Suicidal Terror's only possible victory lies in the pointless self-murder of its last happy martyr. |
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In fact, the word ' suicide ' replaced ' self-murder ' only in the eighteenth century. |
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I support self-ownership, and hence oppose coerced euthanasia or delegated self-murder. |
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By inference, suicide was an extreme case of this, and the language barely distinguishes between self-murder and murder of kindred. |
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During the high Middle Ages, civil legislation against self-murder was enacted in the majority of Western European states. |
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Suicide, or self-murder, is never the only option and certainly never the right option for anyone, anywhere at any time. |
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But I also know that reporters and newspapers must take great care when covering stories about self-murder. |
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I've tried to commit self-murder a couple of times but the day somebody else tried to kill me, I woke up. |
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Religion and other ideological apparati do help facilitate self-murder and the murder of others, but as a motivational cause they seem to be inadequate on their own. |
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If I had paid this visit, as I might have done, a week sooner, loving Lucie would have confided in me, and I would have prevented that self-murder. |
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Even if people think that the Iraq war has made Britain a bigger target, they are still confronted with a fascistic cult of murder and self-murder which allows no compromise. |
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In German, he noted, the word for suicide literally means self-murder, and like a homicide, a suicide often stirs anger. |
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I would also confront many stereotypes about suicide, a word that means self-murder, an act that some religious faiths once equated with eternal banishment from heaven. |
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The self-murder of those who die for a cause is always brought about by a supreme decision to act now for future times. |
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Calvinism, which placed the utmost emphasis on utter surrender to God's will, deemed self-murder a particularly horrifying defiance of divine dispensation, a complete forfeit of grace. |
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She recounts episodes from the canon of voluntary self-murder, including the deaths of Socrates, Cato, Samson, Sylvia Plath, and even Jesus — whose end, according to some scholars, was tantamount to suicide. |
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