Why is Canada euthanising the poor?

There is an endlessly repeated witticism by the poet Anatole France that ‘the law, in its majestic equality, forbids the rich as well as the poor to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal bread.’ What France certainly did not foresee is that an entire country – and an ostentatiously progressive one at that – has decided to take his sarcasm at face value and to its natural conclusion.
Since last year, Canadian law, in all its majesty, has allowed both the rich as well as the poor to kill themselves if they are too poor to continue living with dignity. In fact, the ever-generous Canadian state will even pay for their deaths. What it will not do is spend money to allow them to live instead of killing themselves.
As with most slippery slopes, it all began with a strongly worded denial that it exists. In 2015, the Supreme Court of Canada reversed 22 years of its own jurisprudence by striking down the country’s ban on assisted suicide as unconstitutional, blithely dismissing fears that the ruling would ‘initiate a descent down a slippery slope into homicide’ against the vulnerable as founded on ‘anecdotal examples’. The next year, Parliament duly enacted legislation allowing euthanasia, but only for those who suffer from a terminal illness whose natural death was ‘reasonably foreseeable’.
It only took five years for the proverbial slope to come into view, when the Canadian parliament enacted Bill C-7, a sweeping euthanasia law which repealed the ‘reasonably foreseeable’ requirement – and the requirement that the condition should be ‘terminal’. Now, as long as someone is suffering from an illness or disability which ‘cannot be relieved under conditions that you consider acceptable’, they can take advantage of what is now known euphemistically as ‘medical assistance in dying’ (MAID for short) for free.
Soon enough, Canadians from across the country discovered that although they would otherwise prefer to live, they were too poor to improve their conditions to a degree which was acceptable.
Not coincidentally, Canada has some of the lowest social care spending of any industrialised country, palliative care is only accessible to a minority, and waiting times in the public healthcare sector can be unbearable, to the point where the same Supreme Court which legalised euthanasia declared those waiting times to be a violation of the right to life back in 2005.

Many in the healthcare sector came to the same conclusion. Even before Bill C-7 was enacted, reports of abuse were rife. A man with a neurodegenerative disease testified to Parliament that nurses and a medical ethicist at a hospital tried to coerce him into killing himself by threatening to bankrupt him with extra costs or by kicking him out of the hospital, and by withholding water from him for 20 days. Virtually every disability rights group in the country opposed the new law. To no effect: for once, the government found it convenient to ignore these otherwise impeccably progressive groups.
Since then, things have only gotten worse. A woman in Ontario was forced into euthanasia because her housing benefits did not allow her to get better housing which didn’t aggravate her crippling allergies. Another disabled woman applied to die because she ‘simply cannot afford to keep on living’. Another sought euthanasia because Covid-related debt left her unable to pay for the treatment which kept her chronic pain bearable – under the present government, disabled Canadians got $600 in additional financial assistance during Covid; university students got $5,000.
When the family of a 35-year-old disabled man who resorted to euthanasia arrived at the care home where he lived, they encountered ‘urine on the floor… spots where there was feces on the floor… spots where your feet were just sticking. Like, if you stood at his bedside and when you went to walk away, your foot was literally stuck.’ According to the Canadian government, the assisted suicide law is about ‘prioritis[ing] the individual autonomy of Canadians’; one may wonder how much autonomy a disabled man lying in his own filth had in weighing death over life.
Despite the Canadian government’s insistence that assisted suicide is all about individual autonomy, it has also kept an eye on its fiscal advantages. Even before Bill C-7 entered into force, the country’s Parliamentary Budget Officer published a report about the cost savings it would create: whereas the old MAID regime saved $86.9 million per year – a ‘net cost reduction’, in the sterile words of the report – Bill C-7 would create additional net savings of $62 million per year. Healthcare, particular for those suffering from chronic conditions, is expensive; but assisted suicide only costs the taxpayer $2,327 per ‘case’. And, of course, those who have to rely wholly on government-provided Medicare pose a far greater burden on the exchequer than those who have savings or private insurance.
And yet Canada’s lavishly subsidised media, with some honourable exceptions, has expressed remarkably little curiosity about the open social murder of citizens in one of the world’s wealthiest countries. Perhaps, like many doctors, journalists are afraid of being accused of being ‘unprogressive’ for questioning the new culture of death, a fatal accusation in polite circles. Canada’s public broadcaster, which in 2020 reassured Canadians that there was ‘no link between poverty, choosing medically assisted death’, has had little to say about any of the subsequent developments.
Next year, the floodgates will open even further when those suffering from mental illness – another disproportionately poor group – become eligible for assisted suicide, although enthusiastic doctors and nurses have already pre-empted the law. There is already talk of allowing ‘mature minors’ access to euthanasia too – just think of the lifetime savings. But remember, slippery slopes are always a fallacy.

