This is a euthanasia device or machine invented by Philip Nitschke and Dutch industrial designer, Alexander Bannink. |
The
Sarco device (or Pegasos) is a euthanasia
device or machine consisting of a 3D-printed
detachable capsule (or coffin) mounted on a stand that contains a canister of
liquid nitrogen
to commit suicide
through inert gas asphyxiation. "Sarco" is
short for "sarcophagus". It is used in conjunction with an inert gas,
nitrogen,
which prevents the panic, sense of suffocation
and struggling before unconsciousness, known as the hypercapnic
alarm response caused by the presence of high carbon
dioxide concentrations in the blood. The Sarco was invented by euthanasia
campaigner Philip Nitschke in 2017.
New Suicide Machine With Detachable Coffin Lets You Kill Yourself Anytime, Anywhere
National SPUC Jul 25, 2019
| 1:24PM London, England
The death pod, also referred to as a ‘glorified gas chamber’ was first envisioned in 2012. It contains canisters of liquid nitrogen which is released when activated by the person inside the capsule within the pod, causing oxygen levels to plummet to very low levels and starving the individual of the air he or she needs, causing their death. The capsule is then detached from the pod and serves as a coffin for the occupant.
Nitschke now has his deadly creation on display at the ‘Disrupting Death’ workshop in Queensland Australia, which is set to inform vulnerable people how to end their life. Aimed at those aged 50 plus or the terminally ill, the workshop claims that the suicide pod can kill you with ‘style and euphoria.’
Disturbingly, Nitschke claims that the suicide pod can offer us an ‘elegant almost euphoric’ death.
Speaking to Exit International, Nitschke said: “The idea of using a machine to have absolute control really has been a long-term interest of mine. So, a person can, with minimal involvement, get into the machine and press a button for a very peaceful, elegant almost-euphoric death.”
Assisted suicide spreads into Australia
Nitschke insists that the suicide pod is not illegal to use in Australia as suicide is not recognised as a criminal offence in any Australian state. The culture of death can clearly be seen to have infiltrated the country as assisted suicide laws were passed in the state of Victoria in 2017 and officially came into force in June this year.In recent weeks, a terminally ill patient was the first in the country to be given a ‘permit’ to consume lethal drugs and end their life. According to reports, the vulnerable patient is yet to use their suicide permit.
The global promotion of death
In recent years, countries across the globe have submitted to the culture of death. Disturbingly, the practice of assisted suicide has increasingly been backed and practiced by members of the medical profession in various legislatures, turning doctors from healers into killers.Recently, doctors who end their patient’s lives across some American States have even invested in an organisation, NCCMAID, specifically designed to teach other doctors how to end their patients’ lives and promote assisted suicide within the medical field.
2018 saw the chilling call of two Canadian doctors and a bioethicist for permission to take organs from patients, while they are still alive, who had signed up for euthanasia.
The corrosive effects that assisted suicide and euthanasia can inflict upon the vulnerable are now appallingly apparent. Since Canada legalised euthanasia in 2016, there have been at least 6,749 cases of medically assisted death.
Belgium which euthanises at-least five citizens a day, was recently placed under world-wide scrutiny after three doctors were accused of certifying a 38 year old woman, Tine Nys, as autistic so she could be euthanised, and subsequently killed by lethal injection in 2010. It was later discovered the deceased was not autistic but instead suffered from a ‘broken heart’ after a relationship break-up. Similarly, disturbing scenarios have occurred in the Netherlands which saw a doctor ask family members to ‘hold down’ a struggling patient whilst he euthanised her.
Showcasing suicide to vulnerable people
Michael Robinson, SPUC Director of Communications said: “The acceleration of assisted suicide and euthanasia across the globe is truly unsettling. Assisted suicide exploits vulnerable people and puts them at risk of unthinkable abuse as we have witnessed countless times across regions that endorse assisted suicide.”Mr Robinson continued: “Creations such as the ‘suicide pod’ go one step further however, as it appears to showcase suicide to vulnerable people in a glamorised, stylish fashion. Vulnerable people need care, not killing. The suicide pod being showcased to the ill and elderly today, executes the discriminatory message that some life matters less than others and that killing matters more than care.”
LifeNews Note: Courtesy of SPUC. The Society for the Protection of Unborn Children is a leading pro-life organization in the United Kingdom.
INTERNET SOURCE: https://www.lifenews.com/2019/07/25/new-suicide-machine-with-detachable-coffin-lets-you-kill-yourself-anytime-anywhere-2/
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