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Facebook Stops French Man From Streaming His Dying Days (cnn.com) 140

"Facebook has prevented a French man with an incurable illness from streaming his own death on the social media site, according to a company statement..." reports CNN: Alain Cocq, 57, estimates he will only have days to live after stopping all medication, food and drink, which he planned to do on Friday evening. He had intended to broadcast his dying days on the platform, to raise awareness about France's laws on assisted dying.

In a statement Saturday Facebook said the live stream was prevented to avoid promoting self-harm. "Our hearts go out to Alain Cocq for what he's going through in this sad situation and everyone who is personally affected by it," the company said in the statement. "While we respect Alain's decision to draw attention to this important issue, we are preventing live broadcasts on his account based on the advice of experts that the depiction of suicide attempts could be triggering and promote more self-harm...."

Euthanasia is illegal in France. French law also dictates that deep and continuous sedation, which can hasten a person's death and render them unconscious until they die, is not legal unless under specific circumstances set out by the 2016 Claeys-Leonetti Law, which also requires a person's death to be imminent. But French citizens do have the right to stop medical care, and under French law there is no prosecution for suicide.

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Facebook Stops French Man From Streaming His Dying Days

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  • by itsme1234 ( 199680 ) on Monday September 07, 2020 @07:44AM (#60481606)

    "But French citizens do have the right to stop medical care, and under French law there is no prosecution for suicide."

    Seriously now.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Dog-Cow ( 21281 )

      I am sure the lack of prosecution is of great relief to the victim.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        I am sure the lack of prosecution is of great relief to the victim.

        Sure, in some countries his entire family will be fined for the suicide and the victims property confiscated by the state as punishment.

        • Seriously?? Thats pretty fucked up. Obviously the suicidal person is not mentally well. Lets just go take houses and cars from families that had the nerve to produce a child with autism while we are at it.

          • You do know that in some countries they'll stone women for having been raped and throw gays off of rooftops? The world is very much not all smiles and sunshine.
            • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

              by Anonymous Coward
              Some countries they'll shoot you in the back 7 times for being black...
              • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

                by guruevi ( 827432 )

                And in some countries, they'll even defend rapists that fight with police and draw a weapon if politically convenient.

                • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

                  by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

                  Of course, freedom is meaningless if you don't defend it when it happens to be someone you hate.

                • by dabadab ( 126782 )

                  That is a very poor strawman.

                • No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; n

            • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

              youre comparing religious nutjobs with punishing the family for a suicide of an adult that does not live with them. Thats not the same thing. Theyre both fucked up, but not exactly the same kind of fucked up. One is easily explained by a complete lack of education coupled with a religious leader(s) so drunk on their power they begin to see themselves as part of the deity class. Depression, on the other hand, everyone deals with at some point in their life. Basically there are two types of people in this wor

        • That's why you just go rock climbing or just hiking, and accidentally fall off the cliff while taking a selfie. Plenty of kids do that these days on the tops of skyscrapers and such. Most of the ones whose footage survives also survive, but others...

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Yes, he knows is family will not be prosecuted, his assets won't be taken as a fine, and that if he somehow fails to die he won't be prosecuted.

    • Yes seriously. In the UK, it was forbidden, so a failed suicide attempt could lead to a punishment. I don't know if that is still the case.
      • by itsme1234 ( 199680 ) on Monday September 07, 2020 @08:04AM (#60481634)

        A failed suicide is not a suicide, obviously, attempted suicide could be punished but suicide ... nope.

        • A failed suicide is not a suicide, obviously, attempted suicide could be punished but suicide ... nope.

          A fine could be taken from the estate.

        • by dryeo ( 100693 )

          One common punishment was burial in unhallowed ground, perhaps under the road. For a religious person who has certain beliefs, that threat might be enough to stop them from suicide.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Monday September 07, 2020 @08:28AM (#60481660) Homepage Journal

        Suicide hasn't been illegal in the UK since 1961.

        • If its not illegal, how do you require them to go into treatment for their mental health issues? Without something in law, the government is not supposed to be able to force you to action. But I know little about laws in the UK, maybe you guys are a lot less free than you let on.

