photo credit: NMIH
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Five Last Acts II
“Five Last Acts, at over 400 pages, marks what may be the most comprehensive guide to self-deliverance techniques available.”
- World Right-to-Die Newsletter
Available from Amazon and good bookshops.
>>> Over 400 pages
>>> Over 40 illustrations
>>> Over 450 key referencesUse of helium, drugs, compression, plastic bags, starvation and other means, as well as other key resources including authoritative information on the legal position. It's comprehensive analysis and step-by-step explanation of methods of self-deliverance is far-reaching and probably unrivalled, both for the individual seeking peace of mind and for other researchers in the area.
Main link (Amazon U.S.):
http://www.amazon.com/dp/1453869379/Also available from Amazon uk:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1453869379/The complete reference, over 800 pages, The Exit Path, is also available. Please click the image below to order, or see the Publications page at the top menu.
For even more: Five Last Acts – The Exit Path
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The first purpose of this blog is to update our members and supporters. We’ll also post some news stories of interest. Anyone can join, read the posts, and send comments or questions on specific stories.
Factcheck: We answer our critics
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The most extensive volume on self-deliverance ever published, Five Last Acts: The Exit Path covers every method in encyclopedic detail, answering questions on different approaches for researchers and lay-persons alike. The Exit Path contains all the material from Five Last Acts II plus new and exclusive material.
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Tag Archives: drowning
When hope of assistance dies
What happens when legitimate requests for assisted suicide to be considered are ruled out? A former member of staff at Bracknell & Wokingham College, who had asked to end her life with Dignitas in Switzerland, threw herself into a canal … Continue reading
Edinburgh festival tackles assisted suicide
The Arts can sometimes let us see things differently, more clearly than any amount of words. This year’s Edinburgh International Film Festival (EIFF) has no less than three films dealing with the dilemmas of rational suicide and assisted suicide. Third … Continue reading