Two relatively healthy autistic women are scheduled to be executed by their respective governments. One in the Netherlands, the first country to legalize so-called euthanasia, and the other in Canada, another northern country that currently accounts for more than 4% of annual deaths. Consequences of state-assisted suicide.
Zoraya ter Beek, a 28-year-old Dutch woman, and a 27-year-old Canadian woman, identified in court documents as MV, were arrested by the state despite not having a terminal or debilitating physical illness. filed for assisted suicide.
Ter Beek’s boyfriend appears to be planning to hold her hand as she jumps to an early grave. Meanwhile, her MV’s father is fighting desperately to wrest her from the clutches of Canada’s suicide policy, which originally planned to kill her on February 1st.
Both cases have led liberal-run countries to expand the provision of state-assisted suicide to those who may not be able to provide informed consent, along with the most vulnerable in the rest of society. This highlights the growing desire to do so.
hang up on the couch
Ter Beek is scheduled to be executed in May. Said She told the Free Press that she wanted to become a psychiatrist but couldn’t follow through with it. The hapless Dutchman blames her failed attempts at a career on her suspected depression, autism, and borderline personality disorder. was.
Despite having a nice house, pets, and a supposedly loving 40-year-old boyfriend, Ta Beek desperately wants the government to wipe her out as she sits on her couch. She appears to have made her mind up when a psychiatrist tells her that despite everything they’ve tried, she’s “not going to get any better.”
“It was always clear to me that if things didn’t get better, I couldn’t do this anymore,” Ter Beek told the Free Press in a text message.
“While the tree of life represents growth and new beginnings, my tree is the opposite. Its leaves are falling and it is dying. And when the tree dies, birds fly away from it. ” Ter Beek wrote. I don’t think it means that my soul leaves, but rather that I release myself from life. ”
Tel Beek set the stage for how she would shed this mortal coil.
“Doctors really take the time to examine you. It’s not like they come in and say, ‘Just lie down!’ Most start with a cup of coffee to calm your nerves and create a soft atmosphere.” ,” Ter Beek writes. “Then she asks me if I’m ready. I sit on the couch. She asks me again if I’m confident, starts the procedure, and wishes me a good journey. Or , in my case, I take naps because I don’t like it when people say “safe travels”. I’m not going anywhere. ”
Ter Beek’s boyfriend, apparently unable to dissuade his lover, will likely stand by until government officials kill her. He then ends up finding a “nice place in the woods” to dispose of Beak’s ashes.
“Dying is a little scary because it’s the ultimate unknown,” Ter Beek said. “We really don’t know what’s going to happen next. Or is it nothing? That’s the scary part.”
fight to save the weak from the regime
MV’s father (identified as WV) has long cared for his daughter, who they live with in Calgary, Alberta.
Despite being relatively healthy and certainly not dying, MV was approved in Canada for what is euphemistically called “medical assistance in dying” (MAID) in December.
Canadian national media report By law, two doctors or two nurses must approve MAID for each patient. MV managed to get approval from one doctor, but was turned down by a second doctor. MV was referred to a so-called “tiebreaker” doctor, who authorized her execution on February 1st.
The day before MV’s scheduled execution, her father successfully obtained a preliminary injunction.
Calgary Herald report Sarah Miller, the father’s lawyer, said in a brief to Justice Colin Feasby of the King’s Bench Court in Alberta that MV “does not support autism or other undiagnosed conditions that do not meet the reliability of MAID. There is a possibility that he is suffering from the disease,” he said.
WV said her daughter is “generally healthy and believes that any physical symptoms she may have are due to an undiagnosed psychological condition.”
Additionally, Feasby’s summary says WV believes her daughter is “vulnerable and incapable of making the decision to take her own life.”
Miller also said there were “real concerns about impartiality” regarding a tied doctor who effectively signed the autistic woman’s death warrant.
“There is no evidence in this court that she has an incurable condition,” Miller added.
Feesby control Late last month, he argued that blocking the woman’s execution would cause her irreparable harm.
“MV’s dignity and right to self-determination outweigh the important issues raised by WV and the harm he would suffer from losing him,” Feasby wrote. “While I find that WV raises serious issues, I conclude that the interests of MV’s autonomy and dignity outweigh any competing considerations.”
Feasby cleared the way for MV’s state-assisted suicide, but still gave WV 30 days to appeal to the Alberta Court of Appeal.
WV used this last opportunity to protect her vulnerable daughter from the state.
Miller filed an appeal on behalf of WV on Tuesday, asking the state’s highest court to reinstate the injunction and force potential victims to answer key questions about their MAID applications. Ta. report National media.
Alex Schadenberg, executive director of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, said: I got it.“Canada’s euthanasia laws were not designed to protect vulnerable people. These laws were designed to protect doctors who are willing to kill.”
culture of death
Blaze News previously detailed the findings of a report released by the Trudeau government last year, which found that by 2022, 4.1 per cent of all deaths nationwide will be due to state-assisted suicide. It has been shown that
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s federal government passed the Medical Assistance in Dying Act in 2016, legalizing euthanasia nationwide. Initially, applicants had to be at least 18 years old and suffer from a “serious and incurable medical condition” causing “unbearable physical or mental suffering.”
Since then, the rules have apparently eased and the country’s Founded by eugenicists A medical system for executing people with PTSD, depression, and anxiety disorders economic hardshipand other viable issues.
MAID claimed the lives of 1,108 Canadians in its first year, but that number jumped to 13,241 in 2022.
In countries where medicine is socialized, an increase in the number of deaths is clearly beneficial to the regime’s bottom line.
The Office of the Parliamentary Budget Officer of Canada states: October 2020 report “Expanding access to MAID will result in a net reduction in state health care costs that would otherwise be spent saving lives and providing taxpayer-paid treatment to humans,” he argued. It would save the state government hundreds of millions of dollars.
In the Netherlands, reportedly Euthanasia cases are also rapidly increasing. The share of physician-assisted suicide in total deaths in the Netherlands increased from less than 2% in 2002 to more than 4% in 2019. has continued to rise in recent years — The number of reported cases will increase from 6,361 in 2019 to 8,720 in 2022.
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