are dealt with. There are a couple of tiny agricultural towns near me that really are almost war zones at times with unemployed youth murdering each other daily.

    187. Re:Maybe in a different country by sploxx · · Score: 1

      You say

      [...] many people that kill themselves do so because they are in the grips of simple biochemical processes [...]

      and

      [...] many young people just kill themselves because they don't feel they fit into the world, or because they fall in love with someone that doesn't reciprocate. [...]

      Do you see these groups as largely overlapping or distinct?

    188. Re:Maybe in a different country by rdnetto · · Score: 1

      While I agree with your general point, I'm not convinced its possible to remove all quick and easy suicide methods. For example, electrocution seems like an easily accessible one, especially if you insert some paperclips into the socket and touch your chest to them. Admittedly, it would require some creativity, but it's not something that can be easily prevented. (RCDs help, unless the person has isolated themselves from the floor.)

      --
      Most human behaviour can be explained in terms of identity.
    189. Re: Maybe in a different country by rdnetto · · Score: 1

      For two reasons. The first is that in the majority of cases, depression tends to be the result of environmental factors, as opposed to genetic ones. The second is that many people who struggle with depression often have a lot to contribute to society, particularly as it is known to correlate with creativity.

      --
      Most human behaviour can be explained in terms of identity.
    190. Re:Maybe in a different country by werepants · · Score: 1

      Well, how many automobile deaths are true "accidents", and how many are due to negligence on someone's part? I would bet we've got a similar ratio there, where very occasionally something bad happens despite being diligent and following all best practices, but the vast majority of the times people get hurt are due to human error and stupidity.

      The point being, the common meaning of "accident" doesn't necessarily assign fault. I know gun rights advocates want to bang the "people kill people" gong every chance they get, but it really isn't required here.

    191. Re:Maybe in a different country by Slashdot+Parent · · Score: 1

      Guns do not cause suicide. They are a convenient method when available, but if not available those determined to exit this sphere of existence will find a way to do so.

      Which I think* is the point of the article.

      Let's say that a person is not suicidal, but suffers some trauma that sends him into a mental breakdown and he becomes suicidal during the breakdown. Once the breakdown passes, that person probably will no longer be suicidal. So the idea is to prevent easy access to effective suicide methods, and a handgun is certainly one of those methods.

      If our temporarily-suicidal example person has easy access to a handgun during his suicidal episode, he could quickly and efficiently end his life, even though the suicidal episode might have passed after a few hours or days. So if we can prevent him from eating a bullet for just a few more hours, we can probably stop him from ending his life.

      This method obviously wouldn't prevent planned suicide.

      * I think, because I didn't actually read the article. This is still slashdot, after all!

      --
      They don't grade fathers, but if your daughter's a stripper, you fucked up. --Chris Rock
    192. Re:Maybe in a different country by TemporalBeing · · Score: 1

      The Founding Fathers would not have allowed home inspections of firearms.

      Yet wrote and passed the Alien And Sedition Acts. Owned slaves, and did other things that he modern revisionists ignore when quoting WWtFFD

      No, I'm not ignoring any of that. Just pointing out that with respect to the OP of this thread which remarked about having people inspect the safety of the firearms (f.e kept in safe, trigger locks, etc) that that would have never flown with those who wrote the Consistitution - namely because they did have to live with some of that under the English Rule where soldiers could decide that you or your property needed to be searched for whatever reason they came up with. This is explicitly why we have the 4th Amendment (no Warrantless Searches) and limits on Property Seizure.

      It was a civic duty to have a firearm to start with as that qualified you to be part of the militia (even if you didn't have a firearm you could still join, but then you had to find someone to give you one).

      I've never seen that requirement in the definition of "militia". And your wording is odd. You must either have a firearm or have a firearm (by gift/loan) to join the militia. Seems it would be easier to say "must have a firearm to be a member of the militia." Though the current definition has no relationship to armament. And it's impossible to find a good 1776 definition, as they are all tainted by the modern gun rights war (one way or the other).

      Look at how people fought at that time. If someone wanted to join in, they had to be able to fight. That typically meant they had to bring their own weapons - the military generally did not provide one for them. This was true even in the Civil War, though by that point the military did start providing some as there was more funding towards it. If you didn't have one, then you had to "borrow" one from someone else who had more than one available.

      If you could't fight, or couldn't arm yourself appropriately then you were of little to no use in the militia; though you might have gotten deployed for recon, scouting, or other intelligence operations.

      --
      Truth is like the sun. You can shut it out for a time, but it ain't goin' away. - Elvis Presley (source: imdb.com)
    193. Re:Maybe in a different country by AK+Marc · · Score: 1
      So there was no requirement that you have a weapon to join the militia. You just had a weapon to be useful. There's a difference. I can pay for paper targets and lane usage at a gun range and not have, own, or borrow a weapon. They'll let me sit there for that time, and I don't have to shoot. Though, if crowded, I expect they'd kick me out for a shooting patron.

      You didn't "need" a weapon to join, but regardless of your needs, one would not be provided. The militia still needed cooks and medics. Couriers and scouts.

      Bring Your Own Weapon was assumed, and none was provided, but it wasn't a "requirement" for the militia.

      Just pointing out that with respect to the OP of this thread which remarked about having people inspect the safety of the firearms (f.e kept in safe, trigger locks, etc) that that would have never flown with those who wrote the Consistitution

      I think they'd have no problems with the rules, but would certainly have an issue with a foreign military enforcing them. If you think the guns they had were for military use, then a 30-second delay getting them out wouldn't be a big deal, unless they were already at war. There wasn't much "self defense" use of them at the time.

    194. Re:Maybe in a different country by ZorglubZ · · Score: 1

      But it is not dishonest to use a definition of child that excludes 22% of all legally-defined children so your statistics look better? A child of 14, 15, 16, or 17 is still a child.

  2. We've redefined success! by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Since we've made remarkably limited advances in the treatment of patients who think that the world is worth escaping; we've decided to just start blocking the exits. On the plus side, we have some emotionally salient anecdotes, of the sort that will probably cheer you right up unless you are one of those pesky people we can't really treat!

    1. Re:We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Clearly the next step is to make 'rarely-lethal options' more widespread to fool suicidal people into attempting them instead of other, often-lethal options.

    2. Re:We've redefined success! by SomeoneFromBelgium · · Score: 2

      Since we've made remarkably limited advances in the treatment of patients who think that the world is worth escaping; we've decided to just start blocking the exits. On the plus side, we have some emotionally salient anecdotes, of the sort that will probably cheer you right up unless you are one of those pesky people we can't really treat!

      That's exactly the kind of thinking we need to change. What the article says is that there is a 'growing body of knowledge' that people who commit suicide are not fatally lost and are not uncurable. Rather people tend to decide to take their lives unplanned and without considering the options. If you can deter them at that very moment, treatment is often possible of even unnecessary. Often it was just a momentary coming together of small things.

      On the other hand there are people who are inherently suicidal. For them there is indeed no easy cure and these measures proposed here will no help them.
      But let's at least try and save the others. Who hasn't had an urge to throw himself of a bridge once upon a time?

    3. Re:We've redefined success! by javilon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So it is forbidden to make a decision about your life. WTF?

      I am allowed to marry the wrong person and ruin my life at the drop of a hat. I am allowed to have kids where I may not be qualified to provide a decent life. I am allowed to sign a mortgage that I know I can't pay. I am allowed to try to climb the K7 if I am 70 years old, wich is very close to suicide.

      But I am not allowed to take my own life.

      Bollocks.

      --


      When his defense asked, "Which computer has Jon Johansen trespassed upon?" the answer was: "His own."
    4. Re:We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I recently read a story of a Japanese girl who tried to commit suicide and almost succeeded, but someone tried to help her and ‘saved’ her. Afterwards she called for people not to ‘help’ people who want to die, because life still sucked and in addition she got a huge hospital bill and even more people who guarded her from suicide.
      Suicide attempts fall broadly in two categories. 1) Cries for attention. These are almost always done in a non-lethal way, in my country these tend to be people with psychological issues who overdose on medicine. 2) People who's life really sucks. These tend to use more effective methods, generally resent being saved and often try again.
      So I think we're going about this completely the wrong way if we start blocking ways to commit suicide. Effectively we're trying to turn suicidal people into prisoners. Instead we should be focussing on making the world a better place and their lives happier and worth living. And for cases where this is impossible, we should provide humane options for quitting.

    5. Re:We've redefined success! by Your.Master · · Score: 3, Informative

      Who hasn't had an urge to throw himself of a bridge once upon a time?

      Without actually having statistics to back me up, I'm guessing most people. Certainly not me.

      Some statistics I found from a Google search suggests about 3/4 of people never have: https://www.thecalmzone.net/20.... Some Korean statistics go as high as 35%. I never saw higher without breaking it down into specialised at-risk populations (war veterens, LGBT people).

      I'm honestly shocked that you think it's normal. Clearly it's not rare. 25% isn't low. But it's nowhere near universal.

    6. Re:We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am allowed to marry the wrong person and ruin my life at the drop of a hat. I am allowed to have kids where I may not be qualified to provide a decent life. I am allowed to sign a mortgage that I know I can't pay. I am allowed to try to climb the K7 if I am 70 years old, wich is very close to suicide. But I am not allowed to take my own life.

      No you're not, for the simple reason that you need to be around to pay alimony, school fees, and down payments. Not much mileage to be had out of you otherwise.

    7. Re:We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am allowed to marry the wrong person and ruin my life at the drop of a hat. I am allowed to have kids where I may not be qualified to provide a decent life. I am allowed to sign a mortgage that I know I can't pay. I am allowed to try to climb the K7 if I am 70 years old, wich is very close to suicide. But I am not allowed to take my own life.

      No you're not, for the simple reason that you need to be around to pay alimony, school fees, and down payments. Not much mileage to be had out of you otherwise.

      And how many life insurance companies are "around" to pay out the policy when suicide is the cause of death?

      I thought so.

      That shit goes both ways in this system.

    8. Re:We've redefined success! by durrr · · Score: 1

      But the world will be such more enjoyable for the potential suicidee when he's denied plastic bags, shoelaces, power cords and bedsheets!

    9. Re:We've redefined success! by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      Can't we do both? Why does doing one thing (block the exits) preclude doing the other (treat the issue)?

    10. Re:We've redefined success! by Richard_at_work · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If you are not in a fit state of mind when you get married, you can get an annulment. If you are not in a fit state of mind when you have the child, you can let the child be adopted or temporarily fostered. If you are not in a fit state of mind when you signed the mortgage, it can be nullified.

      If you are not in a fit state of mind when you kill yourself, there is no going back.

      I personally have no issues with suicide, even assisted suicide, so long as the person who has elected to kill themselves has done so in a fully concious, fit state of mind.

    11. Re:We've redefined success! by Vlado · · Score: 0

      In other words, you're saying that about a quarter of population HAS, at some point, been thinking about killing themselves?

      I don't see that as a small number.

    12. Re: We've redefined success! by briancox2 · · Score: 1

      It's their ability to get results that needs to change. Our attitudes will reflect what outcomes we observe, thank you very much.

      --
      We should learn what we need to know about issues, before we decide what we need to feel about them.
    13. Re: We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you! Living and dying in the course of life is never as important as our ability to be self-determined along the way.

    14. Re:We've redefined success! by Vlado · · Score: 1

      I don't think that's the discussion that we're having here.

      If you feel that you should take your own life, I believe that you are well within your rights to do so. The discussion here is about the people who are attempting to end their lives on a whim, for a lack of a better term. And when they do, they realize that they made a mistake.

      Examples that you are giving are also, potentially, mistakes. But they are reversible or correctable. Or in some cases, just life. Suicide attempts, that result in death are not reversible or correctable.

    15. Re:We've redefined success! by Flavianoep · · Score: 1

      Some people go bungee-jumping, so that they can throw themselves off heights without leaving a corpse for their family to take care of.

      --
      Linux is for people who don't mind RTFM.
    16. Re:We've redefined success! by nadaou · · Score: 2

      Moreover, the mentally ill deserve what help we can give them, and those that care about them.

      --
      ~.~
      I'm a peripheral visionary.
    17. Re:We've redefined success! by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If you are not in a fit state of mind when you get married, you can get an annulment. If you are not in a fit state of mind when you have the child, you can let the child be adopted or temporarily fostered.

      I'm not sure which country you're living in but it's not one I've ever heard of.

      Suicide is a problem which overwhelmingly affects men. If you get married the only usual out is divorce, which means that men in 99% of cases are on the hook for support for the rest of their lives. If you're identified as the father of the child, the situation is the same. There have been cases in the US where men who donated to sperm banks, men who were raped by women when they were underaged, men who weren't even related to the child have been forced to pay child support.

      This is the situation locally:

      - 99 percent of husbands lose their homes during divorces
      - Judges frequently make child maintenance orders against men on state benefits whose marriages have broken down - leaving many living below national insolvency guidelines, below subsistence levels
      - In seven out of ten cases the judge ordered a transfer of the property into the wife’s name
      - During 160 contested cases when an order was made to sell the home the wife received more than half of the proceeds in 25 percent of the cases, during the other 75 percent the proceeds were split
      - Joint custody does not mean shared parenting, with children in more than nine out of 10 cases living with their mothers- the "standard access" for married dads to their children after separation is "a couple of hours" every second week, with a few hours once or twice during the week
      - In no cases were the views of any child heard directly by a judge
      - A significant number of divorce cases take eight years or more to be concluded
      - 100% of maintenance orders, both child and spousal maintenance, are made in favour of the wife

      It absolutely is reflected in most western countries.

      If we're going to deal with the problem, let's deal with the problem. This article seems like political power grabbing and grandstanding on the backs of the dead, which is beyond reprehensible and shows the vile moral character of those proposing it.

    18. Re:We've redefined success! by itzly · · Score: 2

      So we should allow people to get professional assistance on how to take their own life in a peaceful way. That way there's a graceful way out for those who have really considered the issue well. At the same time, reduce access to easy suicide on a whim.

    19. Re:We've redefined success! by Richard_at_work · · Score: 0

      I live in the UK, and all of the above stands for both sexes.

      Annulments can be asked for by either party, and if you back it up with enough evidence then the judge will grant it without both parties agreeing.

      If you father a child and you are not in a fit state of mind to do so, the other parent cannot exert their rights on you legally (and no, being drunk does not count as not being in a fit state of mind). Again, a judge will back this up if you present enough evidence.

      "There have been cases in the US where men who donated to sperm banks" - if you use a properly registered doctor and sperm bank, you are protected by state and federal laws against child support claims. If you use a doctor or bank which is not properly registered, then you will be liable. Nothing wrong with that.

      "men who were raped by women when they were underaged" - evidence please.

      "men who weren't even related to the child have been forced to pay child support" - evidence please.

    20. Re:We've redefined success! by silentcoder · · Score: 1, Funny

      >and those that care about them
      The trouble with that argument, although it's incredibly valid, is that it has no impact on libertardians because they don't know what "care" means.

      I'll help them out: it's when somebody feels about another person the way you people feel about money.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    21. Re:We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I personally have no issues with suicide, even assisted suicide, so long as the person who has elected to kill themselves has done so in a fully concious, fit state of mind.

      Ah, but you see, the "Mental Health Expert" and pharmasudical companies have pushed to have any desire to off onesself as an indicator of an unfit state of mind and in need of pricy counseling and medication.

      Before we can make progress we have to quantify when the act itself is not indicative of an unfit mind. This will become increasingly important as our medical science extends our lives. Some day suicide may be the only way to die. "I've been everywhere, seen everything, and lived for a thousand years, TWICE. I'm tired, and bored out of my mind. I don't want to take up resources anymore, unplug me and erase the brain backups, I don't want to come back."

      The future "Mental Health Experts" may propose "blocking the paths to boredom"... This kills the Zen Master.

    22. Re:We've redefined success! by Vlado · · Score: 1

      Absolutely.

      Approaches like that already exist in other areas.
      For example, you generally cannot simply show up for a sex change operation. You have to go through (often) several years worth of consultations and evaluations, before you will be allowed to proceed.
      Similar situation also exists for people that have "extra phantom limbs" (they feel that one of their legs doesn't belong to them and should be removed, for instance). Depending on where they are, they will also have an option to consultations, therapy and, eventually, removal of the limb. Alternative can be a person that will go and sit on the railway tracks in order to have his leg cut off by a train. I think you can imagine how well that can work out.

      In my opinion you do have a right to do anything you want with your body. But in some cases (like in other areas of your life) you don't actually know what you want and may make a different choice if you are well informed and have the support of your environment that helps you research all the options that may be open to you.

    23. Re:We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup. Sorry, but I view this as a lazy approach.

      No one is saying mental health is easy. Targetting suicide prone is probably hardest of all diagnoses. They want to block exits? Those determined will find more creative ways. Such is the mind of someone who sees only one way out.

      And I say lazy, not out of disrepect, but out of the general approach the US takes with regard to mental health. It is shunned, shamed, and not to be discussed, if you just happen to be suffering. That these perceptions aren't being targetted, and that the path of least resistance is, is very telling about the road blocks still in place to fighting mental health in this country.

    24. Re:We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, but no person in a 'fully conscious, fit state of mind' contemplates suicide.

    25. Re:We've redefined success! by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      I live in the UK, and all of the above stands for both sexes.

      99% of men and women lose their homes in UK divorces? What?

      Annulments can be asked for by either party, and if you back it up with enough evidence then the judge will grant it without both parties agreeing.

      And how often would you say that happens?

      If you father a child and you are not in a fit state of mind to do so, the other parent cannot exert their rights on you legally (and no, being drunk does not count as not being in a fit state of mind). Again, a judge will back this up if you present enough evidence.

      If you try to claim that a child was a result of a drunken one night stand and hence you aren't liable for child support payments you'd be laughed out of court. The "best interests of the child" principle is almost uniformly applied throughout the western world.

      "There have been cases in the US where men who donated to sperm banks" - if you use a properly registered doctor and sperm bank, you are protected by state and federal laws against child support claims. If you use a doctor or bank which is not properly registered, then you will be liable. Nothing wrong with that.

      It is completely insane to claim that there is nothing wrong with that.

      "men who were raped by women when they were underaged" - evidence please.

      http://www.businessinsider.com...

      "men who weren't even related to the child have been forced to pay child support" - evidence please.

      http://www.truthrevolt.org/new...

      And it's being codified into law in many places, in Ireland for example there's a new amendment to the Chikdren and Family Relationships bill which states in no uncertain terms that anyone the child considers a "father figure" is on the hook for child support.

      None of your comments address the actual grisly outcomes for men in the family courts and the resultant suicidal ideation. When a father is reduced to a walking cash machine, torn away from his own children, it's no wonder that the majority of suicides, locally at least, are among men in the 30-50 age group.

      I suggest you contact Fathers4Justice (you know, the guys who've been camping out on the roofs of government buildings trying to get attention) and educate yourself on these issues.

      Fix the disease, not the symptom.

    26. Re:We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Absolutely. Approaches like that already exist in other areas.

      For example, you generally cannot simply show up for a sex change operation. You have to go through (often) several years worth of consultations and evaluations, before you will be allowed to proceed.

      Hi. You're wrong about sex change requiring all that. It now requires *one* mental evaluation before proceeding with hormone therapy for sex change or "top surgery" (bilateral mastectomy). Genital surgery only comes after hormone therapy. Regardless: *one* evaluation before proceeding.