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            How is forcing someone to get treatment for clinical depression productive or in the interests of freedom?

            • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

              A danger to themselves or others has always been the criteria for intervention. You, in fact, have made this argument ad nauseam. I am just curious how and why you are reversing your stance. So again I am asking, is mental health a criteria for the government to come in and force you into treatment, and/or any other sort of intervention or forfeiture of estate?

              • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

                The UK law is described here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

                As you can see where it is possible to treat someone without detaining them that must be the chosen option, so it's pretty rare in suicide cases. For detention to take place two* doctors have to diagnose them with a mental illness that cannot be treated any other way, although short term detention in order to make that assessment is possible. Legal appeal is always possible.

                * Normally it's two, at the moment it's one due to coronavirus. I am ver

                • It must be hard on the doctors. They would have to rule against a colleague that they presumably work closely with, there can't be that many doctors in the field that would be in such a position and there must be time pressures too.
          • If its not illegal, how do you require them to go into treatment for their mental health issues? Without something in law, the government is not supposed to be able to force you to action. But I know little about laws in the UK, maybe you guys are a lot less free than you let on.

            The way I believe it works in my own jurisdiction is that if you're medically deemed as a real and imminent threat to the physical safety of yourself or others you can be taken into the care of the state far as long as the immediate threat persists. A decision is signed off by a doctor but only valid for a short period of time, that is automatically reviewed by a panel of psychiatrist to whom you also can submit your own evidence they can then decide for a somewhat longer period but has to make a new decis

          • by pjt33 ( 739471 )

            If its not illegal, how do you require them to go into treatment for their mental health issues?

            Sectioned under the Mental Health Act (1983) [www.nhs.uk].

          • Like in the book: "Out of the Nightmare: Recovery from Depression and Suicidal Pain"
            by David Conroy

            From my comments on the book here: https://github.com/pdfernhout/... [github.com]

            ====

            From: https://www.amazon.com/Out-Nig... [amazon.com]
            "Out of the Nightmare. An all-out assault on the barriers that stand between you and recovery from depression and suicidal pain. decomposes recovery from depression into recovery from envy, shame, self-pity, grandiosity, fear, stigma, social abuse, and the double binds and vicious circles of the mytho

          • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Even an idiot should be able to see that is counter productive.
      • The punishment should be mandatory therapy. Let the punishment fit the crime. The only crime is having poor mental health. Require him/her to go through treatment.

        • If a person has committed suicide I believe no amount of therapy will help. Attempted suicide on the other hand it may be possible. If you are painfully dying of terminal illness as with this case I don't see why you need to be mentally ill to want to die. Like many pro abortion activist like to say It their body they should be able to do with it what they will, and there is no law that tells men what to do with their body, oh wait, that is what every law I can think of tells what to do with your body. The

          • I cannot imagine a terminally ill person failing in their suicide attempt. Overdose on heroin and throw yourself into the pool. They will be so busy trying to revive you from drowning they wont even suspect the overdose. And you wont feel a damn thing.

            • by dryeo ( 100693 )

              An extreme example would be a terminally ill quadriplegic as someone who is likely to fail at suicide without help. Can't give themselves a shot of heroin, little well throw themselves anywhere.

      • by guruevi ( 827432 )

        It's possible pretty much anywhere, a lot of people, in the act of committing suicide have put others in danger in the process or damage property.

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        So don't fail. Easy, small cylinder of nitrogen, a breathing mask, a tube to connect cylinder to mask. Put mask on ensuring it will not come loose, lie back and on turn up gas and go to sleep (it works because you brain does not detect a build up of carbon dioxide and thinks all is right with the world until it stops thinking). I suppose you can also take other intoxicating substances and enjoy the trip on the way out. Your life your choice. You are not a slave to society and do you know why the abrogation

    • "approximately 92-95% of suicide attempts end in survival"
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      I suppose the argument for making it illegal is that it would provide legal grounds for intervention to try to help the person. Whether that theory holds up I do not know.