WRITTEN BYYuan Yi Zhu

source: https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/why-is-canada-euthanising-the-poor-
archive: https://archive.ph/AiuTQ
 
What do you mean, there's a way to make people pay taxes 65 years expecting at least to benefit from our welfare system for 10 years, only for us to make a bogus diagnosis and euthanaise them?

Orwell tried to warn us about this kind of thing in Animal Farm, in the character of Boxer, a loyal horse who did most of the work at the farm only to be shipped off to the glue factory by the pigs once he was too weak to work.
 
At some point, in any system of healthcare, there's going to be a decision regarding resources that essentially ends as a choice over who lives and who dies. Ain't no belief system that can change that.

What we can do is try to avoid perverse incentives that would do things like encourage suicide to conserve resources or get people selling their organs.
 
thats not the issue. The issue is private business or government forcing people into killing themselves because its cost effective for them.
Exactly. The other places like Holland, the Netherlands, wherever they initially accepted euthanasia 'only' for the terminally ill with 6 months or less left to live, have reliably reduced restrictions and added in more groups who are 'eligable' for euthanasia. Now you don't have to be dying from a terminal disease, you just have to be miserable. Involuntary euthanasia is a known and feared thing among patients in those places, if a doctor deems you 'suffering' then s/he can prescribe a lethal amount of medication without your knowledge or consent. It's illegal, but it doesn't stop them from doing it.

Edit, for those who think euthanasia only applies to Canada, Physician-assisted suicide is legal in ten US states and the District of Columbia. It is an option given to individuals by law in Colorado, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, Maine, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Vermont and Washington. It is an option given to individuals in Montana and California via court decision.
 
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People who want to die because of neurodegenerative diseases are offered assisted suicide, yet people who want to die because they are not women are merely given a castration?

Well to be fair the trannies are mentally ill and killing them might be going a tad far.
 
Toronto, 2025
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New advert for maple nigger eugenics service dropped and it's like something out of a dystopia movie
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Also note the lack of diversity.
Imagine even having your fucking suicide turned into a saccharine advertisement for a corporate product.

Truly we have lived to see man-made horrors beyond our comprehension.
 
Just further validation that many progressives are fascists with a guilt complex.
It's another case of the road to hell being paved with good intentions. Originally it was about giving people who agonising terminal tumours a more pleasant way out, but then somehow got extended to euthanising people who're just depressed.

I think it's safe to say that they proved the slippery slope right in that it's too difficult to define "terminal" and thus end up with completely healthy people getting euthanised or people getting pressured into it by others which is why it's a bad idea for the government to legalise services like this.
 
>Import a shitton of people
>Locals and shitton of people have difficulty finding work.
>Rent prices, land prices and overall prices increase while keeping wages low
>Have Universal Health Care
>Gets stressed because of large amounts of people who are unable to pay for shit
>Can't walk back policy or else you get self-owned
>Compensate for the policy by encouraging people to kill themselves


I dunno. Its a mystery.

It's another case of the road to hell being paved with good intentions. Originally it was about giving people who agonising terminal tumours a more pleasant way out, but then somehow got extended to euthanising people who're just depressed.

I think it's safe to say that they proved the slippery slope right in that it's too difficult to define "terminal" and thus end up with completely healthy people getting euthanised or people getting pressured into it by others which is why it's a bad idea for the government to legalise services like this.

But... muh Climate! I'm certain that's how they'll excuse it.

Funny enough, that was also the logic of the Aztec empire when they were sacrificing people. The creepy part is that many of the sacrifices see it as a great honor to go through the sacrifice. And when the conquistadors showed up and stopped the whole thing, the sacrifices were distressed at the fact they couldn't do it. And the whole reason the sacrifices even happened in the first place was the belief that the ancient Gods that controlled the earth needed someone to die in a certain way to keep existence going. Funny how history repeats.
 
The soviets had a special diagnosis of ‘sluggish schizophrenia.’ It’s not a real thing of course, but you could diagnose anyone inconvenient with it, and lock them up for life, suicide them or drug them into vegetablehood.
This feels rather similar. Also everyone in that advert is white. Find me another prime time and from Canada in the last six months that’s all white.
 
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