      Source: medical school lecture from last month from the person who runs our hospital's transgender clinic.

      So, given that your point has been nullified... what now?

    27. Re:We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. That argument is incredibly condescending and nefarious. How many times has the argument been used in the past to justify what we currently think of as heinous crimes?

      "We are bringing civilization to the savages."
      "We are saving their eternal souls."
      "We are preventing them from having children so those children won't have to suffer from the affliction of being a Jew/Gypsy/etc."

      There are things that have been done to Alan Turing, how insane asylums have been run, separating indigenous people's children from their parents, and countless other examples of "providing care."

      Should people be treated well? Yes. But to say that "deserve what help we can give them" begs the question of what "help" are you giving them, and why are you stopping them from making their own decisions for themselves. Saying "they are suicidal therefore are clearly mentally ill" begs the question of why do you consider them mentally ill and a literal Catch-22... could I say "I get all your money because you are insane, and because you don't want to give me all your money is proof that you are insane?"

      I've always thought the so-called golden rule should be "treat others as they want you to treat them" myself...

    28. Re:We've redefined success! by silentcoder · · Score: 0

      None of those things are, in fact, similar to caring about people. All of those came from the same fundamentally flawed thinking: that some people are lesser beings, not fully human.

      You know, what libertarians think.

      And I am damn sure that if on the spur of the moment I was about to kill myself I would WANT somebody to intervene and save my life, because I've BEEN there, twice in my life. And I am really glad that both times there WAS somebody who intervened. There was somebody to stop me. Because the next day, I was so happy to be alive.
      And that is the vast majority of suicides - split decisions, a moment of very bad judgement when life is too much or you're really depressed.
      It can take years to overcome and learn to manage depression, it takes just one bad moment to lose that chance.

      Only somebody who has no understanding or empathy of the reality of the situation would think that the vast majority of suicides would NOT ultimately be greatfull if they were saved.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    29. Re:We've redefined success! by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      When a father is reduced to a walking cash machine, torn away from his own children, it's no wonder that the majority of suicides, locally at least, are among men in the 30-50 age group.

      So go out with a roar, not with a whimper.

      Then you'll see some attention and awareness.

      By definition, though, perhaps we ought to let suicide happen. What's wanted is people who won't.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    30. Re:We've redefined success! by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      If you are not in a fit state of mind when you get married, you can get an annulment. If you are not in a fit state of mind when you have the child, you can let the child be adopted or temporarily fostered. If you are not in a fit state of mind when you signed the mortgage, it can be nullified.

      While these statements are technically true, the reality is that most people actually have great difficulties getting out of many of these decisions. How many people are actually even driven to suicide because of a bad marriage where they feel trapped, or because of an inability to meet family responsibilities and expectations, or because of financial hardships created by debts, bad loans, etc.??

      Proving that you were "not in a fit state of mind" is not as easy as you make it sound. Moreover, the decisions you mention are often done along with someone else, and unless that person agrees that you were "not in a fit state of mind" (unlikely, if they went along with you in signing a mortgage or marrying you or whatever), it's going to be hard to cancel things on that basis.

      And particularly in the case of a child, I don't think you get to make this choice alone. Try getting out of a paternity suit or child support by saying, "Uh, gee... whoops... I wasn't thinking clearly" or even "I was behaving irresponsibly" or "I wasn't thinking soundly." Hormones generally don't go together with a calm rational state of mind.

      I understand that by saying "not in a fit state of mind" you probably mean actually insane or mentally incompetent, but the reality is that many more people than we like to admit are rather sane when they choose to end their own lives -- or at least as sane as they are when they marry some drunken idiot as a teenager or have unprotected sex with someone at a frat party "in the heat of the moment" or sign a loan on the "dream house" they can't afford.

      Lots of things undermine rationality without meeting the threshold for strict mental incompetence. But we don't let generally allow people to easily reverse such decisions.

      If you are not in a fit state of mind when you kill yourself, there is no going back.

      Teenagers who have kids in undesirable circumstances around the world also feel like "there is no going back." Lives are ruined -- or at least severely changed and restricted in choices -- every day through the kind of stuff you mention. As I already said, many of these choices also lead people to suicide... because they feel like they can't reverse these choices. I agree with you that suicide is different and obviously irreversible. But the circumstances you bring up often are practically irrevocable too (or trying to do so would make things worse).

      I personally have no issues with suicide, even assisted suicide, so long as the person who has elected to kill themselves has done so in a fully concious, fit state of mind.

      The problem is who exactly decides and defines who is in a "fit state of mind." The government? I can just imagine a DMV-like place with a long line: "Well, let's see -- you meet criteria X, Y, and Z, you get a free pass to commit suicide! Next! Yes... let me see here... Oh sorry, we have determined that you don't meet criterion Z; try again next year!"

      And then you have the problem of defining these moral parameters X, Y, and Z, which tend to change at various times depending on societal values. We have a hard enough time as a society deciding whom you can legally sleep with. Currently, a single adult partner of the opposite or same sex is fashionable. Multiple partners are not (but were in many cultures for many years). Partners under the age of [arbitrary local number X] are not.*

      Can you just imagine the difficulties in deciding whether you are legally in a "fit state of mind" to kill yourself? Some places now seem to be saying it's okay in the case rather imminent terminal illness.

    31. Re:We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you use a doctor or bank which is not properly registered, then you will be liable. Nothing wrong with that.

      There is something manifestly wrong with that. What should matter is whether you were under an understanding that you were a sperm donor at the time.

      What if the "doctors" lied to you? You have to pay child support when you believed you were protected by following the law.

      What if you have a notarised agreement? You have to pay child support when you believed that the contract should have protected you under the law.

      There is an enormous amount wrong with all of this. How can you not see it?

    32. Re:We've redefined success! by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      Most of the arguments I've heard about suicide and "not being in a fit state of mind" have been largely circular FWIW. Depression has chemical hallmarks, but it's not clear that Depression itself a cause, rather than the Brain's defense mechanism, against a mind that wants out. Depression at least saps the will to take steps such as committing suicide, which is why there's usually a spike in suicides amongst those who have just started taking anti-depressants. The fact the body would generate chemicals sapping the will to kill one's self when one wants to would kinda seem like an evolutionary trait to me.

      I'm far from convinced that (the majority of) people who want to take their own lives have actual mental issues - or rather, few have the mental issues usually ascribed to them. If they did, we wouldn't see people killing themselves over, for example, a lack of acceptance about being LGBT, one of the most common reasons for suicide. There's nothing whatsoever linking Transgenderism/Transexualism or Homosexuality with Depression, but disproportionate numbers of people identifying themselves within those categories commit suicide.

      I think there's a degree of desperation within the medical community when it comes to dealing with certain issues, which is why the DSM has swung wildly over from position to position over the last few decades when it comes to determining what social construct is actually a disease or not. The mind is especially complex. People who want suicide to be preventable are more comfortable with theories that allow it to be a medical condition than cope with the suggestion anti-depressants might result in people living unwillingly in misery. Victims go along with the narrative in order to please friends and loved ones, despite knowing underneath they still feel the same way.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    33. Re:We've redefined success! by moeinvt · · Score: 1

      You don't think that libertarians "care" about their families, friends and other human beings in general? I beg to differ. But getting to the point, I think we're talking about this firearms/suicide thing in the context of public policy. i.e. allowing the government to mandate what we can and can't do in our own homes, right?

      I certainly sympathize with someone who is so unhappy that they are contemplating suicide, but there is no clear link between availability of firearms and attempted suicide. Only that people who use a firearm in the attempt are more successful.
      Therefore, making it a crime for 330 million people to have unlocked firearms in their home is not demonstrating how much I "care" for the .02% of people who are suicidal.

    34. Re:We've redefined success! by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I personally have no issues with suicide, even assisted suicide, so long as the person who has elected to kill themselves has done so in a fully concious, fit state of mind.

      So who defines fit state of mind? Some would say that if you want to kill yourself, that you're by definition unfit.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    35. Re:We've redefined success! by silentcoder · · Score: 0

      >You don't think that libertarians "care" about their families, friends and other human beings in general?

      Oh I think some do, not all, but some.
      Ayn Rand sure didn't - she explicitely stated that there is NO relationship between ANY people that is NOT monetary, and ANY relationship WITHOUT monetary advantages should be ended as it's taking time away from those that are profitable.
      Yes, she sincerely thought that sex partners, lovers, spouses and even children should be chosen based on their ability to contribute to your financial wellbeing AND ONLY that.

      But even the ones who do still lack true empathy, true understanding of the idea of "caring" - we see the pattern over and over over and over. Dick Cheney vehemently opposed gay marriage his whole life - until his daughter came out as a lesbian and wanted to get married.
      When it happens to them - they suddenly understand, they suddenly want to see a change, but in all the decades other people suffer while they are sheltered -they never do, then it's easy to blame the suffering on the sufferers.

      Caring is the ability to feel somebody else's pain and thus a desire to help relieve it WITHOUT you or somebody you love going through it. It's the ability to feel sympathy and empathy for a perfect stranger and those who are capable of it are always and entirely incapable of condescension, cannot look down on others and never blame those in dire straights for the straights they are in - because they CAN imagine it happening to them.
      The ability to realize that line between billionaire and homeless is often just one bad day. Those who can care does not look at a homeless person and wonder what he did wrong in his life to end up that way, he wonders what terrible tragedy befell him to.
      If you care, you stop assuming other people's choices led to their situations - because you come to realize how much of our lives are not really in our control, how little our choices really matter. Because you can imagine how easily a particularly bad set of circumstances could put yourself there as well.

      That is caring. Caring for family and loved ones is nothing special. Even Hitler probably cared for Eva. That doesn't make you a good person, it doesn't even make you human - DOGS do that. The ability to care for strangers BEFORE you even MET them -THAT makes you human.

      > allowing the government to mandate what we can and can't do in our own homes, right?
      Actually - that hasn't come up at all. It didn't come up in the article, or the summary and was only very vaguely alluded to in the comments. I don't think that would be the most practically efficient way to develop solutions from the scientific data with which we've been presented.
      I think making this data widely available, along with practical advice on implementation to teachers and parents and nurses and therapists and similar people would be a much better approach. If you suspect somebody, especially a minor in your care, may be suicidal, one of the things you should do is to (even if just temporarily) remove high-risk suicide options from your home.
      Stuff like that.

      Building a police state wouldn't help - historically that drives suicide rates UP so why you would jump to the bizarre conclusion that anybody was advocating for one to bring them down I have no idea.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    36. Re:We've redefined success! by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      But I am not allowed to take my own life.

      You're a tax-generating asset that has received some amount of investment.

      Imagine if you raised a calf and then at two years it decided to jump off a cliff when you needed a three-year-old steer to slaughter for market. You'd be miffed at that animal.

      In a world where you're being farmed for a share of your productivity to be transferred to the farmer-class, you're speaking here as a very bad unit of livestock.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    37. Re:We've redefined success! by jjn1056 · · Score: 1

      So it is forbidden to make a decision about your life. WTF?

      I am allowed to marry the wrong person and ruin my life at the drop of a hat. I am allowed to have kids where I may not be qualified to provide a decent life. I am allowed to sign a mortgage that I know I can't pay. I am allowed to try to climb the K7 if I am 70 years old, wich is very close to suicide.

      But I am not allowed to take my own life.

      Bollocks.

      There is no law (in the USA) that forbids you from making important life choices.

      We've chosen as a society to allow people to marry at will and have children without being subject to a means test because we've decided the evil that comes from a state empowered to do that is greater than the evil of people being parents that are not fully ready to do so. Its a rational choice.

      We let banks and lenders decide who is capable of paying a mortgage because we've decided again that the free market is a better control for this than what the state may provide. Again, its a choice we've made, and we've tried to balance it out with rules that lenders must follow (and we've recently tweaked those rules when we found them lacking). But ultimately we've chosen to say its less evil to restrict gov't power over this than the evil that comes from people being foreclosed on if they can't pay.

      We let people who are rational take risks, like climbing mountains, because we know that there is a part of human existence that needs to test itself, even at the peril of life. This is a strong part of human existence and we don't want to restrict it unduly.

      On the other hand we have decided that we want to stop people from killing themselves for reasons that are going to seem silly to them 10 years down the road. Lots of kids or young adults face tremendous stress as they try to fit into the world and shape it to their desire and that stress happens at a time when their hormones are out of control and their brain is expanding in new ways. This is a simple, biochemical fact. And this fact puts some people under a type of stress they can't endure. People who are not rational and who would not be doing this five or ten years later when they've managed to settle into a life with a job and possible a family. We say as a society that its not cool to kill yourself because you are young, your biochemistry is out of whack, your brain is growing it complex ways we don't yet fully understand. We think that is a terrible waste. And there is a difference between that waste, and between choices we've made to restrict the power of gov't, to promote individual choice and to allow humans to test ourselves in sometimes dangerous ways. If you don't see that difference I think you need to get away from the computer more :)

      --
      Peace, or Not?
    38. Re:We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bungee-jumpers are jumping with the assumption they will survive. They are doing it for the adrenaline rush. Suicidal actions are taken by someone that feels as though life were hopeless and ultimately not worth pursuing.

    39. Re:We've redefined success! by jjn1056 · · Score: 1

      "Instead we should be focussing on making the world a better place and their lives happier and worth living. "

      We should make the world better, but I think even in a perfect world some young people are going to feel overwhelmed for simple biochemical reasons which make the problems they face seem insurmountable. So we should do the bit that we can do to make it less easy for those people to find a fast way to act on impulse.

      --
      Peace, or Not?
    40. Re:We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This has nothing to do with making suicide illegal. I abhor the fact that it's illegal in the US and often punished with prison, rather than treated as a mental health issue. I support assisted suicide (eg, Dr Kevorkian) and the right-to-die movement.

      On the other hand, I support these initiatives of making "casual" suicide harder. Most people who want to kill themselves don't actually want to kill themselves; it's the result of a mental disorder, and as the article states, rates can drop by as much as 50% just by removing the easy means of doing it. Those people can instead get help and go on to live happy productive lives, lives that they actually want to live.

    41. Re:We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder how many cases exist where husbands take revenge on the judge?

    42. Re:We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Blocking exits keeps potential taxpayers still paying. Treatment of the issue would very likely cost tax dollars in the fruitful hope it produced more tax income from the saved. Much cheaper to to block the exits.

    43. Re:We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I'll help them out: it's when somebody feels about another person the way you people feel about money."

      You mean, similar to how you feel about people that think the same way you do? IE: the opposite of how you treat and think about those who think differently from you?

    44. Re:We've redefined success! by Baldorcete · · Score: 1

      What if somebody knows he is depressed, gets the apropiate care, and still don't want to spend years with the hope that maybe he could manage the depresion, and prefers to die?

    45. Re:We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It absolutely is reflected in most western countries.

      Really? How about Norway:

      If you make a child, you get to pay for it - obviously. Unlike the U.S., you support the child only, not the ex-wife. (Equal opportunities means she can support herself, and is supposed to do so.) If you don't want to to pay through child support, get 50% custody of the child. You have the child 50% of the time, and support it fully in that time. Then you don't owe anyone else anything. Getting 50% custody is not hard for a normal guy with a job. (Might be hopeless for someone with drug problems, a history of violence, extreme poverty or other nasty problems.) Some men want to be "free" instead of living with a child half the time - they obviously get to pay.

      If you are forced to pay child support, they take a percentage of your earnings. Which means you never pay more than you can afford. (Alhough it might be more than you like.) Some assholes abuse this by quitting their jobs - earning almost nothing means they pay almost nothing.

      As for splitting a house - both leave the marriage with whatever they brough in. Often, couples own a house together. If neither is able to buy the other half, they usually have to sell and both move to something smaller.

    46. Re:We've redefined success! by rock_climbing_guy · · Score: 1
      I tend to agree with you that being drunk does not count as being not in a fit state of mind. The thing is, if you suffer from mental illness or someone places you under duress, that is beyond your control; you are not in a fit state of mind.

      If you were drunk, sorry, you made the decision to drink knowing what the possible consequences are. How someone can get drunk and then claim that having sex afterwards was rape just because they were drunk is beyond me.

      --
      Wh47 d1d j00 541, 31337 15n't t3h r0xor5 ne m0r3???
    47. Re:We've redefined success! by rock_climbing_guy · · Score: 1
      "men who weren't even related to the child have been forced to pay child support" - evidence please.

      http://lmgtfy.com/?q=man+not+t...

      --
      Wh47 d1d j00 541, 31337 15n't t3h r0xor5 ne m0r3???
    48. Re:We've redefined success! by rock_climbing_guy · · Score: 1
      There is a man burned himself alive in front of the court where he was divorced to protest his divorce. He was likely inspired by the Tunisian man who burned himself alive to protest conditions there.

      Did that change jack shit?

      Here's a link to one report of the story: http://freekeene.com/2011/06/1...

      --
      Wh47 d1d j00 541, 31337 15n't t3h r0xor5 ne m0r3???
    49. Re:We've redefined success! by rock_climbing_guy · · Score: 1
      There is a man burned himself alive in front of the court where he was divorced to protest his divorce. He was likely inspired by the Tunisian man who burned himself alive to protest conditions there.

      Did that change jack shit?

      Here's a link to one report of the story: http://freekeene.com/2011/06/1...

      --
      Wh47 d1d j00 541, 31337 15n't t3h r0xor5 ne m0r3???
    50. Re:We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Define fit state of mind. For many mental health professionals, wanting to die disqualifies you as being called well adjusted or sane. It is a serious problem in that those that have suicidal thoughts fear getting help more than they fear death because there is a very real chance that their freedom of choice will be taken away from them by the 'help'.

      Most see it as being better to live or die by their own hand than have the choice made by someone else.

    51. Re:We've redefined success! by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Locking up people in a world they do not want to be part of is a hugely immoral act and utterly despicable. Removing people's freedom and choice is of course a very American thing to do.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    52. Re:We've redefined success! by gweihir · · Score: 1

      This is just the usual religious fanaticism that wants you to suffer, with no early escape. Utterly inhumane and evil.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    53. Re:We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for the "Let me Google that for you", asshole.

      But that case hasn't gone to trial or anything. I figured it would be about adopted children.

    54. Re:We've redefined success! by iceaxe · · Score: 1

      Here I go again, replying to anonymous...

      But for the rest of you:

      I could not disagree more with your categorization.

      As far as I can tell, suicide attempts do fall into two categories.
      1. People who are terminally ill and have made a rational decision along with the advice and consent of family and health care professionals to avoid suffering that truly cannot be otherwise avoided.
      2. People with mental illness.

      Category 2 covers a broad spectrum, from the "cries for attention" - a pejorative phrase that is uncalled for, because anyone in this situation bloody well needs some attention - to people who due to their illness cannot comprehend the action they are taking, and all points in between. Suicide except in case 1 is definitively irrational. Life can ALWAYS get better, and usually does, given a chance. Maybe some changes are needed, maybe some health care is needed, maybe some time and help are needed - every individual being different. But suicide doesn't make life better, it makes it worse - especially for those who care about the victim.

      As for the Japanese girl mentioned, I hope she got the care she needed, and lives a full life complete with joys and experiences she would have missed were it not for that help she got, wanted or not.

