kmar has the nail on the head here. if madoff's son had anything like serious clinical depression then i honestly find it impossible to join in the usual crowd crying out 'coward!' and 'weak way out!' depression just isn't properly recognized by most, it seems, as a seriously debilitating mental illness; there still seems to be a lot of stigma, or perhaps the every-day use of the term as a misnomer has 'cheapened' its real classification. clinical depression is an all-consuming - and literally exhausting - experience. it's an impossible hill to climb even when you're taking it on as an entirely personal matter, with all your family/friends supporting you. for this guy? in the public eye? shamed and scandalized? with his father locked away for life? i can't imagine how it must feel dealing with a very-public and very-serious case of depression where nobody is there to put a supportive hand on your shoulder; in a way it's almost as if the media and the public demanded this tragic waste of life, as some form of arbitrary moral 'revenge' for his dad's ponzi scheme. it's a shame but it's practically true: it's the same sort of media-driven crowd-justice frenzy that you get with other celebrity culture, such as the self-satisfying and destructive harassment of stars like britney spears as they have their embarrassing public meltdowns. we demand it, in an odd way... and then only after do we finally say: "it's a shame, that".
as for people arguing that suicide is rational... in the tradition of rational, philosophical thought, i quote my favourite: "there is but one truly serious philosophical problem and that is suicide" said albert camus. and he was working within an existentialist/absurdist tradition that accepted the utter meaninglessness - and indeed, the banal absurdity - of human existence. suicide is an ultimate problem with no firm answer in any philosophical school of thought-- even those so nihilist and existentialist that they reject all forms of rational optimism. i don't think i could ever contemplate suicide in a mental state that isn't considered, at least by a textbook, as 'depressed'. you have to be eaten up in that downward spiral of ego-disintegration to even entertain the idea of terminating your own morality.
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual.
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