No, there are no easy answers.
Would I like to be able to painlessly end my life if I was in horrendous pain with no prospect of recovery? Yes I would.
That said, i have very grave reservations about this bill.
It seems inevitable to me that the old and the vulnerable will be coerced into ending their lives. Whether by avaricious relatives, or by state officials who are acting out of a monetary motive. I think that Diane Abbott made this point very well yesterday.
Lastly the bill's proposer, Kim Leadbeater, has been extremely unimpressive.
Whether watering down the safeguards of the bill (she started off by making the rather ridiculous statement that High Court judges would have to authorise an assisted death, now she's talking about a "panel of experts") or being unable to engage with the differing viewpoints of others, she has come across very poorly.
But lastly and most importantly I think that just like the 1967 Abortion Act, which made much of it's safeguards, mission creep is inevitable.
We have already seen this in Canada where they have their own assisted dying programme - MAID.
For a quick read of what happens, here's a link.
https://thecritic.co.uk/dark-lessons-from-canada/From the article, a quote from a Canadian doctor.
"When Canada legalised assisted suicide and euthanasia, Canadians believed it was intended to be a rare, last-resort measure, reserved for consenting adults enduring intolerable suffering at the end of life. However, lobbying efforts have steadily pushed for broader access and eligibility … British legislators have to consider how easily assisted dying can be expanded, how easily abuses can go undetected".
Which is my thoughts in a nutshell.