      --
      WALSTIB!
    55. Re:We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ‘Here I go again, replying to anonymous’
      What's that supposed to mean?

      ‘People who are terminally ill and have made a rational decision’
      There are many more rational reasons to kill yourself than just terminal illness. The world is a very shitty place and a lot of people are living profoundly unhappy lives with no perspective on improvement whatsoever at all. For some, suicide *is* an improvement, and busybodies who cannot see that only make the world even shittier by ladling guilt, false hope, powerlessness and resentment over all the crap they've already got on their plate, and by maintaining the status quo because their blind spots make perceive the world to be in some sense ‘good enough’. It really isn't.

    56. Re:We've redefined success! by Znork · · Score: 1

      If I ever get the fleeting motivation to just get it over with, I certainly don't want anyone intervening, because at that point I'll know that the only thing worse than depression is ending on your deathbed at an advanced age with the biggest regret in your life being that you didn't end it a long time ago, while there still was something but a wasteland of meaninglessness to look back on. Once anhedonia has turned everything you ever used to enjoy into ash and you're a shadow of what you were, it's not like there's much left to save. Just some flesh going through the motions like some horrific parody of life.

      And no, the vast majority of suicides would not ultimately be grateful if they were saved. Ultimately they'll just be dead. Either way. Like everyone else.

      I'd find the arguments for suicide prevention much more convincing if the proponents weren't seemingly suffering from psychotic delusions that they're not just postponing the termination point. I get the uneasy feeling that it's more about refusing to face their own mortality than any genuine concern for how the individual will experience the rest of their existence. That they have their delusions threatened by people deciding to check out early.

      It would be far more honest to simply admit that as biological beings we are, for some very logical evolutionary reasons, afflicted with a certain level of mental illness, delusions and compulsory behaviour that will make us prefer living to dying and if the depressed person will give it a chance and take some help, maybe the lower biological instincts will assert themselves and override the cold logic of reality. And we can pretend that it'll last... just... a... little... bit... more...

    57. Re:We've redefined success! by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      What if somebody knows he is depressed, gets the apropiate care, and still don't want to spend years with the hope that maybe he could manage the depresion, and prefers to die?

      You might want to read what it's really like from TSN's Michael Landsberg.

      Medication helps, but there are side effects. Therapy helps, but it's not a cure-all. My latest bout has been going on for more than 6 months; more than half a year of not being able to stay awake for more than a few hours at a time, isolated from the regular ebb and flow of life, unable to concentrate because of the side effects of the meds, reminding myself to keep my promise not to make any important decisions when I'm down in the dumps, trying to avoid the obvious - that it (life) is really not worth all this hassle.

      I'd rather be like I am when I'm not in the grips of a major depressive episode; however, if I believed there was no hope of having a "normal life" for at least a while before the next bout, I'd pull the plug. Not because I want to, but because the alternative is worse. Not being "me" sucks.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    58. Re:We've redefined success! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      99% of men and women lose their homes in UK divorces? What?

      What's confusing? Every divorce I've had intimate knowledge of (mostly family members, including my parents), both parents lost the home. How is that hard to believe? With it being the largest asset, it's often liquidated to split up the estate. The divorces by the billionaires that make it on news often have one or more homes to each person, so neither is left homeless.

      I suggest you contact Fathers4Justice

      Nah, I know enough deadbead dads, I don't need to go out and try to hang around more of them. Bitter angry old men. How dare that bitch get treated fairly!

    59. Re:We've redefined success! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      The great thing is that with 50 states, some have bad laws. Rather than trying to target the bad ones, the associations of deadbeat dads get together to help them get worse, then lie and imply that tit's the case everywhere. But it's not. Some guy in Detroit or wherever has no impact on my situation. Paternity is biological-only in most places. So it's a non-issue for nearly everyone in the US (And probably everyone outside).

    60. Re:We've redefined success! by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      What's confusing? Every divorce I've had intimate knowledge of (mostly family members, including my parents), both parents lost the home.

      Brilliant, you're a one man sociological survey. Everyone clam up and gather round the fire as AK Marc tells his story.

      With it being the largest asset, it's often liquidated to split up the estate. The divorces by the billionaires that make it on news often have one or more homes to each person, so neither is left homeless.

      You've never run for elected office no? Thank christ.

      Nah, I know enough deadbead dads, I don't need to go out and try to hang around more of them. Bitter angry old men. How dare that bitch get treated fairly!

      Indeed, I doubt being a father was ever one of your problems.

      Listen bud, drop the hardman act and educate yourself on the real issues before mouthing off in public and making yourself look like an idiot again.

      Just some friendly advice.

    61. Re:We've redefined success! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Listen bud, drop the hardman act and educate yourself on the real issues before mouthing off in public and making yourself look like an idiot again.

      I know more about the issues than you do. You can't attack the logic or facts, so you attack the person. All that proves is that you know that the facts and logic is against you. What, are you a deadbeat dad too?

      All the whiners are. Have some kids, abandon them, rant about your poor life choices, blaming everyone else, especially "that bitch".

    62. Re:We've redefined success! by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      You can't attack the logic or facts, so you attack the person. All that proves is that you know that the facts and logic is against you.

      All I've done is present facts and logic you unrelentingly chinless tit. Which is the exact opposite of what you've managed to disgorge into the conversation.

      All the whiners are. Have some kids, abandon them, rant about your poor life choices, blaming everyone else, especially "that bitch".

      On your bike son, I'm not covering your bus fare home.

    63. Re:We've redefined success! by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Erm - you were literally just presented, in the article, with PROOF that the vast majority of suicidal states are temporary - that those people DO end up grateful if they survive.

      There is nothing we can do to prevent the permanently and devotedly suicidal from success and maybe there is something to your argument that nothing SHOULD be done.
      But if you think that you would rather die from a single moment of bad judgement then that makes you the incredibly rare exception, not the rule. We cannot base society on the rare exceptions.
      That would be like saying "Until the 1980's we taxed the super-rich at up to 90% and they were still rich, so it makes sense to tax EVERYBODY at 90%"

      Sensible societies don't base their responses on the outliers but on the majority - and the science is clear, the majority of suicides, if they are intervened with - have no recurrence. Most people do not really want to die - they just wanted it in THAT moment.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    64. Re:We've redefined success! by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Then you are off-topic, since such a person has nothing to do with the discussion or the article.
      The point of the article is that scientifically those cases are very, very rare - and the suggestions in the article wouldn't make one iota of difference for them anyway. Maybe we need some sort of legal assisted suicide path to let them have their wish, I don't know - but that is an ENTIRELY unrelated issue.

      This discussion is about the 90% of suicidal people who are only suicidal once, for a very brief period, and will be very happy if they survived that.

      Should we deny medical care to somebody who gets in an accident when it was clearly their fault ? No, we generally hold that - as far as possible - we do not let people die because they had a momentary lapse of judgement. Why should THIS kind of lapse be any different ?

      Those who are determined to die are not PART of this discussion at all, they are a distinct group - much smaller and there is absolutely NO logical reason to include them. Trying to find a cure-all for suicide is just as impossible as a cure-all for cancer. You can't find ONE cure for a whole bunch of diseases that only have one thing in COMMON and everything else different.
      The same goes for suicide, now if we can help 90% of them not to die - why the hell are you freaking out because it won't help the other 10% ? Why do you care that there may be side-effects on that 10% that they would consider worse than no treatment ?
      If we get a treatment that saves 90% of colon cancer patients, do we refuse to use it because in the other 10% the side-effects make their final months even MORE painful ?

      Do not let the perfect be the enemy of the good.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    65. Re:We've redefined success! by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      To further illustrate my point: the highest suicide risk in the world today are transgender teenagers whose parents don't accept them. More than 40% of them commit suicide which is massive !

      We also know that for those whose parents DO accept them as trans the suicide rate is exactly the same as the national average for their age group.

      So we have a clear way to establish cause and effect here. We can save ALL those lives, because we can remove the REASON they want to die. If we educate parents properly on the subject we'll save a lot. Maybe we should even go further and declare that NOT accepting a transgender teenager's gender expression is child neglect with a high risk of death. I'm not sure, you should always think 3 times before using the law as a blunt instrument so I wouldn't rush to supporting that, but in principle it seems sound.

      But that cure would make ZERO difference to any OTHER suicides, most of them do not have such clear-cut cause and effect patterns. Most of them does not have such an obvious way to completely remove the cause and cure the condition.
      Other suicide cases should be investigated, scientificaly, as distinct and treated in distinct ways.

      Like I said, suicide is much more like cancer than like TB - it's not A disease - it's a whole cluster of diseases that just happen to have a symptom in common. You can't cure a cluster with one treatment, you have to take every single type of it and find it's own unique cure and accept that, maybe, for some of them there are no cures.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    66. Re:We've redefined success! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "patients who think that the world is worth escaping" - or maybe a world from which any sane person might desire to escape? You don;t fix that by imposing on them further.

    67. Re:We've redefined success! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      All I've done is present facts and logic you unrelentingly chinless tit.

      What, facts and logic like:

      99% of men and women lose their homes in UK divorces? What?

      That looks to be fact and logic free. You've not touched either.

      If you have facts, tell us. How many men keep the primary house in a divorce? How many women keep the primary house in a divorce?

      What percentage of men file for full custody in a divorce?

      Come on, you bitter little misogynist, fact me up. I'm guessing you can't, and you'll just further insult me because you can't support your irrational position, other than rants about how the rich white man is the most oppressed minority in America.

    68. Re:We've redefined success! by JimFive · · Score: 1

      And how many life insurance companies are "around" to pay out the policy when suicide is the cause of death?

      Um, pretty much all of them. Life insurance policies only exclude suicide for the first year or so, then they pay out as normal.
      --
      JimFive

      --
      Please stop using the word theory when you mean hypothesis.
    69. Re:We've redefined success! by JimFive · · Score: 1

      I'm honestly shocked that you think it's normal. Clearly it's not rare. 25% isn't low. But it's nowhere near universal.

      I'm honestly shocked that it is anything close to that low. If I had been asked to guess a number I would have thought closer to 75%.
      --
      JimFive

      --
      Please stop using the word theory when you mean hypothesis.
    70. Re:We've redefined success! by rock_climbing_guy · · Score: 1

      I think "Let Me Google that for you is funny." Lighten up a bit.

      --
      Wh47 d1d j00 541, 31337 15n't t3h r0xor5 ne m0r3???
    71. Re:We've redefined success! by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      That looks to be fact and logic free. You've not touched either.

      That was a question, as indicated by the question mark. Remarkable how grammar works really. Except of course the actual facts cited were supported by links to research in a subsequent comment you unsalvageable pleb.

      Come on, you bitter little misogynist

      Yes, facts are misogynistic. Those damn woman hating facts.

      I want you to stop, put down the bottle, and take a good hard look at what you're trying to excrete here. Nobody, but nobody denies that men get treated brutally by the family courts, except yourself.

      Why might that be?

    72. Re:We've redefined success! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Why might that be?

      I asked questions. You refused to answer any. Instead, you launched into repeated personal attacks.

      Why might that be? I posit it's because you know I'm right. Otherwise, how could someone so full of facts and logic not be able to ever use a single one to refute anything or answer any question?

    73. Re:We've redefined success! by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      You posit? You're an ignorant embarrassment, and that embarrassment is now indelibly engraved on the internet for all time, connected to your Romancing Alaska... thing... And just think, you were so confident about teh muh soggy knees and how all teh wimminz would be lining up for a taste when you were done beating your chest like a jackass.

      My work here is done. Not that I had to do much work, you did all the heavy lifting really.

    74. Re:We've redefined success! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1
      Not that I had to do much work,

      You acted just like a deadbeat dad. You did nothing, whined about everyone else, declared you won, and went home alone and unloved.

    75. Re:We've redefined success! by Slashdot+Parent · · Score: 1

      The idea is to block the exits temporarily to thwart unplanned suicide attempts. The idea is to thwart the suicide attempt until the suicidal thoughts pass. Maybe just for a few hours until the mental breakdown subsides.

      The article topic does not cover preventing planned suicide attempts.

      --
      They don't grade fathers, but if your daughter's a stripper, you fucked up. --Chris Rock
  3. "Posted by Soulskill" by smittyoneeach · · Score: 1

    "Soul skill", or "Souls kill"?
    The parsing is important here.

    --
    Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
    1. Re:"Posted by Soulskill" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm so sick of Ultra Low Sulfur Kerosene.

      So ULSK ill!

  4. Did we need the heart-tugging anecdotes? by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

    Suicide is all very tragic and it'd be lovely if no-one had to feel that way, but did we really need to throw in the anecdotes at the end?

    Ken Baldwin, who jumped from the Golden Gate Bridge in 1985 and lived, told reporters that he knew as soon as he had jumped that he had made a terrible mistake. "From the instant I saw my hand leave the railing, I knew I wanted to live. I was terrified out of my skull." Baldwin was lucky to survive the 220 foot plunge into frigid waters. Ms. Barber tells another story: On a friend's very first day as an emergency room physician, a patient was wheeled in, a young man who had shot himself in a suicide attempt. "He was begging the doctors to save him," she says. But they could not.

    How many people beg the doctors to let them die after a failed attempt?

    --
    systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    1. Re:Did we need the heart-tugging anecdotes? by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 1

      The anecdotes illustrate typical experiences.

      Unless you are in a concentration camp, suicidal ideation and behavior is a mental health symptom. Interrupting someone's "MO" actually is a smart thing to do.

      A common technique is "chain analysis"; analyzing the chain of events that led up to a suicide attempt, and then looking at how to disrupt any future chains.

    2. Re:Did we need the heart-tugging anecdotes? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "How many people beg the doctors to let them die after a failed attempt?"

      So edgy. I'm imagining you sipping coffee.

    3. Re:Did we need the heart-tugging anecdotes? by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      Unless you are in a concentration camp, suicidal ideation and behavior is a mental health symptom.

      Really? So, say, a terminal cancer patient who's in constant pain and wants to die is not of sound mental health?

      Or maybe you'd like to revise that statement and say that there are other conditions besides "concentration camp" where suicide may be a rational response?

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    4. Re:Did we need the heart-tugging anecdotes? by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

      I wasn't trying to be edgy, and I don't drink coffee. I was critiscising the summary's choice to include those two anecdotes.

      What purpose does your post serve, except to make you feel clever?

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    5. Re:Did we need the heart-tugging anecdotes? by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

      The anecdotes illustrate typical experiences.

      No they don't - that is to say, I don't know that they illustrate typical expierences, because the article doesn't say so.

      Even the rest of the article will only go as far as to say that there is a "growing body of evidence" challenging the apparently more widely held view that "people who died by suicide will ultimately do it even if temporarily deterred."

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    6. Re:Did we need the heart-tugging anecdotes? by gweihir · · Score: 1

      It is not universally. Some people are quite capable of deciding that this world is a fucked up place (it clearly is) and that they want no part of it. Removing their freedom of leaving is utterly despicable and fundamentally evil. People doing this impose their own values on others, something only fanatics without empathy do.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    7. Re:Did we need the heart-tugging anecdotes? by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      I guess I don't see how you can classify suicidal ideation as necessarily a symptom of a problem. It falls into roughly three categories for me: a) people who want to commit suicide because they're dying a slow, painful death and/or their quality of life is low; b) people who want to commit suicide because, after analyzing the situation and their needs for happiness, do not feel they can find happiness in a reasonable time frame; c) people who want to commit suicide because of some mental/chemical imbalance that could be repaired, and if repaired would give them a happy life.

      Category "C" is the one which we'd like to jump in front of people and stop them, and give therapy a chance. In terms of category "a" and "b", I'd say we should facilitate it, offer a quick, painless way to go. The only trick is before we offer them the way out, we try o detect "c", and ensure that plans are in place to deal with financial & familial upheaval.

      People look at suicide as a bad thing, I think primarily due to religious or traditional concerns, but I think that's a cruel mistake.

  5. People are creative by thisisauniqueid · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This feels pertinent to me because this morning I was woken up at 6:45am by a loud helicopter hovering overhead for over an hour. A teenager had jumped in front of the CalTrain by where I live in Palo Alto in an apparent suicide. Turns out this is the 8th such CalTrain suicide so far this year, up from 8 suicides total (10 deaths) over the whole year last year. Locals are loudly requesting for the crossroads to be made into underpasses, and for improved fences etc.

    On the one hand I keep thinking that if someone is determined to commit suicide, they'll find a way. (There was a police guard posted at the crossing after previous suicides to prevent this, but the teenager simply jumped the fence 200 yards from the crossing and jumped in front of the train there instead.)

    On the other hand, I see the wisdom in trying to make the world a place where it's in no convenient way to commit suicide. As Banksy tweeted this morning, "Suicide does not end the chances of life getting worse, suicide eliminates the possibility of it ever getting better."

    1. Re:People are creative by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 4, Informative

      "Suicide does not end the chances of life getting worse". Well yes, it rather does.

      While it's a nice sentiment, it's something to which I would reply: "Please let me be the judge of that".

      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    2. Re: People are creative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Life also cant get worse if life no longer exists. I know its feel good to say something negative against suicide, but this statement makes no sense at all.

      If someone wants to suicide, let them. Who are you to interefere in their decision? Do you really think your mightier than god?

    3. Re:People are creative by slashdime · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      "Suicide does not end the chances of life getting worse". Well yes, it rather does. While it's a nice sentiment, it's something to which I would reply: "Please let me be the judge of that".

      Depends on how selfish you are. If nothing else in the world matters to you, then life won't get any worse for you and you only.

    4. Re:People are creative by thisisauniqueid · · Score: 1

      "Everything will be okay in the end. If it's not OK, it's not the end."

      One sad aspect of suicide, out of many, is that a suicide victim never gets to see for themselves that life does in fact get better.

    5. Re: People are creative by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      In this specific case, there is the problem of the chosen method being rather hard on the driver of the train and everyone trying to commute on it; so I'd hardly need deity-level powers to advocate trying to keep people off the tracks; but I'd be less enthusiastic about hunting them further.

    6. Re:People are creative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes... I'm selfish. What's your point?

    7. Re:People are creative by Ihlosi · · Score: 1
      One sad aspect of suicide, out of many, is that a suicide victim never gets to see for themselves that life does in fact get better.

      In the long run, everyone dies.

    8. Re:People are creative by SomeoneFromBelgium · · Score: 1

      On the one hand I keep thinking that if someone is determined to commit suicide, they'll find a way.

      That's the point of the article. The majority of suicide attempts are not determined. Rather they are a 'spur of the moment' 'I've had enough' type of knee jerk reaction to things that may or may not be serious. The idea is that when you can stop them at that moment, the person may come to his/her senses and either seek help (serious problem) or go on with his/her life (no serious problem).
      There is often no reason why this person could not live on happily.
      Mind you: I'm not talking about people that have serious psychological problems and are suicidal. That's another case altogether that is not fixed by a fence on a bridge.

    9. Re:People are creative by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 1

      That works both ways. If a loved one is in dire and apparently incurable anguish, mental or physical, then it would be selfish of me to ask that they hang on just for the sake of the ones they leave behind. A suicide rarely affects only the deceased, but I maintain that ultimately each person should be allowed to make that decision for themselves, rather than having it made for them. (Of course that shouldn't stop one from convincing the afflicted that there is hope, if there is indeed hope to be bad).

