[-] pm_me_your_innie@lemmynsfw.com 3 points 2 weeks ago

A body that would otherwise survive (at least for the near future) and we are artificially ending it.

Just because the body can keep going doesn't mean it's a worthwhile life. Imagine yourself lying in a hospital, conscious but unable to move, unable to speak coherently, unable to even control your bowels. Add unending pain to the mix. What life is that? You would condemn a person in that state to perpetual torture just because ending their suffering "feels wrong" to you? Forcing that person to continue living if they don't want to feels a lot more wrong to me.

  1. people who are depressed or in some sort of chronic pain who otherwise could live a full life

These are medical problems that should obviously be treated medically as a first resort. But a lot of those situations have no solution and a full life is not possible. Chronic pain, even when it wont kill you, is incredibly damaging to the psyche and limiting to one's quality of life. Depression isn't just someone feeling sad - it's a physiological condition that there might be no recovering from. If someone (in cooperation with medical professionals) determines that there will never be a significant improvement to their quality of life, who are you to tell them they can't end it?

To me, it feels like we’re throwing away their human dignity in the name of individualism.

Dying with dignity is the main goal of medically assisted death. There is no dignity in living months or years wishing, pleading, praying for death but not dying, or worse: being kept alive against your will.

[-] pm_me_your_innie@lemmynsfw.com 10 points 2 weeks ago

But I think human life is something sacred and that we all have a duty to ourselves and to each other to live for as long as we can.

Why does length even come into it? This may be an argument from absurdity, but imagine someone born with such a debilitating birth defect that the only way to keep them alive beyond a few minutes is by putting them in a machine that keeps them alive. They have a fully functioning brain but are fully encased in this machine and only experience darkness and pain. At what point does their life become meaningful? 50 years? 80? If doctors can keep them alive for 2000 years, is that life better or worse than if they died after 6 minutes?

What I am getting at is that the length of the life has very little to do with its quality. And when it comes to medically assisted dying, almost nothing to do with it as people have to be over 18 with demonstrably low quality of life.

I’m scared that this will eventually de-stigmatize suicide.

Why is that a problem? Like, our first priority should be providing good healthcare (and that includes mental healthcare), but if someone doesn't want to live anymore, why is it anyone's business but their own? That sounds to me like the most important of human freedoms. Being kept alive against one's will seems like the most horrible, criminal, torture.

We call it “self-assisted euthanasia” but this is essentially legalizing companies to assist in suicides.

And what do companies have to do with it? Companies don't come into it at all in MAID.

Masterwork, a photo of Little Red Riding Hood, young, ((sexy)), small breasts, pale skin, (realistic face, perfect eyes, perfect face:1.1), standing in a dark forest with a wolf ((hiding)) in the background, extremely high quality RAW photograph, detailed background, intricate, Exquisite details and textures, highly detailed, ultra detailed photograph, warm lighting, 4k, sharp focus, high resolution, film grain

Negative prompt: bad art, ugly face, messed up face, poorly drawn hands, bad hands, photoshop, doll, plastic_doll, silicone, anime, cartoon, fake, filter, airbrush, 3d max, infant, featureless, colourless, impassive, shaders, EasyNegative

Steps: 64, Sampler: DPM++ SDE Karras, CFG scale: 7, Seed: 1938658715, Face restoration: CodeFormer, Size: 900x900, Model hash: 6fae47d4e2, Model: lazymixRealAmateur_v30a

Thanks! Nope, just played with the prompt a bit and that popped out.

The AI model added wolves in a lot of the images it created for this prompt, but I ended up not liking any of those ones. So I took this image, ran it through img2img, and added this wolf.

(realistic:1.3), finely detailed, (masterpiece:1.2), (photorealistic:1.2), (best quality), (blonde), perfect skin, (intricate details), ((pussy)), hands on hips, looking up into the sky, legs spread, bottomless, no panties, superhero skirt, powerful expression, view from below, Negative prompt: EasyNegative, drawn by bad-artist, sketch by bad-artist-anime, (bad_prompt:0.8), (artist name, signature, watermark:1.4), (ugly:1.2), (panties), (underwear), (worst quality, poor details:1.4), bad-hands-5, badhandv4, blurry, tattoo, piercing, deformed feet, deformed hands, ((huge breasts)), pubic hair Steps: 64, Sampler: Euler a, CFG scale: 7.5, Seed: 3851122489, Size: 600x1000, Model hash: 42604b475b, Model: animesh_FullV21, Clip skip: 2

This prompt generated a ton of really good costumes, this image just happened to be closest to what I was aiming for with the least problems.

[-] pm_me_your_innie@lemmynsfw.com 6 points 2 years ago

LazyMix+ model

Prompt was something like: Masterwork, ((a photo from the r/Amateur and r/RealGirls and r/Pussy subreddit)) with (film grain) of a nude (young:0.9) girl with perfect breasts and poofy hair, , (realistic face, perfect eyes, perfect face:1.1), brown hair [[goth makeup]], winged eyeliner, wearing a choker, relaxing on a couch, legs open, showcasing pussy, sweaty skin, smirking at viewer in a comfortable bedroom, pink walls, amateur, medium quality, shot on iPhone, reddit

Negative Promp: bad art, ugly face, messed up face, poorly drawn hands, bad hands, professional photo shoot, makeup, photoshop, doll, plastic_doll, silicone, anime, cartoon, fake, filter, airbrush, 3d max, infant, featureless, colourless, impassive, shaders,

DPM++ SDE Karras ~50 sampling steps CFG scale 8

I played around with a lot of things for this one, but that should be close.

view more: next ›

pm_me_your_innie

joined 2 years ago