A movement refusing quiet erasure
Across clinics, parliaments, and living rooms, disabled advocates are raising a clear alarm. They argue that “assisted dying” debates often center a tidy story about individual autonomy, while overlooking the structural realities that make some lives feel unlivable. In this counter‑narrative, the core issue is not choice, but the unequal conditions in which choices are made.
When scarcity shapes consent
In many countries, people rely on fragile home‑care budgets, months‑long equipment delays, and patchy personal‑assistant coverage. Under those constraints, the “option” to die can look like the system’s quiet escape hatch rather than a genuine freedom. A ventilator denied, a wheelchair stuck in procurement, or a care rota left unfilled can feel like social abandonment, not fate. That is why many activists say the conversation about rights must begin with the right to live well.
The harm of compassionate pessimism
Disabled people describe the daily drip of ableist assumptions: “I couldn’t live like you,” “Have you ever considered it?” These comments are offered as concern, yet they normalize the premise that disabled life is inherently tragic. As one organizer put it, “Don’t offer me a ‘dignified death’ until you’ve guaranteed a dignified life.” That line, both plain and profound, cuts through euphemism and comfort.
What dignity really demands
For many, dignity is not a legal document, but a concrete infrastructure: accessible housing, reliable transport, adaptive tech, pain management, and paid care that respects agency. It is timely repairs, not charity; livable wages for assistants, not burnout; and clinicians trained to see bias, not just pathology. Without these, “assistance” can sound neutral, even while it reflects social failures we refuse to fix.
Intersectional fault lines
This movement is proudly intersectional, linking disability justice to feminism, anti‑racism, and critiques of austerity. Women, migrants, and low‑income patients are disproportionately exposed to gatekeeping, under‑treatment, and the quiet pressure to be “low‑maintenance.” Activists argue that the same systems that ration care can normalize rationing life, and that any law crafted in scarcity will perpetuate the harms it claims to relieve.
Beyond yes-or-no laws
Campaigners do not speak with a single voice, and some support narrow, rigorously guarded legislation. But even those advocates insist safeguards must be earned, not just named. A credible framework requires investment that long predates the moment of request, and scrutiny that lasts long after the ink is dry.
- Fully funded, person‑directed home‑ and community‑based care
- Independent disability‑competent counselling before eligibility assessments
- Mandatory reporting on social‑determinant factors in each case
- Automatic second‑opinion reviews by disability‑informed clinicians
- Protected time for palliative and rehabilitative alternatives
- Ongoing audits for inequities by class, race, and gender
Media narratives that matter
Coverage often highlights exceptional, eloquent petitioners and scenes of soft‑lit finality. Missing are the people who never make it past the waiting list, whose “choice” is schooled by isolation and delayed supports. Journalists can change that by foregrounding disabled experts, backing claims with data, and asking whether scarcity was remedied before the final decision.
The ethic of non‑abandonment
Clinicians speak of an ethic of non‑abandonment—the duty to stay when options narrow. For disability advocates, the public owes the same vow: do not offer a quick exit where long‑term support is due. Do not valorize stoic suffering when preventable suffering is the issue. Do not confuse a system’s exhaustion with a person’s well‑considered will.
Policies that build real choice
If lawmakers proceed, they must lead with care, not with exits. That means universal access to assistive devices, zero‑delay repair guarantees, paid family and personal assistance, and robust anti‑bias training. It means dedicated funding for home modifications, transparent wait‑time caps, and redress when agencies fail. Only then can we say a request reflects preference, not invisible pressure.
Choosing to hear the whole story
The movement’s demand is simple and exacting: before you codify a path to death, guarantee a path to life. Hear the grief, but also the ingenuity of disabled communities—how they build networks, design futures, and insist that dignity is a practice, not a paperwork category. The question is not whether autonomy matters, but whether we have done the work to make autonomy real.