      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    10. Re: People are creative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'd hardly need deity-level powers to advocate trying to keep people off the tracks; but I'd be less enthusiastic about hunting them further.

      Truth. I have always thought that jumping in front of a train or truck is a dick move. Not only does one traumatize the driver (guilt? PTSD?), but one also potentially inconveniences many others (commuters).

      Even a firearm suicide is suspect, given the potentially traumatic mess. I'm torn about that one, because a shotgun to the brainstem is fairly hard to fuck up, and it's unreasonable to restrict effective methods for quick, painless suicide.

      I really think that nitrogen asphyxiation is the best option if available. Mask, tank, ventilated area (outdoors), and leave a note indicating that this is nontoxic nitrogen rather than carbon monoxide or something.

    11. Re: People are creative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Statistically speaking, it does not. If things are bad now, they'll get worse. And then they'll be even worse. Removing the means of suicide is just cruelty, allowing sufferers to keep on suffering. We accept that it's useless and cruel to subject the terminally ill to therapies that only prolong the suffering and we're on the way to accept euthanasia. Some private "assisted suicide" agencies allow euthanasia for the depressed. It's time to stop trying to cure the dying and move on.

    12. Re: People are creative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I really think that nitrogen asphyxiation is the best option if available. Mask, tank, ventilated area (outdoors), and leave a note indicating that this is nontoxic nitrogen rather than carbon monoxide or something.

      I don't think that word means what you think it means. If it can kill, it is pretty toxic

    13. Re: People are creative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you claim water is toxic because people can drown in it?

    14. Re:People are creative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As I get older, it is obvious to me is that life doesn't get better. I'm sure there are exceptions, but those are only exceptions and no amount of wishful thinking will change that fact.

    15. Re: People are creative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Something which makes up over 70% of the air we breathe cannot be called toxic. What would kill a person in this case is the lack of Oxygen.

    16. Re:People are creative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I attempted suicide once.

      I can tell you that in the state of mind I was in at the time, I was perfectly alright with doing something for myself for a change.

      Selfish? I suppose it's a matter of perspective.

    17. Re: People are creative by Ihlosi · · Score: 1
      I don't think that word means what you think it means. If it can kill, it is pretty toxic

      If you take all proteins out of your food, it's not the remaining nutritents that kills you, but the lack of protein.

    18. Re: People are creative by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      I'm not a subject matter expert; but I've read that drivers take it pretty hard. Apparently knowing that the physics of braking fast enough to avoid the person who jumped in front of your train just don't work out isn't the same as feeling that.

    19. Re: People are creative by red+crab · · Score: 1

      What is your statistical computation for this, that if things are bad now they'll get worse? If everybody started thinking like that, we would see failures occurring everywhere, more road accidents, more loan defaults, poorer grades in exams in general etc. In fact if you try to view things statistically, things tend to get better in future, followed by another phase of gloom. Its just like a waveform pattern, and as we grow older, we get better at handling failures, and avoiding big failures from happening at first place from our experience. You seem to be confusing suicide with euthanasia and that's a different subject altogether. Euthanasia is acure for terminal illness, not depression.

    20. Re:People are creative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem, and reason it causes so much pain for the left behind, is that usually when people kill themselves, it is the fault of the people left behind, and it is usually the same people who have abused, tortured or humiliated the deceased. That leaves behind a lot of guilt, because they absolutely know that they did this, even if the cognitive dissonance prevents them from admitting it.

    21. Re:People are creative by King_TJ · · Score: 1

      If nothing else, I'd certainly advocate for changing railroad overpasses/underpasses to make them less accessible to people, wherever possible. My reasoning is, anyone wanting to use "getting hit by a train" as a means of suicide is selfishly affecting the lives of others who shouldn't have had to get directly involved. Those trains aren't automated ... They're operated by engineers, who have to deal with the memories of running over a person while operating the locomotive and are often haunted with the "What if?" questions, if they could have stopped the train sooner or not approached a station so fast, or ?

    22. Re:People are creative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Creativity.

      A girl I knew in high school was driving with her two younger siblings when they were hit head on by someone who was trying to kill himself. They survived but were critically injured.

      The guy should have had easier access to a gun. Less collateral damage.

    23. Re: People are creative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If someone wants to suicide, let them. Who are you to interefere in their decision? Do you really think your mightier than god?

      You raise an interesting point. If you believe in god, then you should logically be against suicide, because that person is attempting to thwart god's desire to watch them suffer. Stop trying to take god's entertainment away!

    24. Re:People are creative by DocSavage64109 · · Score: 1

      Yes. I should (theoretically) continue to live in misery just so other people with happy lives won't temporarily feel bad.

    25. Re:People are creative by DocSavage64109 · · Score: 1

      I haven't committed suicide, and I have yet to see life getting any better.

    26. Re:People are creative by gweihir · · Score: 1

      "Suicide does not end the chances of life getting worse". Well yes, it rather does.
      While it's a nice sentiment, it's something to which I would reply: "Please let me be the judge of that".

      And that is the point. If you prevent people that want to kill themselves from doing so, you are removing their freedom and imprison them in this world. How that cannot be utterly evil is beyond me. But it is something religious fanatics like to do: Make them suffer as long as possible.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    27. Re:People are creative by gweihir · · Score: 1

      In fact, it often does not. But that is not the point. The point is that everybody can choose what to do with their lives, and preventing them from doing do is morally reprehensible.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    28. Re:People are creative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Suicide is just efficiency applied to cognitive existence.

    29. Re:People are creative by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

      That sort of shit really pisses me off. You would think even a suicidal dick would try not to inconvenience a bunch of commuters or others while performing their last act. I don't care if they kill themselves what I care about it that they tend to be so selfish in their choices of how/when/where to do it.

      --
      The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
    30. Re:People are creative by cwsumner · · Score: 1

      "Suicide does not end the chances of life getting worse". Well yes, it rather does. ...

      You don't actually know that. There is a small but non-zero chance that it -does- make things worse! I would not recommend taking the chance, if you end up seeing lots of flames and melted sulphur, there is no way back. At least no one showed up here afterwards...

    31. Re:People are creative by thisisauniqueid · · Score: 1

      The impact of a suicide goes far beyond delaying a few hundred people's commute by 3 hours. My friend is a nanny for a family whose daughter knew the kid who jumped in front of the train. This girl was biking past the tracks when the mother of the suicide victim showed up, and subsequently got to watch the reaction of shock and grief of the mother when confronted with the result of this horrific act.

      Suicide is always an incredibly selfish act. You think you're just ending your own pain and suffering, but instead you are bringing a lifetime of pain, suffering, shame, unanswered questions and grief to a lot of other people that care about you even if you think they don't.

    32. Re:People are creative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Life does not always get better.

  6. Let them go by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    You're not in their shoes; let them go.

  7. Survival of the fittest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let these inferior beings off thmselves early. Besides, the world is overpopulated anyway.

    I say if someone is considering suicide, encourage it.

    1. Re:Survival of the fittest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Goddamn you are a shithead.

  8. Idiotic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    A small coal barbecue oven in the bathroom(any small room will do), after the windows and door are taped off with duct-tape is still the easiest way to go.

  9. Treating symptoms by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Suicide is a symptom of mental illness. Taking away the possibility to commit suicide doesn't solve the underlying cause.

    As someone who suffers from medical depression I feel pretty strongly about this subject, at least as strongly as I can allow myself to feel.
    It may sound paradoxical but having the option to commit suicide was one of the things that helped me to finally seek treatment. Before I approached counseling I decided on method and location for a possible suicide. Had that option not been available to me I might not have been able to push through.
    Had there been a policy in place to put people with depression on a 24/7 watch-list to prevent suicide the I would have probably gone for the suicide option first.

    When the subject of suicide comes up I often see people claiming that suicide is the "easy" way out. What they don't seem to realize is that more importantly it is a way out.
    Some people support assisted suicide for non-treatable painful diseases. Typically autoimmune disorders or certain forms of cancer where the body attacks itself. They have seen how much victims of those diseases have to suffer.
    It is much harder to see how much you suffer when the mind attacks itself. People think that therapy cures those problems. It doesn't. Bipolar disorder, schizophrenia and depression are permanent. You can only learn how to endure it or acquire the discipline to keep it back.
    To me the depression is much like one would expect from alcoholism. I function, but I can not allow myself to think freely. I have to keep my mind busy in complex projects and not let it wander off. Some relatives seem to have a hard time understanding that I will never want to talk nostalgia with them, ever.
    Preventing suicide kind of lacks relevance since the person my mind was before died with the depression anyway.

    Taking away to option of suicide doesn't solve anything of that. It only removes the inconvenience of having to deal with a body.

    1. Re:Treating symptoms by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Suicide is a symptom of mental illness.

      Really ? Moron.

      How much "mental illness" is involved in someone living in constant pain, which cannot be removed by any kind of medication, who's request it is to end that pain ?

      And how much "mental illness" is involved when someone, who has been told that his illness will progress in a way which will involve months of such pain and/or turn him into a vegetable or being prognosed with dementia, requests to forgo that future -- for him as well as the ones who care for him (literal as well as figurativily) ?

      And how much "mental illness" is involved in a kid being bullied every day, who than, mostly after having endured years of it, decides to take his life because he does not see any other solution (the world around him is willingly deaf to his troubles) ?

      Yes, I know. That above suicide would certainly be preventable. But we're talking about your "mental illness" here, not the willfull stupidity of other people.

      "Please start brains before engaging mouth"

      I myself hope to, in the future, have the right to choose my own moment of dying in pretty much the same way as I'm expected to choose the moment of dying for a pet that I own -- you do not let them suffer needlessly (its even a social no-no). Yet on the other hand we cannot seem to think about even more beloved family members in the same way, and allow them to decide for themselves. Go figure.

    2. Re:Treating symptoms by Jamu · · Score: 1

      He only said that suicide is a symptom of mental illness. He did not say that suicide was a symptom of other conditions and circumstances.

      --
      Who ordered that?
    3. Re:Treating symptoms by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He only said that suicide is a symptom of mental illness.

      (GP here) Yes, he did. Not an "can be" or "is often" in sight. He set up a "cow" -> "animal" relation. And no, that does not take away the possibility that a "cow" is also a member of the "mammals" group.

      Bottom line: he presented it as a "suicide and mental illnes go hand-in-hand". And thats something I see being used too often as an excuse to take away a persons right to decide for himself: thoughts of suicide -> person must be mentally ill -> ill people cannot be trusted to decide for their own good -> we will decide for them whats good -> keep him/her alive, regardless.

      And by the way, a person I knew who had bipolar ultimatily threw himself off of his 9 story high balcony. He didn't want to continue living a life that resembled a rollercoster which he, nor anyone else (including his doctors) had control over, and had become to dislike immensly.

      He could possibly have died with some dignity if only "the powers that be" (several of them actually) would have allowed him to make such a choice and help him to pass over, lying on his own/a hospital bed. But no.

      So, the end-result was a "Ka-splet" on the grass below, with many onlookers gossiping about what had happened and why.

    4. Re:Treating symptoms by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Suicide is a symptom of mental illness. Taking away the possibility to commit suicide doesn't solve the underlying cause.

      It may not fix the cause, but it may give enough time to heal. Not everyone needs treatment -- some (most?) depression resolves itself over time, much like physical wounds heal on their own -- but even those who do also need time. This is about buying that time, no different than CPR. Sometimes just that time is enough. Sometimes more is required. Let's not discount a method that's effective just because it's not a silver bullet.

    5. Re:Treating symptoms by dpidcoe · · Score: 1

      It may not fix the cause, but it may give enough time to heal.

      Just curious, you're also against DNRs and various end of life things for terminal patients with painful diseases right? I don't care to argue about those one way or the other, but for the sake of understanding I'm kind of curious.

      Not everyone needs treatment -- some (most?) depression resolves itself over time, much like physical wounds heal on their own

      This is only true for the "oh I don't want to do anything today and my life sucks, I must be depressed" kinds of depression you see people post on facebook. Actual clinical depression is serious, and for the most part won't resolve itself. It's also a symptom of other mental illnesses such as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, borderline personality disorder, etc. Those illnesses also won't just resolve themselves over time.

      At one point I used to think a lot like you in that I assumed mental illness was one of those things where someone could just suck it up and get over it. The best explanation I heard that got me on the path to understanding it was something along the lines of "telling someone with clinical depression to "just get over it" is like telling someone with their Humerus snapped clean in half to lift something with that arm. It's physically impossible for them to do". Only in this case the damage is in software, so it's harder to observe from an outside point of view. Since we don't have direct access into the human brain to reprogram it and fix the problem, we have to rely on things such as medications and therapy in an attempt to get the brain to reprogram itself. This often gives the illusion that someone just "sucked it up and got over it" when that isn't really the case. To continue with the broken arm analogy, there might be a few people who can "tough it out", set the bone properly themselves, and then lay motionless for a few weeks so it can heal without a cast. Then there are the rest of the people who go to the doctor, get it x-rayed, set, and put in a cast. Then there are the people who tried to just "tough it out and get over it" who walked around with their arm dangling by the skin and lived a painful last few weeks until infection killed them.

    6. Re:Treating symptoms by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Just curious, you're also against DNRs and various end of life things for terminal patients with painful diseases right? I don't care to argue about those one way or the other, but for the sake of understanding I'm kind of curious.

      Absolutely not. I think people should have the right to suicide, or "death with dignity," or whatever anyone wants to call it to make it palatable. They're separate and distinct issues.

      At one point I used to think a lot like you in that I assumed mental illness was one of those things where someone could just suck it up and get over it.

      No, that's not what I'm saying either. Some mental illness is worse than others. Most depression resolves itself -- we know this. That is not at all to discount or equate those cases with other, more serious cases of either depression or any other illness. Mental illness is a *huge* problem in our country that doesn't get nearly enough attention. I come from a family of psychotherapists, and I've witnessed the shift from state-run facilities to privately-run prisons as the treatment of choice. Which is not to say that state-run facilities were great to begin with, but that's no reason to run in the wrong direction.

      And that's my point here. People are quick to say "that won't solve every problem," and they're right. And they're also right that death should be an option in some cases -- arguably every. But reducing impulsive suicide is still justifiable and worthwhile.

    7. Re:Treating symptoms by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Suicide is a symptom of mental illness. Taking away the possibility to commit suicide doesn't solve the underlying cause.

      And you are wrong here. Sure, some mental illnesses can cause suicide, but you have the implication all wrong. It is quite possible to commit suicide without any mental illness at all. But that wrong implication is just the first step in a despicable and repulsive scheme to remove the freedom to kill yourself from people: Classify the all as "mentally ill", that "do not know what they are doing", and you can nicely decide what is best for them. That is on the same moral level as classifying homosexuality as mental illness, or atheism. Both things have been done.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    8. Re:Treating symptoms by dpidcoe · · Score: 1

      Most depression resolves itself -- we know this

      You're going to have to define both depression and what you mean by resolving itself if you want me to agree on that one. Otherwise I'm going to maintain that an actual diagnosed as a serious problem by a medical professional kind of depression isn't going to resolve itself without specific actions on the part of the individual and/or said professional to resolve it. I'll grant you that actions on the part of the individual might come naturally to them in the same way that one naturally favors a sprained foot, but this stuff doesn't just magically go away (unless we're including depression caused by some specific event, which is why you'll need to define the scope for this discussion to be useful).

      People are quick to say "that won't solve every problem," and they're right.

      I'm not saying it won't solve every problem, I'm saying it won't solve the vast majority of actual problems involving real depression/bipolar/BPD/schizophrenia/etc.

      But reducing impulsive suicide is still justifiable and worthwhile.

      But what specific actions are justifiable at what cost? I've often seen people justify things with "if it saves just one life it's worth it", but by that logic dogs and backyard swimming pools should be illegal.

    9. Re:Treating symptoms by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a difference between putting people on a watch list and taking their shoelaces away (intrusive), and putting high railings on bridges (passive).

      "Impulse suicide" is a thing. I have no idea how big a thing, but one post upthread suggests as many as 25% of people contemplate it at one time or another. It's reasonable to suppose that if the means are easily to hand, more of those people will do it. If it requires more work, they have more time to rethink.

    10. Re:Treating symptoms by Slashdot+Parent · · Score: 1

      FYI, this article wasn't about removing the means to commit suicide from people like yourself. Since you suffer from long-term medical depression, should you make the long-run decision to take your own life, you would have sufficient time to plan your suicide. Hopefully you would not make such a decision and I genuinely wish you the best of luck in your treatment/coping--I'm just saying that this isn't aimed at people in your condition.

      Instead, this method of removing easy access to suicide means is directed at people who ordinarily are not depressed or suicidal, but are temporarily so due to having suffered a trauma (or several traumas). The suicidal impulse may last only a few hours, and the person is unlikely to be thinking clearly at that time. So the idea is that if you can keep them alive until the suicidal impulse has passed, you will have saved that person's life.

      So I think that this is really cool research, even if it doesn't pertain to people in a similar position as yourself. And I again wish you the best of luck.

      --
      They don't grade fathers, but if your daughter's a stripper, you fucked up. --Chris Rock
  10. Yeah right, take the guns away and ... by Ihlosi · · Score: 2
    ... people will start throwing themselves in front of trains. Which traumatizes train drivers and at least inconveniences everyone else on the train.

    Suicide is a cultural problem, not one of availability (or unavailability) of certain means. The suicide rate of, say, the US and Germany is pretty much the same, despite guns being much more accessible in the former than the latter. However, the train network is much more developed in the latter.

    People should, however, be educated about really shitty ways of killing yourself, like overdosing on acetaminophen and the like.

    1. Re:Yeah right, take the guns away and ... by swamp_ig · · Score: 2

      People should, however, be educated about really shitty ways of killing yourself, like overdosing on acetaminophen and the like.

      That's a way I'd personally prefer to avoid.

      Maybe (not that it would ever happen) there could be a govt sanctioned 'suicide wait list' where you sign on and after three months of counselling and intervention if you're not taken yourself off it, it'd get done painlessly and privately.

      At least that would curb the public messes. Maybe...

    2. Re:Yeah right, take the guns away and ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More healthy organs salvaged for transplants too.

    3. Re:Yeah right, take the guns away and ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... people will start throwing themselves in front of trains. Which traumatizes train drivers and at least inconveniences everyone else on the train.

      Suicide is a cultural problem, not one of availability (or unavailability) of certain means. The suicide rate of, say, the US and Germany is pretty much the same, despite guns being much more accessible in the former than the latter. However, the train network is much more developed in the latter.

      People should, however, be educated about really shitty ways of killing yourself, like overdosing on acetaminophen and the like.

      It isn't easy to get killed by a train in germany. And many survive the contact with the train (if your train is delayed by 15min (s)he survived, 1h+ and they had to call in the state attorney and it was successful). People usually try to suicide near towns where the system is shut down till railway police extracts them from the tracks. People are usually spotted fast and no one dies. Most of the times people on the tracks are drunk youths, which is pretty annoying nowadays. At least some manage to get electrocuted before interrupting service.

    4. Re:Yeah right, take the guns away and ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... people will start throwing themselves in front of trains. Which traumatizes train drivers and at least inconveniences everyone else on the train.

      Which is why we should recruit train drivers among serial killers.

