Democrats Who See Life As A Problem See Death As Its Solution
A Canadian fashion company published an ad last month that had nothing to do with fashion. At the end of the advertisement, it turns out the star, 37-year-old Canadian Jennyfer Hatch, is dead.
“Last breaths are sacred. Even though as I seek help to end my life,” she says in the 30-second montage of her final days as if it’s a lucid dream. “With all the pain and in these final moments, there is still so much beauty.”
According to the National Post, a Candian newspaper popular west of Ontario, Hatch was terminally diagnosed with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, a rare and painful condition that compromises connective tissues. She turned to medical assistance in dying (MAID) after she failed to secure medical assistance in living.
“I feel like I’m falling through the cracks so if I’m not able to access health care am I then able to access death care? And that’s what led me to look into MAID,” she told CTV under a pseudonym last year. “It is far easier to let go than keep fighting.”
Canada is now expanding eligibility for assisted suicide, with corporate support. Sheila Gunn Reid, the editor-in-chief of the Canadian newspaper Rebel News, outlined on Fox News last month how Canada has been making it easier to kill people. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government, she said, removed the 10-day wait time between requests for medically assisted death and execution.
“And you don’t have to do it in writing, you can just ask the state to kill you,” Reid said. “And when we say ‘medical assistance in suicide,’ don’t think for a second that that means doctors participating in this. It doesn’t have to be your doctor. It can just be a medical professional. That might be a nurse that is seeing you today for the first time or even a pharmacist.”
This summer, the Canadian government reported more than 10,000 people died by assisted suicide in 2021. Next year, lawmakers are expanding eligibility for assisted suicide to the mentally ill. When the government legalized euthanasia in 2016, it was open only to patients with terminal conditions over 18 years old.
Peter Simons, the company CEO behind the “All is Beauty” campaign, said the company’s ad was about glorifying life and “hope and optimism.” Yeah, right. It was a promotion for people to kill themselves, opening with “the most beautiful exit” and promoted in a nation whose leaders want to make it easier to die. None of Hatch’s efforts to procure treatment were reflected in the corporate ad glorying her death.
Hatch didn’t have to be put down like some dog with a tumor. She just couldn’t find proper care in Canada’s system of medicine where socialism has turned health care it into death care.
“Hatch’s case fits into an ever-expanding constellation of Canadians who want to live, but applied for medically assisted death out of desperation after failed attempts to seek appropriate care,” the National Post reported. “Last year, B.C. woman Donna Duncan
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