Looks Like Medical Suicide Isn’t Canada’s Only Organ Harvesting Scheme

by
Steve MacDonald

Garnet Harper couldn’t get a doctor or hospital in Canada to perform a much-needed kidney transplant because he hadn’t received any vaccinations for COVID-19. He had viable donors, but Canadian Health Care™ policy prohibits transplants for the unvaccinated. He died at the age of thirty-five.

Related: Canadian “Coloring Book” Normalizes Assisted Suicide for Children

 

In February 2022, Garnet was diagnosed with stage five kidney disease. Two of Garnet’s brothers offered to donate their kidneys, but the hospital refused to consider them as Garnet would not disclose his vaccination status. 

Canada’s current public healthcare policy denies organ transplants to those who have not received at least two doses of the experimental COVID vaccine.   

As a result, on May 22, 2023, 35-year-old Garnet died of a bleeding stroke during his sleep, leaving behind his wife and five children. 

 

Someone in the Canadian Health Care™ system, knowing that Harper would soon shuffle off his mortal coil,  must have contacted a local organ donation agency.

 

In May, Trillium Gift of Life Network (TGLN), the Ontario organ donation agency, called Meghan Harper to harvest her husband Garnet’s organs as he lay dying because the hospital refused to provide organ transplants to unvaccinated Canadians.  

“They call you while you’re sitting next to your dying loved one and they ask you if they can have his organs,” Megan told independent journalist Monique Leal. 

 

TGLN was unaware of the patient’s medical status. They didn’t know he was denied a transplant, or so the story goes. Whoever had denied him one, or some bureaucratic Canadian Health Care™ flunky, didn’t bother to inform the donation agency, the result of which is this rather curious set of circumstances.

Connor Harper, unvaccinated, age 35, a married father of five, is ineligible to receive a transplant, but his unvaccinated organs would be a great gift to someone else once he dies. The news has resulted in a nationwide call to Canadians to refuse to donate their organs.

Pastor Henry Hildebrandt had some questions about discrimination of this nature. What’s next, he asks, denying Christians? It sounds absurd, but during COVID, Christians were denied their right to assemble while BLM and Antifa were praised for gathering to burn down black neighborhoods.

 

 

A general call to change your organ donor status might work. Cut short and already typically inadequate supply. But this is The People’s Republic of Canada. They’ve got an organ donor program already. It’s called Medical Assitance in Dying (MAiD). With a tweak of the rules and a wink and a nod from the government, a growing bureaucratic army of caregivers will sweep out across the countryside to convince the disadvantaged and mentally deficient (definitions that broaden based on political priority or need) to give up their lives for the good of the corrupt banana republic Canada.

That’s me being cynical. I’d like to think that we’re past all the nonsense, but governments do not give up on schemes that marshall control. And while ours was created to protect rights, even it has managed, in a few short centuries, to flip that experiment on its head, mostly by using its institutions to convince people it knows better.

The COVID response was proof it does not, but not everyone or enough of anyone is convinced. In the Great White North, they are killing people, which, as Ontario MPP Randy Hiller notes, is “Only the tip of the iceberg … Our governments are and have been engaged in social murder. Unfortunately, many people believe recognizing these facts and speaking out is more dangerous than becoming the inevitable next victim.

 

 

Author

  • Steve MacDonald

    Steve is a long-time New Hampshire resident, blogger, and a member of the Board of directors of The 603 Alliance. He is the owner of Grok Media LLC and the Managing Editor of GraniteGrok.com, a former board member of the Republican Liberty Caucus of New Hampshire, and a past contributor to the Franklin Center for Public Policy.

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