      A second consideration is more ghoulish, but I suppose life insurers might support making it illegal because life insurance doesn't reward suicide and if it's illegal the state would have to make that determination, giving a more solid legal s

    • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday September 07, 2020 @11:43AM (#60482134)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • I believe that in the end it must be up to each individual to decide if they feel life is worth it. But I do wish that mental health issues were more openly discussed, more treatable and carried less stigma. Many of the issues that make life feel unbearable are temporary. Many are the result of accepting others' judgement of our own worth. Therapy and other help could get a lot of people through those rough spots if it was more available and affordable and accepted. I lost a dear friend to suicide almo
  • To Belgium, Luxembourg or the Netherlands where he would get euthanized if he wanted to.

    • Or board any flight bound to the US and shout allahu akbar, to get the same service quicker and free of charge.

      • Or just get on a US plane and work on some math problems

        • Nah. If you do math problems, you get shipped off to Gitmo and locked up for life. Shouting something in Arabic gets you shot by the air stosstruppen nice and clean.

      • Precisely zero people have been killed in this way so what's the basis for getting the same service quicker and free of ... do you have any idea how much a fucking plane ticket to the USA costs vs driving 100km?

    • To Belgium, Luxembourg or the Netherlands where he would get euthanized if he wanted to.

      Or he could instead try to raise awareness of a contentious political issue through his act hoping to incite change.

      I mean black people in the 60s could have just used their dedicated bathroom as well if they wanted too right? No need to change anti-discrimination laws either, they still have the ability to pee and poop right!

      • by clovis ( 4684 )

        To Belgium, Luxembourg or the Netherlands where he would get euthanized if he wanted to.

        Or he could instead try to raise awareness of a contentious political issue through his act hoping to incite change.

        I mean black people in the 60s could have just used their dedicated bathroom as well if they wanted too right? No need to change anti-discrimination laws either, they still have the ability to pee and poop right!

        Old guy here.
        The dedicated bathroom for blacks is kind of a myth. The general practice was no bathroom whatsoever for black people except in black establishments.

  • Last Statment (Score:4, Informative)

    by betsuin ( 5812894 ) on Monday September 07, 2020 @08:24AM (#60481650)
    Which the guy who is dying wants to make.
    And FB stops it.

    All I can say is let him speak.

    I watched my mum die over 4 days, day 2 it was obvious but "sensibilities" did not allow a quick relief. Fuck that.
    It was against her stated will.
    • Which the guy who is dying wants to make.

      And FB stops it.

        All I can say is let him speak.

      Speak away. Just not on my platform (or Facebook's).

      I am American, not French, so I do not know the relevant laws/culture in France. Here we have the right to speak, but not the right to use someone's platform to speak from.

  • by Alain Williams ( 2972 ) <addw@phcomp.co.uk> on Monday September 07, 2020 @08:24AM (#60481652) Homepage

    Stopping food/drink (especially fluids) will be very unpleasant. He is doing it as the only way of bringing on his death which he wants as his illness causes him great suffering. If you had a dog or horse with this disease and stopped food/drink to kill it then you would be prosecuted for animal cruelty. Why is it OK to make a man suffer but not an animal ?

    • He is chosing to do so. Your analogy has you forcing an animal to do so. It is the forcing that is illegal. If your horse or dog won't eat or drink and dies (there is some evidence animals will do that) you won't get charged with animal cruelty.

    • That's it, really. I live in a bible belt state and separation of church and state is barely even paid lip service.

    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Monday September 07, 2020 @09:36AM (#60481780)

      Why is it OK to make a man suffer but not an animal ?

      Same reason abortion isn't legal everywhere for grounds of suffering or medical issues. Morals are feel good issues that people pat themselves on the back for when they preserve life. No consideration to the quality of the life is ever given.

      That and everyone seems to always know better than the person involved, apparently. Who is this person? I don't know, never met him, never heard of him, but my god says life is sacred so he's clearly not sound of mind. - Religious Fanatics.

    • when you've got religions promising paradise in the afterlife and the real world is insanely miserable for 90% of the population then you need strong taboos and laws to prevent people from skipping out on this life for the next one. Otherwise everybody goes Jonestown. As a ruler you need as many people as you can get to fend off bandits and other tribes.

