Quando achei que já tinha motivos suficientes para amar o Pratchett...
Pratchett's a hero, but on this he's plain wrong
By AMANDA PLATELL
Last updated at 12:54 PM on 16th April 2011
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Wrong: Just because I respect him, it doesn't mean I have to agree with Terry Pratchett's actions with the BBC
As an advocate for research into the treatment of Alzheimer's, there has been no more compelling champion than Terry Pratchett.
The best-selling author has sold more than 65 million books worldwide in 37 languages. He knows better than any of us how to tell a story.
Since his diagnosis with Alzheimer's in 2007, he has raised the profile of the debilitating disease and talked movingly about the horrific way it robs victims of their minds.
He has also calmly spelt out his own desire to end his life when he chooses, not when the disease does. He won't want to be pitied, but it is impossible not to feel deeply for Sir Terry, and one can understand only too easily why he might in time choose to take his life.
Yet our sympathy and respect for him should not cloud our judgment when it comes to his latest project, in which he presents a BBC documentary that films a man taking his own life.
In Terry Pratchett: Choosing To Die, the author sits beside the 71-year-old man known only as Peter, who suffers from motor neurone disease, and watches him die slowly from a lethal cocktail of drugs in a Swiss clinic.
It will be the first time the moment of a suicide victim's death is screened on television.
Whether or not you agree with assisted death and what goes on at the controversial Dignitas clinic in Switzerland where the suicide takes place is almost beside the point.
To my mind, this is the almost pathologically liberal BBC at its worst, producing a propaganda film for the pro-euthanasia lobby and deliberately offending the significant number of Britons who believe in the sanctity of life.
What makes this all the more insidious is the high moral tone adopted by the corporation. 'The BBC does not have a stance on assisted suicide, but we do think this is an important matter of debate,' says a spokesman.
Giving Sir Terry free rein in a documentary on this highly sensitive matter seems like a pretty strong stance to me.
And the very fact that Sir Terry is the front man is in itself a form of moral blackmail.
How could any compassionate and reasonable person object to this individual — a man who, we are all too dreadfully aware, suffers from an incurable disease himself — promoting the right of another sufferer to be assisted to take his own life?
The fact is that all right-minded people should be objecting to it.
This isn't a work of fiction, but an all-too-real human being's life — and death — ghoulishly being played out like some snuff movie.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/artic ... z1Jgp2OoDv