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End of life: Emmanuel Macron believes that we must ask ourselves the question of the "lesser evil"

End of life: Emmanuel Macron believes that we must ask ourselves the question of the "lesser evil"
In response to François Bayrou's comments - questioned on the "right to assisted dying" - who said he was "on the side of care and the defense of life", Emmanuel Macron called for the debate not to be "reduced" to pro or anti-life, but to ask the question of the "lesser evil".

Emmanuel Macron said on Monday, May 5, a week before the arrival in the National Assembly of the text creating a "right to assisted dying," that the debate could not be "reduced" to for or against life, but must pose the question of the "lesser evil."

The MPs approved the bill in committee on Friday, after respectful but uncompromising debates on this sensitive issue. This bill stems from a bill requested by the head of state that could not be completed due to the dissolution of the National Assembly in June.

Interviewed by the Journal du Dimanche this weekend, Prime Minister François Bayrou said he was "spontaneously on the side of caring for and defending life." "But I am not blind. There are extreme situations, cases of suffering and despair that no one can ignore," he added.

"It's a vertigo that affects each and every one of us," the head of state said on Monday during a speech to the Freemasons of the Grand Lodge of France.

"But the debate, resolutely, cannot be reduced to the question of whether we are for life or against life, or whether on the one hand there would be a humanism that would be worth the treatment and on the other simply abandoning oneself to death, no," he affirmed.

"I fear that sometimes, in our debates, things get rushed and forget the depth and sometimes the great difficulty of simply thinking about the lesser evil. Because in certain situations, there is no longer good on one side, evil on the other, but simply a choice in concrete situations, in the solitude of the one who has to die, of his family, of his doctor, the singular path that respects the dignity of each person at every moment," he added.

He congratulated the Freemasons for carrying "this ambition to make man the measure of the world, the free actor of his life, from birth to death."

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