    5. Re:Yeah right, take the guns away and ... by dpidcoe · · Score: 1

      Maybe (not that it would ever happen) there could be a govt sanctioned 'suicide wait list' where you sign on and after three months of counselling and intervention if you're not taken yourself off it, it'd get done painlessly and privately.

      At least that would curb the public messes. Maybe...

      Interesting idea. Though I think a lot would hinge on how well the counseling and intervention worked.

  11. More gun grabbing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... can't have the population of a country able to defend itself against a tyrannous government, can we! And it's not as if the entire media is run by the same worthless parasites who run the government, is it...

    Google 'Democide'...

  12. Barking up the wrong tree? by jandersen · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Trying to address the issue of suicide by taking away the means of killing yourself is probably entirely the wrong way to go about it. People who are serious about suicide will always find a way, for starters, and unless something substantial is done to address the mental suffering that drives a person to suicide, all you achieve is to prolong the suffering. It is the kind of boneheaded, incompetent idiocy that you get from politicians, when their only goal is to get re-elected.

    I think a much better approach would be

    1) Give people the right to suicide and the help to do so safely, if that is the right word. This will show people who are suicidal, that you respect them, something is all too often not the case. I think respect is crucial, because if you see suicide as the only way out, you don't want to seek help if you fear that this way out will be taken away; so you have to know that you can go ahead, if you really want to.

    2) Make that right dependent on them having been through good quality advice and assessment. Many people only want kill themselves because they can see no other way - they can often be helped to find a better way out.

    There is still too much religiously motivated prudishness towards death - life does not belong to some 'God', it belongs to the individual and it is ultimately the responsibility of the individual what they want to do. It is IMO deeply unethical to force life on somebody who really doesn't want it.

    1. Re:Barking up the wrong tree? by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 1

      The article asserts that having "good" methods of suicide (including a viable assisted-suicide scheme such as you describe) isn't going to make a difference in these spur-of-the-moment cases, where people apparently tend to pick whatever method of suicide lies close to hand rather than stop and think about what the most effective method would be. The idea is that if you make people stop and think, they'll think better of it. I'm all in favour of an assisted suicide scheme, but there appears to be merit in the idea of removing at least some ready means of suicide in order to allow desperate people to come to their senses.

      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    2. Re:Barking up the wrong tree? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Trying to address the issue of suicide by taking away the means of killing yourself is probably entirely the wrong way to go about it.

      This isn't about making the mentally ill feel better, it is about making the people around them feel better.

    3. Re:Barking up the wrong tree? by Greyfox · · Score: 3, Insightful
      A lot of these seem to be impulsive in nature. Depression is a cyclical thing, and eliminating an opportunity from presenting itself could mean the difference between someone dying and their outlook brightening enough for them to realize they have other options. I spent the weekend worrying about a skydiving friend who had to go jail yesterday. If he'd opted to pound in, no one could have stopped him. I wasn't about to tell him to spend the weekend not skydiving, though. I did make sure to talk to him when he needed it, letting him know that the sky and all his friends would still be here when he got out. I think that could have made the difference between the world closing up on him. He was much more of a loner a year ago and the outcome might have been different if he'd been in this position then.

      There's a pretty decent support network over at the dropzone. Good folk there. A lot of them know their way around the prison system. Society tends to look down on people with criminal records, but I've trusted my life to a lot of those guys and am going to do it again without hesitation. There's a lot broken with our society, but we should fix what we can.

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    4. Re:Barking up the wrong tree? by javilon · · Score: 1

      Please mod parent up. Your life is yours and only yours. You should be entitled to end it. People around you may suffer or you may be alienated enough that nobody would care much, but that, again is your decision. In my country the suicide rate goes way up on people over 80. They have had enough and want to end their lifes with some dignity and spare themselves all of the suffering of terminal illneses and isolation depending on a health system that only sees them as a number.

      What is wrong with that? only the idea that your life belongs to God and you should accept whatever level of suffering life brings to you just so you can be "saved" and go to "Paradise". All this suffering caused to people that positively knows there is going to be more negative than positive during the rest of their lifes should be enough to understand the cruelty of religion.

      People should watch: "The Ballad of Narayama" from Akira Kurosawa.

      --


      When his defense asked, "Which computer has Jon Johansen trespassed upon?" the answer was: "His own."
    5. Re:Barking up the wrong tree? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree people should be allowed to end their life if they so choose. But the decision should be one made with some thought put into it. Preferably a discussion with a priest, doctor, counselor or such should be required(you know, so they can offer another way out. Nobody should ever be forced to see a priest, so the person should be allowed to choose themselves to whom to speak to), and some waiting period. After that if the decision is still "yes, I've had enough" the person should be given some painless and 100% sure way to do it.

      (also, priest that would just say "if you kill yourself you'll go to hell" should not be included on the list of accepted persons to talk to)

    6. Re:Barking up the wrong tree? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's about preventing a slave nation from culling its own flock. Need to keep productive for the elite among society, for fear their lifestyle may suffer just a little bit.

    7. Re:Barking up the wrong tree? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd like to address one point you made, perhaps one of the smaller ones but an interesting one nevertheless. You assert "life does not belong to some God" and automatically assume that it belongs to the individual. How is it a fact rather than your personal philosophical position? What if your life belongs to your parents who conceived you? What if it belongs jointly to you and your spouse if you promised to never leave them? What if it belongs to the community that you're part of, or to the nation, or to a god, or to your species, or to the slave master, or to a gene that is trying to propagate itself through you? Granted - you may be making the decision, but that does not mean is not the same things as saying who your life belongs to (compare: you can make the decision to kill other people but their life certainly does not belong to you). What I mean to say is that an opinion does not necessarily have to be based on traditional religion to be a faith position...

    8. Re:Barking up the wrong tree? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A lot of these seem to be impulsive in nature.

      It's much darker than that. Depressed people have trouble doing anything, including making plans to kill themselves. This is a known problem among these semi-quacks with treatment: you have to be careful with drugs whose effects goes through a phase where the patient's will to act is restored, but their perception of the misery of their life hasn't yet been clouded over with indifference, otherwise the drugs could facilitate the suicide causing ethical hand-wringing for the doctor.

    9. Re:Barking up the wrong tree? by jandersen · · Score: 1

      You assert "life does not belong to some God" and automatically assume that it belongs to the individual. How is it a fact rather than your personal philosophical position?

      Did I say it was a fact? However, I think it follows logically from the idea of the right to self-determination, which I think is a very reasonable idea, all considered. Throughout life - and if you believe in an afterlife, perhaps even after death - we are judged on our actions, we are assumed to be responsible for our own actions. But if you have to bear the responsibility for your choices and actions, then you must have the right to make the choices. There is no natural reason for why the right to decide whether to live or not should be denied the individual, so you must have the right to make that choice as well. To me this is obvious.

      What if your life belongs to your parents who conceived you?

      How can you argue for that position? It is the role of parents to bring up their children to be able to make their own decisions, but they don't own their child - they are custodians, and once the child mature enough to make informed decisions, that's is what they should do. Good parents will encourage this, and will offer advice and help when the child wants it.

      What if it belongs jointly to you and your spouse if you promised to never leave them?

      If you have made that promise, then you have made the decision to give away some of your freedom, and the promise may influence how you make decisions in the future. I would hope so - otherwise you can't function as part of any relationship.

      What if it belongs to the community that you're part of, or to the nation, or to a god, or to your species, or to the slave master, or to a gene that is trying to propagate itself through you?

      Well, are they there to take the responsibility for what I do? No, but I am, so the decisions about my life are mine to make.

      What I mean to say is that an opinion does not necessarily have to be based on traditional religion to be a faith position.

      Faith? What is faith in this context, other than religious faith? All anybody needs, really, is to decide what they think is fundamentally true - the axioms, the basic assumptions. If you go to the extreme, you can shave it down to very little - something like a belief in the validity of logic and the assumption that if you can observe something repeatedly, then it is likely to be real. There is no need to assume the existence of a god or anything supernatural, not even in order to establish moral values; they follow directly from simple considerations over what makes a social group work, and what is necessary in order to succesfully bring up children.

  13. Crayons and safety scissors for everyone! by sjames · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I understand the motivation, but there are simply far too many ways to die if you want to. Even if we nerf the whole world and baby proof everything, we won't stop an adult or teen that wants to die from doing so. But we will make the world a worse place to live.

    There is a significant chance that we will just force people to choose a horrific way to die or (perhaps worse) a way that is as likely to leave them in a horrific but not dead state as it is to kill them.

    Besides, how will we cook without knives?

    1. Re:Crayons and safety scissors for everyone! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even if we ... baby proof everything ....

      Besides, how will we cook without knives?

      Baby food puree?

    2. Re:Crayons and safety scissors for everyone! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anything that can be cut can be hammered.

    3. Re:Crayons and safety scissors for everyone! by houghi · · Score: 1

      As I read it, it is not about babyproofing. It is about prevention. You will not completely make it nul and void. You make it possible for people who are at their wits end to ask for help instead of doing an irreversable deed.

      I (and probably you) will never be in that situation.You could compare it between yelling jump or yelling don't jump.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    4. Re:Crayons and safety scissors for everyone! by martas · · Score: 1

      Yeah, putting a net under a bridge is just a few steps away from taking away all kitchen knives and "nerfing the whole world", right? If I didn't know any better, I'd think you were doing a caricature of bad slippery slope arguments. And apparently we aren't even reading summaries anymore, because if you had, there's no possible way you could have missed the part about how a significant portion of suicides are highly impulsive. Or the fact that all speculation aside, there is actual empirical evidence that "reducing the availability of highly lethal and commonly used suicide methods has been associated with declines in suicide rates of as much as 30%–50% in other countries".

    5. Re:Crayons and safety scissors for everyone! by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      The perfect is the enemy of the good.

    6. Re:Crayons and safety scissors for everyone! by sjames · · Score: 1

      In Japan, the hand can be used like a knife. But this doesn't work on a tomato.

    7. Re:Crayons and safety scissors for everyone! by sjames · · Score: 1

      From TFA:

      Instead of treating individual risk, means restriction entails modifying the environment by removing the means by which people usually die by suicide

      So they really are talking about nerfing the world rather than making sure counselling is readily available.

    8. Re:Crayons and safety scissors for everyone! by sjames · · Score: 1

      Put a net under the bridge and they'll just run out in front of a bus or pull a knife on a cop instead. It simply isn't possible to eliminate even the most impulsive forms of death.

      For it to have even a hint of effectiveness, they would actually have to nerf the world. If they're not going to do that, then they will have no effect at all.

  14. Prospects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Becoming a non-functional remnant of a biological machine? That's not funny. I prefer to function oen way or another while possible.
    Yes, life sucks.
    Saying that, there might be valid reasons for a suicide when there is no way out. E.g. a criminal is finally cornered by police and faces a life in jail. Or is hunted by some rogue military that will torture and kill him. Or finds out that is terminally ill, or with a neurodegenerative disease (ALS, Alzheimer etc.). It is better to end your life than live through that - sometimes also to make it easier for others around you.

  15. Or we could help people so that they dont try. by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 5, Interesting

    it seems to me that making treatment free (it's expensive!) and encouraging people to get help rather than shaming them for feeling badly would be a better way to go.

    society doesn't want spend money to help the mentally ill which ironically bites them in the ass because about 1/3 of the homeless have a form of (untreated) mental illnesses which is why they are homeless. it costs more to have social programs for the homeless than it does to actually help them or even give them homes! i'm sure it would cost much less if we had free treatment to prevent them from becoming homeless in the first place.

    wake up, society!

    --
    Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
    1. Re:Or we could help people so that they dont try. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The idea that things are not alright because we're not trying hard enough to make them right leads to the idea that people are somehow at fault for these problems and deserve what they get, and not just on an individual level: We don't get to live in a nicer society because we don't solve homelessness. We are bad people because we don't prevent suicides. But actually it is impossible to make everything right. There are illnesses that can't be cured. There are always going to be people on the fringes of whatever bell curve you're looking at. We don't make the rules, we just play by them. A society in which everybody is "kept between the guard rails" is a dystopian nightmare not because we wouldn't all love to live happily, but because it requires so much force to uphold it when it always tries to revert to its naturally random, imperfect state. A good society allows for the exception to the rule, for the tragedy that could only be avoided by a bigger tragedy. Of course you should treat people well, try to help people who've fallen on hard times, and treat mental illnesses and not shame people for having them, but in the end there are always going to be homeless people and people who commit suicide, and we're not bad people because we "allow it".

    2. Re:Or we could help people so that they dont try. by monkeyxpress · · Score: 1

      It's because they have no deemed economic value. Until you have been made unemployed you really can not understand how brutally our system is geared towards assessing a human being's total value solely on their economic utility. I think in the end we will look back on this time and see this pervasive thinking as truly barbaric, and generally only suitable for sociopaths and narcissists.

    3. Re:Or we could help people so that they dont try. by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 1

      It's because they have no deemed economic value.

      it's ironic because there is a disproportionate amount of intelligent and successful CEOs with mental illnesses (besides socio/psychopathy) that they have managed to get under control.

      Until you have been made unemployed you really can not understand how brutally our system is geared towards assessing a human being's total value solely on their economic utility.

      this is something i know quite well. If anyone needs a C++ programmer, i'm available for hire.

      --
      Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
    4. Re:Or we could help people so that they dont try. by martas · · Score: 1

      So, we can't possibly do both, right? Is has to be either/or? If we install a few fences around suicide hotspots to reduce suicides by double-digit percentages, then by necessity we can't possibly do anything else to address mental illness?

    5. Re:Or we could help people so that they dont try. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed. Yet someone may not necessarily be mentally ill when they snap. Isn't there a major major issue when on TV we see adds for glorified happy pills? That only covers the issues!
      I'm stoned so I don't care that I have no job tomorrow, doesn't do anything to address the root of the issues:
      The US economy, the us Gov. needs a reboot.
      There is an enormous problem if small percentage of any countries people have most of the wealth, or rescources.
      The US at any rate will not admit it's economy does not work. "Free Market" is load of bullshit and no one sane buys it. Why is it a fucking privildge to have housing and food?
      Why is it considered a fucking priviledge to have insurance for when something goes wrong?
      That's a system and a group of people that needs a reboot and reality check as sooner or later they ass will have a problem. Maybie they accidently gut them selves, ages catches up, or what not. They'll be the first on TV talking about how medical needs work.

    6. Re:Or we could help people so that they dont try. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is not just that treatment is expensive, but that for a large minority (~20% of any given diagnosis is a good first-order estimate from the studies I've seen) it doesn't work (and that's after going through the years-long wringer of trying an assortment of cocktails; the number for whom the first prescription doesn't work is closer to 70%), and very few resources are actually aimed at improving the efficacy of mental health treatment. There have been zero major breakthroughs in efficacy for treating major depressive disorder in the past 50 years or so. SSRIs, SNRIs, and NDRIs are safer and have much more tolerable side effect profiles than MAOIs or tricyclic antidepressants, but they don't actually work much better at the core function of treating depression. This is reflective of a broader problem with modern drug development: taking a risk on a new mechanism of action is risky and expensive, so companies funnel their R&D dollars into tweaking pharmacokinetics and receptor selectivities instead. You can see similar trajectories with statins and beta blockers. On the psychotherapy side of things, cognitive-behavioural therapy is more efficient than other forms of talk therapy, but its success rates and effect sizes are not appreciably higher (also, psychotherapy in general has a massive problem with biased and otherwise crappy studies, even more so than drug trials).

  16. One hell of a strawman..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ....even bigger than the one they set on fire in Blackrock every year. Seriously, can't libs come up with any argument that isn't
    A) ad hominem attack
    B) strawman
    or
    C) some other hysterical appeal to emotion?

    I have yet to see it.

  17. Cost of making the entire world 'safe'? by burtosis · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I can only imagine the costs of changing every last bridge, high area, train track, city sidewalk, etc. into hampster style fenced off tunnels to be, at a minimum, in the hundreds of billions of US dollars (world costs in the tens of trillions) while leaving hundreds of millions of homes in the US alone still chock full of methods to commit suicide anyway. Not to mention natural areas - are we going to fence off every cliff within a few miles of a homestead too?
    Here's a thought that's way out there; let's spend those billions on research and development of new medication and treatments instead - that would likely have a far bigger impact. Sadly it's just poorly thought through emotional click bait instead of a sane approach to solving a serious problem. It's as if the rationality of humans is as well evolved as our lower spines.

    1. Re:Cost of making the entire world 'safe'? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No need to put fences on every cliff. Just surgically cut through everyone's spinal cord and keep them hooked up to feeding tubes and a ventilator. Watch them try to blink themselves to death.

    2. Re:Cost of making the entire world 'safe'? by martas · · Score: 1

      I must have missed the part where anyone in the article (or in the entire history of mankind, for that matter) suggested that we should try to change "every last bridge, high area, train track, city sidewalk, etc. into 'hampster' style fenced off tunnels". Could you point where that proposal was made? I feel so silly, here I was thinking that they were just proposing trying to address a few of the easiest and most common ways people commit suicide. But no, I suppose when they put a fence on the sides of a bridge just down the street from the campus of one of the most stressful universities in the country, that was just the first step to locking us all into hamster tubes.

    3. Re:Cost of making the entire world 'safe'? by burtosis · · Score: 1

      I must have missed the part where anyone in the article (or in the entire history of mankind, for that matter) suggested that we should try to change "every last bridge, high area, train track, city sidewalk, etc. into 'hampster' style fenced off tunnels". Could you point where that proposal was made? I feel so silly, here I was thinking that they were just proposing trying to address a few of the easiest and most common ways people commit suicide. But no, I suppose when they put a fence on the sides of a bridge just down the street from the campus of one of the most stressful universities in the country, that was just the first step to locking us all into hamster tubes.

      Now I know no one reads the article and it is behind a paywall but FTFA:

      Instead of treating individual risk, means restriction entails modifying the environment by removing the means by which people usually die by suicide. The world cannot be made suicide-proof, of course. But, these researchers argue, if the walkway over a bridge is fenced off, a struggling college freshman cannot throw herself over the side. If parents leave guns in a locked safe, a teenage son cannot shoot himself if he suddenly decides life is hopeless.

      they are talking about fencing off bridges - the logical conclusion is to cage it in completely as is common with walkways over freeways in many areas already. The problem is the popular areas get replaced by a new popular area once fenced off. There are an astounding amount of areas that need to be 'made safe'. The cost of such a project vs. the return is nowhere near the scant money we actually spend on research and development which is where the real future prospects for cures and successful treatments actually are. Guns are a similar slippery slope. It's always good to lock guns up but you never really know who will snap. The same is true for people driving cars, they are at least as dangerous as a gun. There is even a term for people who get aroused from car accidents - where does this madness end besides doing the research?

    4. Re:Cost of making the entire world 'safe'? by rock_climbing_guy · · Score: 1
      You might be joking about the cliffs, but there was a bit SNAFU in Hawaii several years ago. As I like climbing, I'm glad it happened after I moved away from that state.

      A young teenage was critically injured when a climber kicked a rock down from a cliff onto her while she was on a climbing tour with the YMCA. (As an aside, this likely would have been prevented had the YMCA put a helmet on her) In response, the state declared that the cliff was closed to public access, put up signs declaring it off-limits, and actually sent out officers to summon violators to court to be punished.

      So you may jest, but denying public access to a cliff is not without precedent.

