I agree, kimc. Every time this comes up, I am puzzled by the way that so many people seem to miss what - to me, anyway - is the main point of this episode.
It's not supposed to be easy. It's not supposed to be obvious. I am truly and sincerely worried by those viewers who believe whichever answer they favor is clear, easy and ought to be obvious to anyone, because it's not even close to obvious to anyone. I'm sorry, all of you believers in "it's obvious," but no matter how much you'd like to believe otherwise, neither answer is obvious. It's a dilemma. It's is supposed to leave fans arguing about what should or should not have been done. You're supposed to think about things like Tuvok's and Neelix's right to life (deliberate word choice there) versus Tuvix's right to life (ditto) and how irreconcilable those two rights are.
Indeed... that's what you're supposed to do, and of course it's not supposed to be an easy thing to answer..... but an answer exists none the less. The point about all of this is to determine what conclusions each of us would come to. Sure it's supposed to make you think, but it's not that complicated and answers do exists.
I personally don't understand why you worry so much about how fast someone comes to a decision/conclusion as it's far better then just sitting on the fence and doing nothing.
You can't just dictate to people what you think is possible or not, because then you're no better then those you are complaining about silly. It is obvious depending on the information provided, the laws, rules, regulations, rights, etc. that all exist.
Tuvok and Neelix were not technically "Dead" ~ Calling them dead is the easy way out of the situation and it's far from being true because they are both alive in this combined individual. The problem is that this individual believed all his combined throughts, memories, feelings, etc. were his, when they wern't..... they were both Neelix and Tuvok's..... ever single bit of it.
Because there was a method of restoring both Tuvok and Neelix back to their original selves, this wasn't some means of bringing back the dead, but correcting an accident that affected both of their lives..... nothing more.
The ending is supposed to make the viewer think, and it's supposed leave the thoughful viewer feeling confused, ambivalent and maybe even a bit angry.
didn't really do that for me. Of course I sympathized with Tuvix's position, however it was irrelevant and his one opinion on his own rights does not trump the opinions, individual rights and existence of two people (Majority Rules ~ Needs of the Many outweigh the Needs of the Few.)
He went to the teleported, vanished, end of story.... it's not like he suffered.
Pretty cut and dry if you ask me.
Added:
And hypothetically could I have the stomach to be the one to make the decision or push the button?
Sure.
Why?
Because when it comes to a situation of personal rights, emotional bias and one side arguing their rights are more valid then anothers, making a decision based on emotions is not only flawed, but not balanced..... this situation all boils down to numbers that lead me to a mistake that requires correcting in order to ensure the safety of two existing and distinguished crew members, not to ensure the safety of one mutant transporter accident who's only existence begins and ends with everything that made up the other two crew members.
It'd be no more different then trying to uphold the rights of a clone over the rights of the original individual. One is real, the other is not.....
Sure in either situation, a living being will be sacraficed one way or another, thus there's no logic in dilly dallying over the fact that all choices are bad ones...... pick the least worst and move on with your life.