49 Replies to “But It’s Only a Hangnail?”

    1. Carousel !!!

      They’ll start using lasers to kill off the un-wanted.
      Even charge admission. Make a wonderful public spectacle of it.

  1. Went through this with my 64 year old dad in the Hospital. They kept recommending he die. We told them no. They stopped providing adequate care until he died.

    I hate every doctor and health bureaucrat. They’re all murderers. I will never forgive any of them and I hope their jabs kill them faster.

    1. Hospitals have always been places of death, infection, incompetence, malice, and interference. My mother at the age of 89 went in for a head injury and had to stay a few nights. She was absolutely terrified of being alone in that place. So siblings all took turns, and had a 24 hour watch until she was released. I thought back then she was over reacting, but experience has taught me to agree with her sentiments.

    2. I hate repeating myself, but here we go. First they make it legal then they make it mandatory.

      1. Then the suicide vending booths come.
        As easy as taking a picture, like the old picture booths.

  2. That needs to change immediately. I support those who wish to end their life, but not this.

    1. All of this “end of life” nonsense is killing the sick and elderly.

      “Think of the money it will save!” cry the bleaters who claim that the American system is only one of profit.

      1. Well … just keep raising the sin tax aka the carbon tax to pay for your socialized medicine … and the problem will solve itself as the weak, old, and sickly simply freeze to death. Pre-frozen corpses for the coroners office.

    2. First it was benign neglect, while you are stuck on a waiting list for care (or a waiting list to get on the waiting list of a specialist)
      then it was malignant neglect, where they push Medically Induced Death and withhold care until you accept it

      eventually it will become mandatory.

      /”logans run” is not an instruction manual

    3. As I recall, Allan S, we did warn you that this would be coming. You laughed and said it would never happen, but here we are.

      They’re now killing people with depression as their main diagnosis. Did you know that? But they -won’t- give permission to try -legal- alternative treatments like psilocybin or MDMA for depression. Not that they won’t pay for it mind you, they forbid their use. Won’t issue permission. People have to go to the black market. And they do, of course, with the expected mixed results. You don’t really expect pharmaceutical-grade from the neighborhood crack dealer.

      I’m not saying that magic mushrooms and molly are going to be the magic cure for depression. I -am- saying that even at their worst, they’d still be better than murdering the patient. At least have a go, right?

      But here we are.

    1. If Canadians know how to do anything, it’s protect a system for the sake of protecting a system, no matter how unfair or inadequate.

    1. That’s a tough one, reading what his daughter was going through, even given a short predicted life span, in constant agony, with no positive outcome..
      I’m sure he thinks about it every day and may beg God’s forgiveness, for what he believes he did to end her suffering..
      I would not want to be called a hero..

      All that came after, is the slippery slope we now are faced with.

      Condolences to Morocco Mole and his father for having to endure our medical system. It used to be “Canada has the best medical system in the world, if you can survive the wait times!” Now it is not even that!

    2. I fully supported Mr. Latimer then, and still do. YOU, Mike, were never in his shoes, nor his daughters. When you’ve had to deal with his circumstances, I’ll listen to you. Until then…

      1. Oh, do cram it.

        Imagine not being able to breathe because your dad is slowly asphyxiating you.

        Imagine THAT pain.

    3. I think that is very unfair. In the Larimer case, the doctors were negligent not providing proper pain medication for his child. You would not let an animal suffer like that. Latimer was a farmer. I totally understand and sympathize to with his decision. He was willing to pay a price for his decision, and he did. Some anonymous medical bureaucrat pushing MAID on people is a totally different situation, and unforgivable.

      1. When did Tracy ask to be offed? Any home video broadcast on the news showed her smiling at the camera. Who made Latimer God to decide who gets put down?

        We are not farm animals. Furthermore those people that love to put invalid people down are the same keeping animals alive long past the point of cruelty.

      2. No, he was tired of looking after her.

        There were plenty of advocates he could have turned to for help.

  3. How is Paul Bernardo doing these days ?

    State sanctioned “Capitol Punishment” is “unconstitutional”, but State sanctioned eugenics is a “Constitutional right”… sounds legit.

  4. Canada picking up where Dr Karl Brandt left off…! Aktion T4 euthanasia program…

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Brandt

    So when do canadian doctors take the SS runes off their lapels, and they get the hanging that is their just “reward”?

    No wonder the old man Trudeau rode around with a german picklehaube during WWII…he was obviously stumping for this ‘end result’.

    Cheers

    Hans Rupprecht, Commander in Chief

    1st St Nicolaas Army
    Army Group “True North”

  5. “You know Doc, now that you bring it up, you don’t look that good yourself. I’ll maybe recommend that treatment for you too.”

  6. I support death with dignity for terminal illnesses, as long as the person is of sound mind. The Trudeau government’s MAID policy is exploitive, imo. There’s not much worse than manipulating someone during their weakest moments. Our current federal government corrupts everything they touch. Trudeau and his MPs fit the description of this book:

    Snakes in Suits: When Psychopaths Go to Work is a 2006 non-fiction book by industrial psychologist Paul Babiak and criminal psychologist Robert D. Hare.

    I had a manager who was a real piece of work. After numerous complaints about this guy, therapist that the company hired to handle personnel issues said that, in his opinion, the manager was a classic example of this book. A psychopath in the corner office. I would bet that they are pretty common in the political class, too.

    1. There is is no death with dignity.

      There is killing off what the government calls dead weight.

      1. I prefer to do it my way as Old Blue Eyes used to sing.

        If I gotta go , I’d like to contribute to the benefit of mankind by taking a WEF cult member with me.

  7. That’s why they paid The big bucks. You don’t pay off student loans if your clients don’t come back. Not the patients.

  8. When they proposed it for New South Wales, I e-mailed the relevant pollies re my opposition to the scam, explaining that it would quickly morph from ‘assisted dying’ (how beautifully put) to ‘insisted dying’… It’s now law here, and I felt like saying to them, “You first…”.

  9. “Looks like you have the start of a sinus infection. Have you considered medically assisted suicide?”

  10. Didn’t the Inuit expect their old people to go out and lie down in the snow?

    I expect the Greta Tunberg’s of the world to strongly (forcibly?) encourage anyone over 60 to choose MAiD

  11. Ah, good, that explains this conversation I had with my doctor:

    DOC _ And you’re vaccinated of course?

    MOI _ You mean injected? No, I want my immune system to work in 2024.

    DOC _ Why don’t you drop dead?

  12. House call to Rideau Cottage. Patient is suffering of terminally stupidity. Required to put him out of our misery.

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