      --
      Wh47 d1d j00 541, 31337 15n't t3h r0xor5 ne m0r3???
    5. Re:Cost of making the entire world 'safe'? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is not an either/or solution, and nobody credible is arguing that we need to fence off every bridge in America, which would make little impact since guns play a considerably larger role anyways. The focus is on keeping people alive long enough to get them into treatment. Anti-depressants can help some patients, but they also take time to work, whether days or weeks (e.g. Prozac) and they require someone to seek help first.

      This being America, in several states we have laws that prevent doctors from asking people whether they have guns in their house. Repeal those laws or add exceptions in the cause of what seems like suicidality. It costs absolutely nothing, save for the NRA's pride, and makes a difference.

    6. Re:Cost of making the entire world 'safe'? by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      So why not at least put a few posters with the phone number of a hot line and a call box? And maybe the address of a drop-in clinic? Offer some help?

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
  18. CDH by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cold dead hands.... yada yada.

  19. Straight jacket. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's called a straight jacket. Put everyone in one and nobody can commit suicide.
    What a stupid idea. At some point of time, everyone needs to take some responsibility for themselves.

  20. Misguided Sympathy by some+old+guy · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Some people commit suicide because their life sucks so much they don't want to deal with it any more. People should be afforded the dignity to make their own choices without pseudo-altruistic nannying.

    Others do so because they are defective. Selfish, attention-seeking losers who want everyone around them to be part of their pity party. Screw them. The gene pool is improved by their departure.

    Oh, by the way, I have personally witnessed a suicide. A roommate blew his brains out in our living room because his "pain management" doctors couldn't manage his pain (neurological disease). I regretted his situation, but I respected his choice. I wished him godspeed as he gurgled his last auto-reflexive breaths.

    --
    Scruting the inscrutable for over 50 years.
    1. Re:Misguided Sympathy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, by the way, I have personally witnessed a suicide. A roommate blew his brains out in our living room because his "pain management" doctors couldn't manage his pain (neurological disease). I regretted his situation, but I respected his choice. I wished him godspeed as he gurgled his last auto-reflexive breaths.

      Jesus christ. You'd think he could have done it in the bathtub or a public park so it wasn't a nightmare for you to clean up.

    2. Re:Misguided Sympathy by some+old+guy · · Score: 1

      The landlord's insurance paid for the cleanup. It really wasn't the most important consideration at the time. Meeting his parents afterwards kinda took precedence.

      --
      Scruting the inscrutable for over 50 years.
  21. If not suicide, then what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    once all avenues for taking one's own life are removed, yet no help is given to correct the underlying issues that drive a person to want to end their life, where will these people turn?

    I suspect you will see a drastic uptick in the number of homicides as people who cannot flee start lashing out at the world they feel is wronging them.

  22. Let me spell it out for you..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ....I wonder how many "suicides" are actually MURDERS. See the policy hazard now, you pro-suicide fuckwits?

  23. Sounds like another attempt at civil disarmament by krygny · · Score: 2

    Nobody ever seems to want to solve the problems they have. That's hard. It's easier to solve problems you wish you had.

    I locked up my gun today so little Jimmy couldn't blow his brains out. He'll be fine now.

    --
    Research shows that 67% of those who use the term "research shows", are just making shit up.
  24. You are allowed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    To be living on the streets unemployed or temporarily and precarious severely underpaid jobs that wont ever allow yourself to buy a decent home much less a cheap car or some other type of basic means of dignity in the modern industrialized less jobs for the common man and only "hich tech" slavery and tax evasion by our mighty corrupt corp and rented politician A to Z.

    Fuck "you".

    "You" are lucky "they" just commit suicide and don't take any of these sociopathic parasites that want to rule the world and economy with outdated capitalist and governance models with them as a last act of justice sacrificing oneself in the process.

  25. Seems by no-body · · Score: 2

    that those concerned about other's ending their life are projecting their own fear of dying. Who owns one's life? Some priest, politician or shrink or the one living it?

    1. Re:Seems by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Indeed. It is a typical problem of religious people: Fear of death so strong that that will believe ridiculous fairy-tales and force others to believe them as well, by any means necessary. And a prohibition against killing yourself features strongly in Christianity, for example. The funny thing is, the prohibition against killing others is never really taken seriously by these fanatics.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  26. Gun statistics in suicides by gnasher719 · · Score: 4, Informative

    An amazing statistic in the USA is that females have significantly more suicide attempts, while males have significantly more "successful" suicides. And that's due to the availability of guns, which provide an easy way to kill yourself with a high success rate.

    An anecdote from the Golden Gate Bridge: A man was spotted on the bridge in some rather agitated state, so the police was called, and the got him. It turned out he had decided to kill himself by jumping off the left side of the Golden Gate Bridge. (Un)fortunately he found himself on the right side. Now there is absolutely no difference between jumping from the left or the right side, but he had decided to kill himself by jumping from the left side. (Un)fortunately there were six lanes of traffic between the right and the left side, and he didn't dare running across the traffic for fear of getting killed, which was actually quite reasonable.

    A few years ago, when there was a statistically small number of suicides at Foxconn, the company put up suicide nets which would catch and save people jumping from the roof, and more likely prevent them from jumping in the first place (because these people wanted to die, not look like idiots caught in a net). That gave a course a lot of ammunition to the idiots among the Foxconn haters and Apple haters, but it actually worked. Take a simple way of killing yourself away, and suicide rates drop.

    It's long known that the majority of suicides are not done for any rational reason, but because of some mental disturbance. The slightest obstacle in the way of killing themselves can save them.

    1. Re:Gun statistics in suicides by moeinvt · · Score: 2

      ..."males have significantly more 'successful' suicides. And that's due to the availability of guns..."

      Your conclusion doesn't follow from the premise. The only thing it demonstrates is that people who use firearms in a suicide attempt are more successful than people who use other means. It's not evidence that the availability of guns is the causal factor in the attempt.

    2. Re:Gun statistics in suicides by stoploss · · Score: 1

      An anecdote from the Golden Gate Bridge: A man was spotted on the bridge in some rather agitated state, so the police was called, and the got him. It turned out he had decided to kill himself by jumping off the left side of the Golden Gate Bridge. (Un)fortunately he found himself on the right side.

      If true, this is some sort of inverse Darwin Award: failure to be removed from the gene pool, saved by sheer stupidity. A more intelligent person would have just turned 180 degrees and jumped off with their goal condition now satisfied.

    3. Re:Gun statistics in suicides by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Which side of a bidirectional roadway is the left side?

    4. Re:Gun statistics in suicides by Malizar · · Score: 2

      A large number of female suicide attempts are screams for attention, they don't actually want to kill themselves.

    5. Re:Gun statistics in suicides by Pat1978 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      No. Women use drugs more often, and those are much more often counted as accident. At school in Australia I had a dorm mate who committed suicide with a prescription opioid overdose. We all knew she was depressed. It was ruled accident, because unlike self inflicted death by gun which are always ruled suicide, drug overdose is treated the opposite way by Coroners. With overdose, absent affirmative proof of intent to commit suicide, it is ruled an accident. In short if there are gun cleaning materials out, or if a person is hunting, as is in the case with a tiny fraction of one percent of self inflicted gunshot, it WILL be ruled a suicide. In contrast unless there is a note or the family is volunteering the victim had severe depression, a prescription or illicit drug overdose is always an "accident". The fact is, within a given demographic, self caused "accidental deaths are higher among those without guns. Think Philip Seymor Hoffman who was clinically depressed, took a MASSIVE and clearly lethal dose, and was ruled an "accident."

    6. Re:Gun statistics in suicides by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The other side.

    7. Re:Gun statistics in suicides by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's long known that the majority of suicides are not done for any rational reason, but because of some mental disturbance. The slightest obstacle in the way of killing themselves can save them.

      As a formerly-suicidal person, fuck you, sir.

      It is like you are flogging these people into the grave, and when one of them almost makes it you pull them back so you can torture them more. seems like a familiar bully's tactic.

      Do you enjoy hurting small animals, too? They're so pathetic, aren't they? The weakest little cage can hold them because they're so small, and they try to scratch you but it doesn't really do anything.

    8. Re:Gun statistics in suicides by asylumx · · Score: 1

      It's not evidence that the availability of guns is the causal factor in the attempt.

      GP didn't say guns were a causal factor in the attempt. You did. He said they provide an easy way to kill yourself with a high success rate, which is a pretty obvious statement. He said nothing about cause at all.

    9. Re:Gun statistics in suicides by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People that are suicidal don't want to die. Dying is cruel and painful; the worst thing all of us will ever experience. Suicidal people want to be dead. They want to not exist anymore. That is entirely different from wanting to die.

      Take a simple way of killing yourself away, and suicide rates drop.

      The statistic changes, because the means and place of suicide changes. Out of sight out of mind.

    10. Re:Gun statistics in suicides by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Explains much about the world doesn't it? This phenomenon or something like it would make an excellent contender to unravel the Fermi Paradox.

    11. Re:Gun statistics in suicides by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      It's at least as easy for women to buy a gun. It's also at least as irrational to continue your life as to terminate it, though it's true there usually aren't solid arguments either way, which is why people generally do neither

    12. Re:Gun statistics in suicides by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Well, in the US you drive on the "right" side of the road, so the "left" side of the road would be the other side.

    13. Re:Gun statistics in suicides by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      A large number of female suicide attempts are screams for attention, they don't actually want to kill themselves.

      And the men who kill themselves wouldn't have rather lived if they could have gotten help with their problems?

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
  27. my experience by slfnflctd · · Score: 1

    If I had been able to obtain a gun a number of years ago when I hit rock bottom, I would no longer be here. I'm still not certain if that's a net positive yet (or even how to define such), but I can tell you that I'm deeply glad for all the great experiences I've had in the time since. I expect this approach will help some people. People like me.

  28. Seems by no-body · · Score: 1

    that those concerned about others ending their life are projecting their own fear of dying.
    Who owns one's life? The one living it or some politician, priest or shrink mindfucking about it and continuing trying to dominate others?

  29. The roots of suicide are buried in religion by brunes69 · · Score: 0, Troll

    The primal roots of suicide are buried in religion and thoughts of an after-life. The sooner people wake up to that fact and seek to correct it, the better.

    The whole notion of "something better than this" or "anything is better than this" assumes there is a "thing". There isn't. There is nothing. And nothing is not an "escape", it is nothing. Period.

    If people did not feel there was somewhere or something better to escape to, they would not be offing themselves.

    1. Re:The roots of suicide are buried in religion by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The primal roots of suicide are buried in religion and thoughts of an after-life. The sooner people wake up to that fact and seek to correct it, the better.

      Oddly enough, most religions do not predict a pleasant afterlife for suicides.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    2. Re:The roots of suicide are buried in religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cute. Ironically, your absolute, dogmatic certainty about this makes you sound like the very fundamentalists you're attempting to condemn.

    3. Re:The roots of suicide are buried in religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'm an atheist who has attempted suicide.

      I can't speak for everyone, only myself. I can tell you the promise of something better never crossed my mind. The suicidal person isn't planning a trip to Disney Land. They've simply reached the limit of what they can cope with, and want out. As for myself, I was happy with the notion of plunging into the Void.

    4. Re:The roots of suicide are buried in religion by brunes69 · · Score: 1

      You won't "plunge into the void". You need to alter your thinking.

      If you think you are an atheist and not scared of death, IMO you are not a real atheist because you still have some kind of notion of something after.

    5. Re:The roots of suicide are buried in religion by Ihlosi · · Score: 2
      If you think you are an atheist and not scared of death

      Why should you be scared of nonexistence? You already know what it feels like. Just try to remember the time before you were conceived. That's what it feels like to not exist.

      Not very scary, is it?

    6. Re:The roots of suicide are buried in religion by brunes69 · · Score: 2

      Doesn't matter, because the person committing suicide is thinking "I don't care what it is, it has to be better than this".

    7. Re:The roots of suicide are buried in religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oversimplified pontificating. I can tell you that my own regular thoughts of suicide are very much based around the idea of skipping to the end. I don't think I'm going anywhere afterwards, and that doesn't make me desperate to suck the marrow out of life. I have no faith but an awareness that in fact my life is not getting better. I would like that to stop. I would not be escaping anything.

      The thing that stops me is how it would affect the younger members of my family. Perhaps it always will.

      CAPTCHA: advice.

    8. Re:The roots of suicide are buried in religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People become unconscious on a regular basis. We call it "sleep", and most people aren't afraid of it. Does the possibility of never regaining consciousness scare you? Why?

    9. Re:The roots of suicide are buried in religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I don't follow your logic.

      How would you define nonexistence? Call it Void. Abyss. Whatever you like.

      Once we're beyond that, you have to ask yourself - why be afraid of nothing?

    10. Re:The roots of suicide are buried in religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The primal roots of suicide are buried in religion and thoughts of an after-life.

      Science seems to say otherwise (in fact, religion's moral objections and lower aggression levels temper the drive to stop the current circumstances that affect everybody):

      http://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/doi/abs/10.1176/appi.ajp.161.12.2303

    11. Re:The roots of suicide are buried in religion by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1
      You know, right, that suicide is a HUGE, HUGE SIN in Christianity? You'll burn in hell forever. Dante's Inferno included a section on all the famous suicides suffering and pleading for help.

      People don't commit suicide in hopes of a better afterlife. Where'd that idea even come from? Did you make it up in an uninformed attempt to smear religion? They commit suicide because they lose hope and don't think that their lives will ever get any better. The inconvenient truth is a lot of times, they're right. It's called depressive realism, look it up.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    12. Re:The roots of suicide are buried in religion by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      Doesn't matter, because the person committing suicide is thinking "I don't care what it is, it has to be better than this".

      This statement is just as valid for an Atheist. If ceasing to exist is better than living, then you're ready to die.

      Note that your seriously suicidal Christian will be thinking "if I kill myself, the afterlife will be WORSE than simple nonexistance"....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    13. Re:The roots of suicide are buried in religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you think you are an atheist and not scared of death

      Why should you be scared of nonexistence? You already know what it feels like. Just try to remember the time before you were conceived. That's what it feels like to not exist.

      Not very scary, is it?

      Now do the same thing in front of a lunatic pointing a gun at you. It's probably a little harder to die in that situation, but if your method is sound it should work.

      I'm saddened by the general view in this thread that suicide is okay. We should all feel a sense of failure when some one decides that they don't have anything to live for. Even the very sick who make a "noble" gesture and end their lives to avoid pain. We inspire others not by how we die, but how we live. People suffering horrible pain, whether mental or physical, have something to offer. We just lack the appreciation of that person to help.

    14. Re:The roots of suicide are buried in religion by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      What? No. You are talking out of your ass. It's about ending pain, plain and simple, whether that's physical or emotional.

      Besides, most religions threaten horrible punishment for suicide.

    15. Re:The roots of suicide are buried in religion by asylumx · · Score: 1

      I don't think this is remotely true. Most religions don't reflect kindly on suicides, and most people committing suicide aren't looking for "Anything better", they just want their pain to end. If what follows suicide is "nothing" then they will not feel pain anymore. They will feel nothing, which is preferable to someone in that kind of distress.

      Religions can be credited with a lot of bad things in society but I don't think this is one of them.

    16. Re:The roots of suicide are buried in religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's basically a bolt-on solution to suicide by the religions. That is, the type of thing you come up with after you are committed to a solution and now need to accommodate a scenario you neglected.

    17. Re:The roots of suicide are buried in religion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Condoning suicide and explaining that fear of death (unlike fear of dying) is irrational are not the same thing. When someone thinks that people commit suicide to get something (the afterlife) and not to lose something (the pain), how else would you clarify that not existing can look better than keeping on going?

    18. Re:The roots of suicide are buried in religion by sunsurfandsand · · Score: 1

      People suffering horrible pain, whether mental or physical, have something to offer.

      You are likely right that we stand to gain something from their continued suffering. The question is, do they stand to get something in return that is a fair bargain? When life's compensations are too little, and its costs too great, we are selfish and wrong to demand that another person go on living for our benefit.

  30. Utter nonsense. by TrentTheThief · · Score: 1

    They can no more remove the means for suicide than they can legislate a person's desire to live or what makes them horny.

    It's a complete waste of time and money to even attempt to banning the items a person could use to suicide.

    It's time for the fucking politicians to actually rectify a serious problem instead of dicking around with time wasting subjects and endless re-iterations of old laws to appear that they're actually working.

    1. Re:Utter nonsense. by nitehawk214 · · Score: 2

      legislate a person's desire to ... what makes them horny.

      No, but the republicans will try.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
  31. Not true by aepervius · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "People who are serious about suicide will always find a way"

    No You don't. At some point in my teenage life I came to that dark place. But since the easy method was removed from my reach, I did not go for other method. the moment *passed*. In fact suicide is not always associated with a mental illness. I see many poster here pretend that, but it is not. Suicide is a symptom that somebody feels is in a situation where living further is more painful than dying. It CAN be a symptom of mental illness but also simply a symptom of intense physical pain or a symptom of plain stupid teenage angst. And for the last group, removing the easy means can simply make the person force to have more time to think.And thus prevent suicide. And then post about it on slashdot 25 years later.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
  32. nonsensical by argStyopa · · Score: 1

    "The world cannot be made suicide-proof, of course. But, these researchers argue, if the walkway over a bridge is fenced off, a struggling college freshman cannot throw herself over the side. "

    So in short they ARE trying to suicide- proof the world. Good luck with that.

    Well, no, I take that back, since I can almost guarantee that they're going to use my ever increasing taxes to pay for stringing safety nets everywhere.

    --
    -Styopa
  33. You need a knife! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You need a knife, now, right now. You run to the kitchen drawer and open it and all there is are spoons. Spoons! Fucking thousands of spoons. Why? Why are there only spoons? You open another drawer, more spoons, every drawer spoons, why this, why right now this, even a fork would be useful.

    You need a knife. You escape to the supermarket, there should be a knife there, and there is, several in fact, but they're all plastic and useless. They're knives only in appearance, like knives for kindergartners. Why? You run around the store, helpless. You stop an employee on their track, ask, "I need a knife, where can I find one?" He says "follow me, I think I can help you, sir," and you follow him, right back to where the plastic knives were. Why?

    You need a knife, but why?

    You go back to the house, past the kitchen drawers with thousands of spoons, back to the living room, stand opposite to your patiently waiting nurse, and say, "you were right, knife control does work," and you stab yourself with a broken spoon.

    1. Re:You need a knife! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      All those thousands of spoons, when all you need is a knife? Sounds like a scenario someone could confuse for irony.

  34. Remove the reason for suicide, not the methods by Corwyn_123 · · Score: 1

    This whole article is a cop out, it's for lazy people trying to sweep the problems under the rug, so the true problems don't have to be corrected, or even identified, and no one needs to take any responsibility for any of it.

    Remove the reason for someone to want to commit suicide. Give them a reason to want to live, not through pharmacology.

    This is a societal problem, not an individual one, and as we progress, society gets more complicated. More pressures are placed on people to keep up, to cope, to do more. There are those that just can't cope, or do more, and therefore, aren't able to deal with the pressures.

    Until the root cause of the problem is addressed, the problem will continue, and blocking the exits will only slow the most determined down, if someone wants out, they're going to find a way.

