UN SLAMS Canada – Death Policy!

Canada’s “death on demand” program is under international fire as the UN slams the country’s euthanasia policy that offers death to people who simply aren’t ready to die yet.
At a Glance
- The UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities is demanding Canada repeal its 2021 euthanasia expansion to non-terminally ill people
- In 2022, 13,241 Canadians died by MAID (Medical Assistance in Dying), a shocking 31.2% increase from 2021
- Canada’s euthanasia program is now the 6th highest cause of death in the country, accounting for 4.1% of all deaths
- Critics argue the program disproportionately targets disabled and poor individuals, with reports of patients being repeatedly offered death instead of proper care
- The government plans further expansion of the program to include mental illness by 2027 despite growing international condemnation
Canada’s Death Factory Gets International Pushback
Well, what do you know? It turns out even the United Nations thinks Canada’s enthusiastic embrace of state-sponsored death has gone too far. The UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities is now pushing back against Canada’s 2021 modification of its Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID) policy, which expanded eligibility to include people who aren’t even terminally ill. Let that sink in. The Canadian government is now offering to help end the lives of citizens whose only crime is having a disability or chronic illness that makes life challenging. This isn’t healthcare – it’s a disposal service for people the system finds inconvenient.
A Two-Track System to Death’s Door
Canada’s euthanasia program operates on a two-track system that would make even the most ardent death enthusiast blush. Track 1 is for people with a “reasonably foreseeable” death – what most people might consider the intended purpose of such laws. But Track 2? That’s the innovation here – it’s for people who aren’t dying but have some physical disability or chronic condition. The UN committee is particularly concerned about this Track 2 MAID, which effectively sends the message that having a disability is a fate worse than death. It’s social engineering disguised as compassion, and even the globalists at the UN can see right through it.
“The UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities has warned against Canada’s euthanasia program, urging the repeal of legislation that allows the killing of non-terminally ill individuals.” said UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.
Death: The Government’s New Cost-Saving Measure
The numbers are staggering and should terrify anyone who believes in human dignity. In 2022 alone, 13,241 Canadians were euthanized under this program – a 31.2% increase from the previous year. That’s 4.1% of all deaths in Canada now coming through government-sanctioned suicide. Instead of investing in better healthcare, housing, or mental health support, Canada has discovered that killing citizens is much more cost-effective. And wouldn’t you know it, the people most likely to be pushed toward this “option” are those with disabilities and those from marginalized or low-income backgrounds. Nothing says “progressive values” quite like helping the poor and disabled check out early.
“I felt like a problem that needed to be [gotten] rid of instead of a patient in need of treatment. I don’t want to be asked if I want to die.” said a Nova Scotia grandmother.
Coming Soon: Death for Depression
As if the current situation weren’t dystopian enough, Canada plans to expand this program even further by 2027 to include people with mental illness. Having a bad day? Feeling depressed? Don’t worry, the Canadian government will soon offer to put you out of your misery permanently! The UN committee has specifically recommended against this planned expansion, but why would Canada listen now? They’ve already established that some lives aren’t worth living. The slope isn’t just slippery; it’s a vertical drop into a dark abyss of state-sanctioned eugenics dressed up as healthcare and compassion.
“Eligibility for euthanasia on the basis of disability endangers and devalues the lives of disabled Canadians.” according to EFC’s brief.
The True Face of “Compassionate” Liberalism
This is the endgame of leftist “compassion” – a system where the government decides whose life has value and whose doesn’t. There are numerous reports of Canadians being repeatedly offered euthanasia instead of proper medical care. One Nova Scotia grandmother reported feeling “like a problem that needed to be gotten rid of.” When a disabled person can’t get adequate healthcare but can get a lethal injection on demand, we’ve crossed a moral line that no society should approach. This isn’t about choice or dignity; it’s about a government that finds certain citizens too expensive or inconvenient to care for properly.
“The UN is clear that our country must do better in upholding the rights and dignity of persons with disabilities” said Krista Carr.
The Constitutional Right to Life
The UN committee’s recommendations include repealing Track 2, halting any further expansions, and affirming the fundamental right to life for people with disabilities. They suggest investing in poverty alleviation, housing, and healthcare instead of killing those who need these services. What a novel concept – helping people live better lives rather than helping them die! The Evangelical Fellowship of Canada and numerous disability rights organizations support these recommendations, but Trudeau’s government seems more committed to their culture of death than to constitutional protections for the most vulnerable. This is no longer about end-of-life care; it’s about ending lives the state finds burdensome.