      It's the same reason why Homosexuality is taboo. As a ruler you need to be firing on all cylinders, e.g. everybody needs to be cranking out babies for y
  • He should just have his page reported as fake news violating Facebook's T&C by a few hundred friends and followers, that seems to be the best way to keep a controversial page up and avoid any action from Facebook until after the event has taken place - whereupon it will be highlighted as violating Facebook's T&C, taken down, and held up as an example of Facebook self-regulation working as intended.

  • by LenKagetsu ( 6196102 ) on Monday September 07, 2020 @08:48AM (#60481694)

    Change the channel.

    • Change the channel.

      Unless of course it is "misinformation", or might help the other guy win an election, or ...

      We are very selective these days about our free speech.

      • "Unless of course it is "misinformation", or might help the other guy win an election, or ...
        We are very selective these days about our free speech."

        The man is trying to end his own life due to a painful illness. I respect that, but Facebook is right to not air it because there are vulnerable people out there grappling with depression to consider, and it's Facebook's right to be mindful of that.

        We're talking about this man's case and how awful it is, that should be enough to catalyze change in France. It

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Then how are they going to get ad revenue? It's the channel's advertisers that are offended, not the viewers.

      • Well that's too bad, they're not the target audience and should just hand over their money. Nobody gives a fuck about advertisers anyway, anyone with a functioning brain runs a pihole or ublock. They should be sucking fuckerberg's dick raw in thanks for even being ALLOWED to advertise on one of the world's largest social media platforms.

    • It was done for suicide prevention. I respect the man's wishes, but if we can avoid a spike in depressed teenagers committing suicide, that would be great.

      • And what empirical evidence is there that people watching will cause a spike in suicide? This is just someone making a hypnosis without actually doing the experiment. I could also make up some nonsense that if people see this video they may be more aware of suicide and provide people help people therefore reducing suicide. That too would be unsubstantiated and without proof and only useful as a suggestion to what we should be looking into.

  • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 ) on Monday September 07, 2020 @09:18AM (#60481746)

    In France, while suicide is not illegal, promoting it is.

    Maybe Facebook is overly cautious here but I am not a lawyer.

    • Clearly you're not a lawyer if you think that this is promoting anything.
      • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

        Are you a lawyer who knows French law?

        One thing to realize is that freedom of speech is more restricted in France than in the US. For instance, hate speech is illegal, and Facebook gets a lot of attention for it.

        Here Cocq is voluntarily ending his own life by refusing treatment and his intention is to advocate for "assisted dying". Sounds a lot like suicide. I am with him on that one, but his announcement was probably overheard by some overcautious corporate lawyer who decided that there was less risk block

  • but not really content for the public viewing online, i think if someone is suffering an incurable illness and the quality of life is low and painful i think it is immoral for the state to force a person to continue to live in such a miserable state of existence, i think in some places euthanasia is already legal, it should be legal everywhere
  • I guess no ad revenue upside, so ban, eh? The person should fly over to Switzerland. There was a heart wrenching story on PBS about assisted suicide. One case involved a couple in the UK where one had I think MD. The disease where all muscles stop working including the ability to swallow. Even Swiss law requires (as do most US State laws) that the patient drink a large amount of liquid containing the drugs without help. So the trick was that the patient wanted to live as long as possible, but before they co
  • They stopped him from streaming his dying days on facebook.

    You're going to have to decide if you believe in freedom of speech, or if facebook should be forced to carry this content.

  • by Randseed ( 132501 ) on Monday September 07, 2020 @09:55AM (#60481826)
    Obviously, the penalty for attempting suicide should be summary execution.
  • Facebook is a social MANIPULATION platform.

  • ... that Macron was up for re-election.

  • Not French but Francophone here.

    I do not understand why France does not have an assisted suicide/euthanasia law like several other European countries have. It is not the first time a well covered case of a person having some horrible disease is forced to suffer until the bitter end. Google Chantal Sebire, i warn you the pics aren't easy to watch.

    This stubborn backwardness reminds me a bit the hysteria from all the religious nutjobs when same sex marriage law was proposed. Again after other European countri

    • Correction:Chantal Sébire wasn't a very good example: She had medical opportunities she refused because she believed in quack remedies.

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