Slippery Meet Slope: Another COVID Vaxx Injured Canadian Gets Suicided

by
Steve MacDonald

The Can in Canada looks increasingly like, “Can we find a reason to kill you?” and “What hoops are here to jump through so we can?” It’s not a new problem. The Grok has followed Canada’s ride down the slippery slope for a number of years. A path littered with bodies as assisted suicides rise annually to meet what can only be called clean up.

It is a system draped in compassionate wolf’s clothing disguised as health care to address the “needs” of those who might be in terminal or incurable conditions. And while the law” requires people to have a grievous and irremediable physical condition,” what is that, and who decides? It is whatever the government says it is, and it is the people who decide—the slippery slope.

There is no condition that couldn’t become a reason to relieve Canada of its burden. Addiction, depression, poverty, chronic illness, injury (disablement), birth defects, mental illness, suicidal ideation, and even vaccine injuries. Canadian Doctors suggested MAiD to Kayla Pollock after her Pfizer jabs paralyzed her. She was comorbid, and “They” would not allow her to visit her father in long-term care without the juice, so she rolled up her sleeve. Four days after her second dose, her legs stopped working—tumor on the spine.

Kayla’s doctor believed it was the vaccine because many people have had similar conditions.

One of the cures for everything that ailed her, according to experts, was medically assisted death.

Related: Slippery Slope: Assisted Suicide Will Always Be Cheaper Than Treatment

We don’t know how many vaccine-injured there are or who were counseled (in Canada) to shuffle off their mortal coil, but a recent review by Canada’s Ministry of Death (they call it the MAID death review committee) found at least one successful case.

Identified as “Mr. A,” the man experienced “suffering and functional decline” following three vaccinations for SARS-CoV-2. He also suffered from depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety and personality disorders, and, “while navigating his physical symptoms,” was twice admitted to hospital, once involuntarily, with thoughts of suicide.

“Amongst his multiple specialists, no unifying diagnosis was confirmed,” according to the report. However, his MAID assessors “opined that the most reasonable diagnosis for Mr. A’s clinical presentation (severe functional decline) was a post-vaccine syndrome, in keeping with chronic fatigue syndrome.”

While the panel is not convinced that Post-Vaccine Syndrome is incurable, it is officially (more or less) a recognized condition that will increasingly be justification for euthanasia. They represent a significant fiscal and social cost to the State it must now balance against the needs of others across. Victims of policy whose burden might be relieved thanks to MAiD.

The government doesn’t care if you want to live or feel you have value or are valued by others. And a government with permission to kill anyone it can convince needs to die will take the short road. The experts – doctors, therapists, ministers, will convince people they’d be better off dead.

The majority will be middle- and lower-income citizens, many of whose circumstances result from state meddling, influence, or misinformation (as in the case of the COVID-19 inoculation). This opens a world of possibilities to social engineers who happen to be of the same ilk. Increase misery and wait for the undesirables to volunteer to die.

It is a depopulationists dream come true.

One more step to the left and a few grants for corroborating research and disagreeing with the government becomes a recognized mental disorder. I hope I don’t have to paint the rest of that picture.

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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