    1. Re:Remove the reason for suicide, not the methods by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are close.

      You can't give someone a reason to want to live. That comes from within. What you can do is help someone cope with the issues that are making their own life unbearable.

    2. Re:Remove the reason for suicide, not the methods by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

      You are more likely to be successful at fencing off every bridge, banning every gun, and tearing down every tall building.

      But some people are suicidal even if they live what seems to you and I like a charmed and content life. if someone is suicidal because they broke up with a loved one or their puppy died, you can't simply take away that reason. Therapy is the solution for suicide (as much as people do not want to spend money on healthcare). Just like cancer, the only way to prevent suicide is early detection. If people learn the signs and urge the person to seek help it can be done.

      But not always.. some people are truly inconsolable. Changing all of society to "take away the reason" is only going to work for people that agree with us on what is a good society.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
  35. terrible tragedy by TheCarp · · Score: 1

    Its sad really. Sad that these people have so much pain and sad the grievous injuries some of the survivors will sustain.... sad all around. However, I just don't feel it is a valid reason to tell someone what they can and can't have at their own disposal.

    Its a nice thought and good intention, its just, not justified. I don't want to tell other people what they can and can't own, I don't want my government doing that, and want it to do less of it than it does. Hell, I would constitutionally remove the right to even enact such bans for the most part.

    I mean I totally understand we don't want people building bombs in the city and there needs to be some amount of sense and balance with intrinsically unsafe activities and populations,....but simple worry of self harm or potential malicous intent?

    Not valid reasons if liberty and pursuit of happiness are inalienable rights.

    If a person feels that death is his best path to persue happiness, I feel no right to stop him. To implore him to think on it, to hope that he changes his mind before he goes through with it, but, in the end.... its his life; his choice.

    --
    "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
  36. Stupid liberals! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now you are going to need get a mental health evaluation if you want to buy some rope!

  37. Gun control bullshit by moeinvt · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Nothing but more theory and anecdote.

    "You can reduce the rate of suicide in the United States ... if fewer people had guns in their homes ..."

    Total nonsense. The number of households with firearms has been on a multi-decade downward trend:

    http://www.slate.com/blogs/the...

    Meanwhile, the suicide rate per 100k people has been quite stable at 10-15 per 100k over the last 60 years:

    http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/...

    So where's the evidence that fewer gun-owning households means a lower suicide rate?
    The ONLY consistently documented relationship between firearms and suicide is this:

    "Some methods have a case fatality rate as low as 1 or 2 percent ... with a gun, it's closer to 85 or 90 percent."

    True and I'm sure that in their so-called "study", the 10-15% of people who survived a self-inflicted gunshot wound regret it and claim it was an impulsive act, but that's hardly "proof" that access to firearms was a causal factor in suicide attempts.

    This also raises the important question of how many people really want to die and how many are just desperate for attention. The "cry for help" suicide is a well known and documented fact. If you slice your wrists perpendicular to the length of the arm, you're either incompetent or you don't really want to commit suicide. Fire a 12 gauge shotgun in your mouth and there's zero doubt that you're genuinely trying to kill yourself.

    Note also that the USA is #30 worldwide in suicide rate, far behind many countries with strict gun control laws. Take Japan for example with a rate of 20.7/100k.

    This is just a bunch of leftist academics trying to further the gun control agenda without real evidence. Gun control groups like Michael Bloomberg's astroturf "Everytown" are actually pushing laws requiring that all firearms in private homes be locked up ... where they will be useless for defense. And imagine police getting search warrants and breaking down your door because someone saw a gun on your nightstand? Insanity..

    1. Re:Gun control bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If you look at the numbers objectively, you will realize that if we ban guns there will be fewer gun deaths. If we ban automobiles there will be fewer people dying on the nations roads. If you ban alcohol there will be fewer alcohol related deaths (there were fewer per-capita alcohol fatalities during prohibition even if you account for the deaths caused by the war on alcohol). How far do you want go to legislate everyone should have a long drawn out boring life. There is the trade off between freedom, and safety. The safest thing would be to keep everyone in a people zoo locked in cages where they can't harm themselves or others. Of coarse guns would not be allowed and housing would be free (the liberal weenies should love this). If you take the argument to it's logical conclusion, everyone born will eventually die. Does that mean that we should charge every mom and dad with child abuse for bringing a child into the world that they knew was defective and would eventually break. It seems that is what the media Is turning us into. No guns. No walking to school. No freedom. No life. Just infinite safety in the arms of a politically correct state media apparatus.

    2. Re:Gun control bullshit by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Fortunately, smarter people than me have already researched this far more thoroughly.

      http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/hi...

      I'm all for the 2nd Amendment, but I'm not going to use my bias to deny reality either.

    3. Re:Gun control bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are not saying that access to guns causes suicide attempts. They are saying that access to a firearm greatly increases the chances of a successful suicide attempt once someone decides to try to commit suicide.

      There is merit to that argument - BUT should it lead to gun control legislation? I don't think they quite made that argument successfully.

  38. !NewsForNerds. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hugh...You suck at picking stories to submit. Soulskill, you suck at filtering this crap. Where the fuck is the tech in this? You will try to say that the readership steers what you chose based on what type of stories gets the most comments. I say you're attracting the wrong kind of reader to the site by posting this kind of shit in the first place.

    Lets go through some of your recent posts, the firehose moderation I'd give, and the reason, shall we?

    • YouTube Video Of Racist Chant Results In Fraternity Closure - Troll: Incites racial baiting. No technology involved save youtube.
    • Free-Range Parents Found Responsible For "Unsubstantiated" Child Neglect - Troll: Incites "Think of the Children" debate. No technology involved. Period.
    • Anonymous Social App Raises Controversy on College Campuses - Neutral: Involves a form of technology, but feels like a bait
    • China's Arthur C. Clarke - Interesting: OK, Sci-Fi is a geek topic, and it's an interesting perspective on it taken from a different culture than where most comes from.
    • Facebook Rant in Florida Lands Man in Jail In Middle East - Troll: Incites hatred and disrespect towards other country's laws. Technology incidental to the story (come on...how many times to we have to be told "Be careful what you post in Social Media"? It's getting old. Fast.
    • To Foster Complex Societies, Tell People a God is Watching - Troll: Incites Religious Debate. No Tech or geek stuff, whatsoever.

    I could go on, but I think the point is made. This is my last participation in anything posted by Hugh as I will now be filtering his crap out of my feed. If you want Slashdot to continue down this shit-hole path, I can't stop you from commenting on his crap, but the higher the number of comments, the more shit stories will be in the feed.

  39. Suicide application form by Thraxy · · Score: 2

    How about we make suicide completely legal? Think about it. We make suicide legal, but you have to apply for it. Then you have to show up at the Department of Social Health and wait in line for 5 hours, and if that doesn't make you go "man this is ridiculous... I'll just go on living" maybe you'll actually get some real help.

    Anyway, you might be right. Lets put corks in tailpipes and ban metal cutlery. That'll show those damn commie suicidal bastards that they can't take away our freedom.

  40. Sounds like sandbagging to me by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

    Article title makes me think of a flood analogy: "World seeks to address rising sea levels with dikes, walls and dams."

    Since the psychologists are powerless to do anything about the underlying causes of suicidal behavior, now they attempt to make it harder to do? Good luck with that.

  41. Cause: Horrible American diet by Theovon · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I am not alone in the opinion that the horrible American diet does not only cause obesity. It also causes all manner of health problems, including mental ones. If people ate healthier foods and therefore got the nutrients their bodies need, and eliminated the excess simple carbs, pesticides, pollutants, and common inflammation-causing irritants, then people would feel a hell of a lot better. We already know that depression is linked with brain inflammation, which diet customization can ameliorate. Depression is also linked with poor diet because serotonin is stored in the gut lining, which is commonly eroded in people who eat a bad diet. That's why so many people say SSRI's don't work -- there's no serotonin to selectively reuptake inhibit.

    And of course, no MD would ever be smart enough to tell you to take 5HTP. That's the other problem. We're trained to think of doctors like they're priests. They're just technicians, many of whom just barely made the cut. And I wear to you, the first thing they do when you enter med school is excise the parts of your brain that contain any nutritional knowledge. When a gastroenterologist tells me he doesn't believe in food allergies, you know there's a problem. So, the one group of people we should be listening to for nutritional advice know absolutely nothing about it. In fact, it's a general incompetence among MDs (remember, most are just technicians specializing in narrow areas of medicine) that is the reason so many people are afraid of vaccines. Who's pushing the vaccines? The same people who tell you your chronic symptoms are all in your head. (Those chronic symptoms are probably nutrition-related, BTW.)

    A high school in the southeastern US switched their lunch program to all healthy foods. McDonalds out. Salads and generally good variety in. Behavioral problems went down, absenteeism went down, grades went up. No surprise there. (Incidentally, shifting high school hours slightly later in the day, to adapt to the teen sleep cycle, has some similar effects, so we can't say it's ALL nutrition. That's just one major factor. Imagine doing both!)

    Eat better.

  42. Screw You by p0p0 · · Score: 1

    "a teenage son cannot shoot himself if he suddenly decides life is hopeless"
    This really pisses me off. It's never a case of "Oh. I don't know what to do today. Guess I'll kill myself."
    There are signs. There are always signs. "They're hard to see." people say. "How was I supposed to know?"

    These researchers should worry more about identifying the causes and helping people with suicidal tendencies instead of trying to baby proof the world. Of course someone might feel regret mid-jump. You're not supposed to want to kill yourself. It isn't a natural state. A better public understanding of mental health would do worlds more than putting up a couple fences.

    1. Re:Screw You by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are signs. There are always signs. "They're hard to see." people say. "How was I supposed to know?"

      They say that because right up until the suicide, they're usually the ones pushing vindictive abuse towards the victim day in, day out.

      I know what it's like, because I've spent my entire life with my parents pushing and abusing me hoping I kill myself so I don't burden them with my existence.

      Every day it's the same. They say things like they want me to be a functioning member of society, but never offer any support or encouragement or practical advice, just belittling me and destroying my dignity any time I make any steps forward.

      Once I realised what the fuck was going on, I made a promise to myself to never kill myself, just so that they have to suffer the burden of my existence until one of us dies. I see the same fucking shit happening in a macro sense, where governments are using structural violence to force "undesirables" to kill themselves, by humiliating them for being poor, making them wait in lines or go to useless meetings where they are shamed for being unemployed. The end goal is clear, make society so unhospitable to anyone who doesn't march in line, that they kill themselves. The problem with this for the marchers, is that it also creates enormous waves of crime as people who have self preservation at mind choose crime over humiliation and suicide.

    2. Re:Screw You by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's more likely to happen - putting up some fences to deter suicide or a better public understanding of mental health?

      If you had a modest budget at your disposal how would it be better spent: funding lobbying for some fences or promoting a better understanding of mental health in the public? Which is more likely to actually save some lives?

      The perfect is the enemy of the good.

    3. Re:Screw You by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a lot of data that shows people make a rash decision - within 5 minutes of the first thought they commit.

      Didn't anyone on this website ever see the movie "it's a wonderful life"? George has a few minor things go slightly wrong. He's ready to jump within a few minutes of the movie starting. Once he get's a chance to think about it, the decision is a distant memory. He wasn't disturbed or depressed. This is more common than we're willing to admit.

  43. Corresponding data by retech · · Score: 1

    Corresponding data also shows a rise, almost identical in numbers to the prevented suicides, of severely depressed individuals who had to be heavily medicated. Those individuals eventually became pariahs and were conveniently not heard from again. Thus bolstering the apparent success rate of the initiative.

  44. Why isn't suicide legal? by blue+trane · · Score: 1

    Get it all out in the open. If someone wants to kill themselves, let them make it known. Then do-gooders like the person in this article can talk them out of it. If the person can't be convinced by any argument you can think of, let them proceed in a civilized, legal, controlled manner which allows them to abort the suicide procedure at any time.

    The measures described cause lots of collateral damage: what if I want to walk on the bridge for exercise, to see the scenery? Why should my freedom be restricted? If you gave the would-be bridge-jumper a legal, abortable, civilized option, they wouldn't need the bridge anyway.

  45. A little context and insight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I have attempted suicide. Twice.
    I'm healthy, educated, reasonably well-off. I work in tech, I'm good at what I do, and my friends tell me I should quit and be a comedian. No history of mental illness. But I had a relationship go bad in a very serious way, and the wrong genes, and the stress triggered clinical depression. That can happen. You'll find the best description of depression that I've found anywhere, here on mostly hilarious Hyperbole And A Half blog: http://hyperboleandahalf.blogspot.com.au/2013/05/depression-part-two.html.

    The state of despair is just that you don't particularily want to live any more. "Wanting to live" ceases to make any sense, and then all that's left is the shit you're dealing with, so saying to hell with it all and leaving, is as good a thing to do as any.

    And it's not some ongoing active determination to jump in front of a train, or shoot yourself, that no power will stop. Don't be an idiot.

    And it's not a cause or a right to die. Fuck you if you think that. Look at the graph and decide if that makes any sense at all:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suicide#Risk_factors
    Wanting to die is a medical problem, or is temporary. Stopping it from happening is the correct thing to do.
    If I hadn't messed up the first time, and panicked the second time (not wanting to live is not the same as wanting to risk being injured/disabled), I wouldn't be here. And my family would have suffered a horrible loss, my parents would have never recovered living the rest of their lives in emotional pain. If you've ever met anyone who has lost a child, it will hit home how badly and permanently it ruins lives. And my friends would have been affected too. I would have been out and away from my troubles, it's barely even about me; I would have damaged everyone around me.

    People with failed suicides are frequently ambivalent about it, I've learned. It's true of me. I have no new lease on life. With my health restored I don't have a death wish any more than anyone else. It has become a source of real interest, but my personal brush is not, strangely, a source of much emotion. If you can get over the issue and get on with things, you do. And that's the most common case. The dramatic stories are the outliers, so don't put any stock in individual anecdotes. That's true of most things of course.

    You'll note I haven't said a thing about the TFA. There's a reason for that, and the reason is this:
    You will never find anything intelligent or worthwhile in a HughPickens.com post.
    It's low-life clickbait. It's just the direct analog of "See how this mother of five lost 18kg in two days!". My advice to anyone who has read this far: Next time, if you see "HughPickens.com writes..." at the start, stop reading there. I would have, if it wasn't a headline that mattered to me. Don't bother with TFA, I haven't and I don't plan to. It will have been picked out for its clickbait potential and nothing more - it could be good, it's more likely to be worthless, but TFA is irrelevant here. I'm commenting on the comments I've read so far.
    But please, don't encourage Slashdot posts from HughPickens. Find something better to read everyone. Don't feed the hugh troll.

    1. Re:A little context and insight by Cederic · · Score: 1

      my friends tell me I should quit and be a comedian. No history of mental illness

      Those two facts are contradictory.

  46. Suicide rates are not affected by means available by Pat1978 · · Score: 2

    I am an Aussie living and working in the States for the past five years. At Uni I worked for a suicide hotline and I keep up with the literature. For a long time after we instituted our stronger gun control, widespread confiscation of handguns, there were claims our suicide rates dropped. Those claims have been debunked. There were both a) methodological changes that caused an 18% drop simply due to the way counting was done. Google Australia suicide undercount" to see the peer reviewed work showing that. b) non gun methods of self caused death rose much more than the reduction in self caused death by gunshot. In Australia, as in the USA, a self inflicted gunshot is per se ruled a suicide. there must be evidence to the contrary to rule it an accident. The OPPOSITE is the case with drug overdose, poisoning, crashes, "falls" tat are really jumps, drownings at sea, co2 asphyxia, etc. Absent affirmative evidence of suicide, these are per se ruled accident. None gun self caused death rose more than double the rate of the drop in gun suicide The research shows having a gun in the household -- within a demographic group -- does not change suicide rates one iota. The 'within demographic group' is important as well. In The highest (counted) suicide and self caused death rate is later middle age men generally , with a sharper spike in in rural areas. That is true in cultures with guns and those with no guns. In the USA, that is the demographic with guns. So there is a logical and statistical fallacy in not controlling for that. The data need to be looked at with and without guns within the same demographic groups. When that is done, the presence of a gun is irrelevant to self caused death rate. This NY Times article is a gigantic disservice. More and more mental health professionals understand we may have up to 100,000 suicides per year, and with about wrongly 65,000 counted as accident, the MINORITYY are with guns. It is the WHY of suicide that is important. The "how" is irrelevant, and it is harmful and distracting to concentrate on the means.

  47. And how is this a technical issue?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Come on, this not at all related to relevant stories here!

  48. Blister packaging by swm · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The UK used to sell acetaminophen (AKA Tylenol) in bottles (like in the US).
    Some people committed suicide by OD'ing on the pills.
    So they changed from bottles to blister packs.
    Now if you want to off yourself that way, you have to sit there and pop out ~50 pills, one by one.
    It reduced those sucides by something like 30%.

    That's a lot of lives saved, with a pretty low barrier.

    1. Re:Blister packaging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit.

      I once swallowed 50 extra strength Tylenol in the US and I'm still here.

      That's 25 grams of acetaminophen.

      Didn't do squat.

    2. Re:Blister packaging by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Problem is, those "lives saved" where saved against their will. I call that evil.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  49. Or maybe by MitchDev · · Score: 1

    Let people who want to die die quitely at home or in a hospital instead of jumping off buildings or bridges or other public nuisance methods of killing oneself...

     

  50. My Life Belongs To Me, go fsck yourself Ms. Barber by virens · · Score: 1

    My life belongs to me, and if it sucks, I want to end it without any interference from religious morons and brainless public administrators like Ms. Barber. Removing the means of suicide does not solve or prevent the real problem: people have less and less reasons to live.

    Why should I live and get education when engineering is off-shored to brainless indians and chinese?
    Why should I live and contribute to knowledge if science and research is constantly mocked, ridiculed and deprived of funding?
    Why should I live when I've been treated as a insignificant cog in a corporation (which is now true for everything - even universities are run like a business)?
    Why should I live when some female bitch, whose mental capacity was enough only to graduate from an obscure secondary school in a german village, is sitting in EuroParliament and blathering about shutting down nuclear fission and fusion research?
    Why should I live when postdocs are lasting months? What useful science could possibly be done in couple of months?!
    Why should I live when even art and music became a commodity, and are forced to cater to lowest form of human waste?
    Why should I live when imbecile politicians want to turn the whole country into a large maximum security prison?!

    I want to kill myself not because I cannot cope with pressures and competition, but because stupid MBA morons hijacked the system and gained power over creative and talented people. Remember those socialized schmucks who bullied and ridiculed you in high school and universities? Now they are MPAs, MBAs and your bosses - they hate you and want to crush you, because deep inside they realize that they are worthless earthworms compared to creative people. I worked hard to solve difficult problems and hence earn my Ph.D. in electrical engineering, but thanks to banksters and businessdicks, the long-term postdoc positions have vanished and even short-term postodcs are nearly impossible to find anywhere in the world.

    My life belongs to me - not to a district attorney or moronic MPA. And when I want to end my life, I want my decision to be respected. It is not difficult to implement: farmers already use Controlled atmosphere killing for animals slaughter - inhaling inert gas guarantees a painless and quick death within minutes. You don't even have to build any new buildings or suicide booths - morgues are perfectly fine and can easily cope with those who want to voluntary end their lives.

