I am thoroughly confused right now. You said if someone interfered in your suicide and saved your life, that you would hunt them down and kill them in the most gruesome way imagineable. Now you are saying you never stated nor implied any such thing and I am extrapolating. Which is it?
Oh for Jesus' sake. Do I really need to parse fundamental meanings here? Really?
Maybe they are an asshole, but do all assholes really deserve THAT?
I never stated nor implied any such thing. Your extrapolations are running toward the wild.
It was CLEARLY stated that my reaction would be to a very specific circumstance, not a general one.
OK, last time: people who really want to kill themselves almost always succeed. There are, however, those rare occasions where things go "wrong" and someone finds them incapacitated. The natural reaction in most people is to try to save the stricken party - after all, they may not know it is a suicide, right?
Same page so far?
Nothing I wrote could be even remotely taken as meaning such people should be killed or in any way punished for their actions. With me? And yes, this is all in my original response, which you failed to read with CARE, but the implications to these effects are abundantly clear.
Moving along - if someone tries to kill himself and someone else, knowing that person's wishes, tries to intervene beyond a limit (e.g. trying to talk them out of it), has crossed a line that places themselves squarely within the rightful cross-hairs of the person with whom they knowingly interfere in an unwelcome manner. At the lowest conceptual level this is NO different from robbing me at the end of a gun because you are violating my sovereignty. The fact that YOU think someone ought not kill himself for reason X does not place you into a position of authority to take action against that person's fulfillment of the intention. If you think that you do, then you are in no way a liberty-oriented human being, but a pretty slaver. Real liberty has its dark side and to deny this is to deny truth itself.
If you do not see the difference between one naively interfering, which is to say unknowingly butting into another's rightfully intentional business, and doing so with sufficient knowledge that they are acting in contravention of another's explicit wishes and, therefore, their sovereign right to so act, then there is nothing more I can do to help you. I did not state nor imply in any way imaginable to the rational and nominally intelligent adult that anyone should be taken to task for acting on presumptions. I spoke of a very specific circumstance that involved ONLY MYSELF. I very explicitly stated that I spoke for no other human being on the planet. I very explicitly stated that I would never decide to kill myself casually, nor would I ever make a melodrama of such a decision for the sake of getting attention. Having stated this, the reader then is in possession of the essential parameters relating to such a decision and could not claim to have acted naively. The only possible interpretation of his interference would be the knowing assumption of authority to act in contravention of my sovereign right to autodiathesis (self-determination) and that is a sin which, given the circumstance at hand, I would not be disposed to forgive.
Go re-read my original post, only with some care, some application of semantic analysis, and you will see that it is all there. That one fails to take the proper care in reading is not my fault.
Because you are easily qualified as a nominally intelligent adult, I will chalk this up to bad habit or a moment of lapse. We all do it, myself included. But having been corrected, I will find it less forgivable if you come back at this with the same position and tone.
We don't have to agree, but let us not misrepresent each other's positions with such apparently wild abandon. I've not done it to you and I expect the same courtesy in return. We are, after all, supposed to be on the same side here.