    Instead of stupid regulations, how about giving more reasons to live and removing the reasons for suicide? Or at least simplifying the whole process of ending one's own life? It is harder than writing useless regulations, for sure, and requires substantially more brainpower than a typical MPA possesses, but we still have some smart, educated, thinking people on this planet, aren't we?!

  51. Doesn't fit the narrative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    nope, the last guy who did that in the US burned himself on the courthouse steps, but the American media deliberately ignored it.

  52. suicide as an evolutionary side effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have often wondered if the contemplation of suicide is a sort of strange side effect of a similar evolutionary process. There's an evolutionary advantage for instinct of self preservation to be turned on its head in many cases -- for example when self sacrifice is required so that others might live.
    I wonder if this trait is softer in some individuals... self preservation itself may be weaker in some individuals, but that conditions are able to activate this sacrificial mindset without the presence of the "honor/nobility" logic from the super-ego. The id fantasizes about fulfilling that sacrifice to stop the conditions, and the ego reinforces it as ok without consulting the super-ego ( IMNAPsych )
     

  53. Suicide: the planners and the spontaneous by King_TJ · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The person who equated this article to advocating "blocking the exits" is exactly right. The individual who actually plans to end their life in a fully conscious, fit state of mind has also surely come up with a plan that will get around any number of "blocked exit" strategies (like locking up personal guns in a cabinet, or hiding the keys to the car). They're not who this article refers to, IMO.

    But the person who is distraught enough to actually go through with a plan that has a high likelihood of ending their life (as opposed to FAR more of them who might talk about it or use a half-hearted attempt as attention-seeking behavior) are going to do it when the mood strikes them. And the original article seems to be saying it's effective and appropriate to remote as many possible means to accomplish this as possible, so the means will be lacking when the mood strikes.

    My problem with this is that it's only a band-aid for the underlying issue ... someone's severe depression. If it's not possible to get a person to get back the will to live, what quality of life do they have anyway, while you've "succeeded in preventing their suicide" by locking all of your knives up in a box?

    1. Re:Suicide: the planners and the spontaneous by StikyPad · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Just one point: Talking or "joking" about committing suicide are high risk factors. It may be "attention seeking" as well, but in many cases, suicidal people feel socially isolated and genuinely need attention.

    2. Re:Suicide: the planners and the spontaneous by DocSavage64109 · · Score: 1

      I am one of those who don't want a gun precisely because it would make it way to easy for me to finally escape. I don't need the opportunity.

    3. Re:Suicide: the planners and the spontaneous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Think of it as a tourniquet rather than a band-aid. It definitely isn't a permanent solution, but it's a starting point to recovery, and I don't know any mental health professional who would call it a day (in part because they can be held liable but mostly because they deeply care about their patients). There are entire protocols for this with questions that have to be asked and plans that have to be made.

      This is one reason why it's important that people have access to mental health care.

  54. Suicidal impulses as counter-survival birth defect by DutchUncle · · Score: 2

    I know the "Darwin Awards" are intended as a joke, but consider a purely animalistic / mathematical perspective: the individual doesn't matter to Mother Nature. Most species produce lots of offspring simply to overcome the high odds of dying before reproducing. Those odds are mostly external from predators and injury, and also include internal causes like illness, "unfitness" (in the Darwinian sense), and any kind of defect. Some calculated risk-taking is useful, but poor calculation skills (or excessive bravado despite calculation) lead to the "Darwin Awards" concept. Maybe, in the same vein, some amount of fear / depression / unhappiness is useful as a moderating influence on behavior - as often stated, courage is not the absence of fear, it is persistence despite fear - but too much of those emotions renders the individual less useful, and enough of those emotions to cause self-damage or self-killing is a trait that will self-cull from the gene pool.

    Is it, then, worthwhile from a purely economical point to try to baby-proof the world, or would it be more practical to emphasize recognition and identification of people with problems for targeted help? Not to mention impinging on everybody for the safety of the few (a hot reaction in so many posts here). This has some analogy to the issue of "playground safety" meaning that children get no exercise and learn no skills because the play area must be totally safe for all activities and ability levels. At what point does making the world totally safe mean nobody can have a cooking knife?

  55. You guys are worse than horror movies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For most people, suicide is a temporary desire and life can be fixed. BUT FOR SOME IT IS NOT. For some people life is unimaginably horrible and every day is torture.

    This is a trope in horror movies, where somebody is in utter agony and begs to be released. But most most people on this thread would say no.

    Sure, some people will be saved. And lifelong hell for the others is a price worth paying, right?

  56. White people should be xempt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    As a member in good standing of the privileged white hegemony, I demand that all white people should be exempt from all NWO anti-suicide brainwashing. The media elilte should be happy to join me on this crusade; as they want all white people to kill themselves.

    Only in the USA can you be considered to be a member of an oppressive majority, when you are in fact a minority, and make less money and have less political pull than the majority. But I guess that is my fault since I have been systematically raping and selling into sex slavery every single black and latino person I have ever met. (at least that is what I am told)

  57. How about this? by moeinvt · · Score: 1

    In an earlier post I made it clear that this idea about a correlation between firearms availability and suicide attempts is completely bogus. Also, the idea of making it a crime to have unlocked firearms in a home is totally insane.

    Something I might be willing to consider is adding people who are admitted to an emergency room after a suicide attempt to the NICS database. At least temporarily. (NICS database contains the list of people who are prohibited from buying firearms).

    Just thought of this, but maybe we should also allow people to get themselves added voluntarily! I've got no issue with that. "I think I'm a danger to myself your honor and I'd like to limit my own ability to acquire a firearm." I think they'd have to be insane to do that, but it would be their choice.

    I'd be very worried about the implementation, but I think it could work. Impose a very rigid criteria for adding a person and give them a chance to argue against it in court. Then provide an inexpensive way for the person to get their name removed. Or maybe they're automatically removed after 1 year or something?

    Just a thought.

    1. Re:How about this? by rock_climbing_guy · · Score: 1
      I think that generally speaking, it's a bad idea to have laws prohibiting the mere possession of common things in your house for a variety of reasons.

      First, it gives the state reason to forcibly enter your home searching for these things. This is dangerous practice that has resulted in many lost lives, injuries, and extensive property damage, even when it is ultimately found that no law was broken.

      Second, it is generally very difficult to prove in court that something was or was not found in your home. If the powers that be don't like you, they could simply haul you into court and show some prohibited item (unlicensed firearm, cocaine, child pornography, etc) to the jury, and say that they found it in your home.

      I know, freedom is a scary concept. It means that other people will do things you don't like.

      --
      Wh47 d1d j00 541, 31337 15n't t3h r0xor5 ne m0r3???
  58. Lets Ban Forks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Save the fat people, ban forks!

  59. lefty logic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    leftists suddenly care about human life if it means an opportunity to infringe on the rights of law-abiding citizens. then they turn around and celebrate the high sacrament of their faith, abortion.

  60. Pills by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All my old friends have done themselves in with pills. While I think we should not have free access to pills in our society, I know that will never happen. There is too much money to be made in pills for anyone to restrict them.

  61. Not sure I like this idea by ErichTheRed · · Score: 1

    One of the problems I have with people passing anti-suicide laws is the fact that some people really don't want to live. Everyone says "oh, it's a temporary condition, it can be fixed with meds, etc." but the reality is that peoples' lives are messy. If they feel that this is what they need to do to stop suffering on a regular basis, then that option should be open to them. Whether or not they're thinking clearly, it's their choice.

    How would you feel about forcing someone to live through the suffering of terminal cancer or some other debilitating illness? That's what you would be doing.

    The other larger macro-level problem to think about is population control. In the near future when automation has completely taken over, unemployment is high and no one can feed themselves anymore, do you really want to force a population floor? Sounds pretty cold hearted, but so is the reality of 90% unemployment and widespread poverty that awaits us shortly...

  62. it's citation but so true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    reminds me of: "A slave is not even worthy of death."

  63. Re:Cause: Horrible American diet by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1
    Buzzword bingo: Let's start!

    Americans are bad. Trendy diet advice. Weird diet additive 5htp, whatever that is...author assumed everyone else knew what it was, too, because the author lives in a bubble. Doctors accused of being priests instead of scientists. Accusing scientists that trained for years of being ignorant. Unnamed high school anecdote with no link. We're done here.

    --
    Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
  64. Real Security! by NickAragua · · Score: 1

    This reminds me of something one of my professors told me in a computer security course a long time ago. "If you want to make a computer really secure, all you have to do is turn it off, lock it in a safe and throw away the key."

  65. Re:Cause: Horrible American diet by StikyPad · · Score: 1

    I am not alone in the opinion that the horrible American diet does not only cause obesity. It also causes all manner of health problems, including mental ones.

    And I am not alone in the opinion that you're wrong.

    Caloric intake has actually remained fairly steady. It's physical activity that has declined.

    http://www.foodinsight.org/new...

    And there are few, at best, established connections between any given food type and risks of any disease. And it's not because we haven't looked -- we just aren't seeing them.

    Not that evidence has ever affected "nutrition" advice...

  66. Not Really True by koan · · Score: 1

    Experts and laymen have long assumed that people who died by suicide will ultimately do it even if temporarily deterred.

    Yes some that are suffering will go until they are "relieved", but I am reminded of the story of Kevin Hines, the man who jumped from the Golden Gate Bridge and instantly regretted it, survived to tell us.
    He states he prayed to survive and never thinks about suicide any longer.

    I wonder how many other would say the same if they had survived.

    http://www.theblaze.com/storie...

    https://www.google.com/search?...

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  67. Over 90% of Child Gun Accidents are Criminal homes by Pat1978 · · Score: 1

    In our state it was in the homes of felons and gang members where over 90% of child gun accidents occurred. The main state newspaper looked at the past 200 shootings of children in "gun owning homes" and over and over they found the gun owner was an illegal un owners, over 90% of whom were prior felons or persons in gangs. Indeed the homes of gun owners who are not prior felons, prior criminals or gang embers are about 20% SAFER from violence than unarmed homes When you control for the fact that within any given demographic suicide rates (2/3 of gun deaths) don't change, just method changes, with or without guns, and 90% of accidents being in the homes of prior criminals, and 90% of gun homicide victims being prior criminals themselves, gun owning homes of persons not in those groups are safer than non gun owning homes! http://usatoday30.usatoday.com...

  68. This is impossible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You simple cannot make every potential suicide victim's environment suicide proof. For starters, you don't know who all these potential people are, so that means you have to suicide proof everyone. Should we just put everyone in a little padded room? Except the people running the padded rooms, right?

  69. Stop the reason by AndyKron · · Score: 2

    Why the fuck don't people remove the REASONS why people commit suicide in the first place? Who are these jokers who want to put all of us in rubber rooms?

    1. Re:Stop the reason by gweihir · · Score: 1

      That would require the realization that something is fucked up, and that they may have a part in that. Far easier to blame the victims.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  70. The roots of suicide are buried in suffering by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Double-check your opinion. Atheism is lack of belief in deity. Such lack doesn't preclude the possibility of something else after this life ends. But just not St. Peter at the Pearly Gates and those other hoary biblical fairy tales.

  71. personal experience by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Twenty years ago my younger brother took his life. While I didn't read his suicide note, I believe he had lost hope in his future. But consider what his future would have included - technologies like smart phones, (giant) LCD HDTVs, DVDs & Blu-Rays and MP3 players; internet companies like Google; and even cheap communication and cheaper travel.

    Then there are the personal things he's missed out on like being the best man at my wedding & an uncle to my son.

  72. Re: Over 90% of Child Gun Accidents are Criminal h by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The article at the top of the post directly disputes the notion that method doesn't matter. For one thing, guns are a much more lethal method of suicide. And if you already own one, it takes almost zero effort to go from thoughts of suicide to hole in your head. Gun suicides are a serious problem in the U.S.

    And this notion of gun homes being safer is ridiculous--it only begs the question of whether such households could be even safer without guns.

    FWIW, I support gun rights. I grew up in the South. All the guns in our house were not only unlocked, but loaded. Which was never a big deal because you were shooting before you could walk, and never saw guns as toys but serious business.

    But I don't think people should adopt the same dumb arguments that anti-gun folks take.

  73. some rants by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have been suicidal since 2007 and this news annoys me. People have the right to commit suicide.
    Life is not worth the effort.

    Rational thinking about suicide:
    http://theviewfromhell.blogspot.nl/2008/12/response-to-suicideorg-on-right-to-die.html

    theviewfromhell.blogspot.nl
    http://www.amazon.com/Every-Cradle-Grave-Rethinking-Suicide/dp/0989697290/
    http://www.amazon.com/Conspiracy-against-Human-Race-Contrivance/dp/0984480277/
    http://www.amazon.com/Better-Never-Have-Been-Existence/dp/0199549265/

    It would be nice if these admirers of life present some scientific evidence in order to support the thesis "It is better to refrain from suicide". I do not have to take it on authority of someone else that it is better to refrain from suicide. I want scientific evidence. If scientific evidence is presented to me I can verify it myself.

    All those so called "arguments" to refrain from suicide are usally utter bullshit. See first link in this message.

  74. Re:Cause: Horrible American diet by Major+Blud · · Score: 1

    If this were true, I'd expect the suicide rate in countries such as Japan (or many other countries) to be much lower than the U.S......unless of course the Japanese diet is worse than that in the U.S. But Of course, as you say, "we can't say it's ALL nutrition".

    --
    If you post as Anonymous Coward, don't expect a reply.
  75. Re: Over 90% of Child Gun Accidents are Criminal h by random+coward · · Score: 0

    The original article is wrong. This has been studied before and noted that Canada decreased its gun suicide rate but the overall rate didn't change. Instead the rate of jumping suicides increased. It may be that suicides decrease as guns increase for some cultures; however it is very likely that will not be the case in USA. It is also true that somewhere between 1million and 3million crimes are prevented by privately owned firearms every year in the USA. So is it worth and extra couple millions crimes to shift the suicide methods of men?

    Truth is this is simply a tool for gun control. In other countries they just use other means more, but same demographic. Note too that even this article isn't "how to help prevent men from becoming victims of suicides" but rather "lets get rid of a method of suicide" as if the method and the path were intertwined.

  76. So much for basing decisions on evidence... by Optic7 · · Score: 1

    After reading all the top-rated comments here, I have to think that the Slashdot crowd has given up on evidence-based solutions to problems.

    From the TFS: "Reducing the availability of highly lethal and commonly used suicide methods has been associated with declines in suicide rates of as much as 30%-50% in other countries (PDF)."

    Who said anything about forbidding suicide? They are just talking about reducing the availability of easy routes to suicide. I just don't understand why anyone would be against that, as it is not impinging on anyone's rights. The only thing it does is to help prevent someone from making a rash decision while they are not thinking straight.

    It's a little bit like IT security. You can't stop the people who are really determined to get to their objective, but you can stop the casual attempts. In this case, you will give people a chance to think twice about this very ultimate decision.

  77. Modded Interesting? More like Totally Made Up by Renevith · · Score: 1

    Your numbers sound pretty made up, especially anything that's 99% and 100%, or "in no cases." Let me guess, they were "not intended as a factual statement"?

    If you get married the only usual out is divorce, which means that men in 99% of cases are on the hook for support for the rest of their lives.

    According to the US Census, as cited in this excellent article analyzing child support, only 53.4% of custodial mothers are awarded child support (and only a fraction actually receive all the support they are awarded). Key chart here: https://espnfivethirtyeight.fi...

    children in more than nine out of 10 cases living with their mothers

    From the same article above, "18.3 percent of custodial parents in 2011 were fathers."

    - In seven out of ten cases the judge ordered a transfer of the property into the wife's name
    - During 160 contested cases when an order was made to sell the home the wife received more than half of the proceeds in 25 percent of the cases, during the other 75 percent the proceeds were split

    In the same article, they make the point that the wife is usually poorer and has a worse employment situation, a correlation that explains most or all of this imbalance. Judges are going to award more financial support to the poorer party, and if you don't correct for that, you're presenting very misleading stats. Though given the totally made-up numbers you scattered throughout your entire post, I guess you don't care.

    1. Re:Modded Interesting? More like Totally Made Up by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      Your numbers sound pretty made up, especially anything that's 99% and 100%, or "in no cases." Let me guess, they were "not intended as a factual statement"?

      http://www.irishcentral.com/ne...

      And of course the ratio of male to female suicides locally is higher than even the normal 4:1, it's 5:1.

      In the same article, they make the point that the wife is usually poorer and has a worse employment situation, a correlation that explains most or all of this imbalance. Judges are going to award more financial support to the poorer party, and if you don't correct for that, you're presenting very misleading stats. Though given the totally made-up numbers you scattered throughout your entire post, I guess you don't care.

      Now if only those judgements were accompanied by genuine shared parenting legislation rather than a weekend every fortnight or what have you, and few penalties for making even that much harder. This is often accompanied by something known as "parental alienation", you should look it up.

      And who bitterly and relentlessly opposes shared parenting legislation?

  78. Re: Over 90% of Child Gun Accidents are Criminal h by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    Gun suicides are a serious problem in the U.S.

    Why??? if people dont wanna go on, why force them to???

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  79. been there done that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I commited suicide but was saved. 10 minutes after i woke up in hospital the next day I was again thinking ababout suicide and how to do it properly. Only because I was indicated antidepressants I did not repeat it.

  80. RvB by tmjva · · Score: 1

    Would they have stopped the fate of Dr. Leonard Church in the Project Freelancer Offsite Storage Facility?

    http://rvb.wikia.com/wiki/Dr._...

    --
    Tracy Johnson
    Old fashioned text games hosted below:
    http://empire.openmpe.com/
    BT
  81. DR ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are not doctors in the business of treating the sick? Seems that way does it not? I mean how can you make living as a doctor if you go around curing illness? Suicide is kinda like the VA method of curing a diabetic's infected foot. No foot, No infection. No problem.

  82. Re:Cause: Horrible American diet by Theovon · · Score: 1

    Yeah, because it's too hard for you to Google something.

  83. In the US it'd be great to look at some... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of the root causes for people being pissed, frustrated and distraught.
    For example all to often people in rural states such as Arizona, New Mexico, the Carilinas and Detroits are facing long periods with no Jobs, no social structure, order programs to help get back on there feet.
    All while facing mounting issues, be that bills or malfunctioning states and cities.
    Why aren't we considering those problems. I know someone that's been turned down by 15 Customer Service Call center applications- for example. The only reason that person has a home is the generosity of family. Few people have that. It's little wonder someone snaps then.

  84. One part of me says this is tragic, another says g by aisnota · · Score: 1

    For instance, many drug abusers are just slowed down self destruction that drags everyone else with them in so many ways.

    Give them a choice, red or purple and be done with it all! Tired of affluenza loaded bs media stories where such and such had everything, yet felt like nothing. Give them red or purple and be done!

    --
    http://www.aisnota.com/slashdot/ Welcome to Logic and the Future
  85. Cost of Golden Gate Bridge alone is 76M by burtosis · · Score: 1

    The cost of just the Golden Gate Bridge is 76M alone. It's about 2 million dollars per suicide victim in a year. Here's a thought, spend that money *on people who need treatment* instead of a 76M net that just causes them to jump a half mile down the road. The cost of a safety system dosent even begin to do the same good direct treatment does.