Canada’s radical euthanasia program has exploded at such a pace that the government is now struggling to find enough doctors willing to carry it “assisted suicide.”
The Canadian government’s eugenics program is officially called Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD).
What began in 2016 as a “compassionate” measure for the terminally ill has morphed into one of the most permissive assisted-death regimes on Earth.
MAiD now accounts for one in every 20 deaths in Canada, surpassing fatalities from Alzheimer’s and diabetes combined.
However, the program shows no sign of slowing down as it’s only rapidly expanding.
Soon, MAiD will also include people suffering only from mental illness.
Disturbingly, the Canadian Parliament has floated plans to begin euthanizing minors.
Initially limited to those near death, Canada’s MAiD law has been widened to cover anyone with a “grievous and irremediable” medical condition.
The language is so broad that doctors have euthanized patients who weren’t dying at all.
People are now being killed for homelessness, depression, and even hearing loss.
Some practitioners have performed hundreds of assisted deaths.
Patient “autonomy” is the justification, framed in the progressive language of equality, access, and compassion.
But critics warn that the program’s rapid growth is blurring the line between voluntary choice and societal pressure. In some tragic cases, Canadians have sought euthanasia simply because they couldn’t afford treatment or disability support.
The demand for assisted death has now reportedly outstripped the supply of clinicians trained and willing to provide it.
Doctors are warning that they can’t keep up with the number of citizens they are expected to euthanize.
Some doctors who embraced MAiD from the start have essentially turned it into a specialty, one that keeps them in constant demand.
Without enough practitioners, patients seeking to end their lives face delays, and advocacy groups are pressuring the government to expand the training pipeline.
This is creating a disturbing paradox as Canada’s healthcare system is struggling to treat the sick, but mobilizing resources to ensure they can die more quickly.
As such, the Canadian government is easing pressure on the socialized healthcare system by killing patients instead of treating them.
At the same time, medical professionals who decided early on to reorient their career toward assisted death no longer feel compelled to tiptoe around the full, energetic extent of their devotion to MAID.
Some clinicians in Canada have euthanized hundreds of patients.
Alarming, some doctors are even boasting about the number of people they have euthanized.
Canada’s MAID expansion has triggered ethical alarm bells worldwide.
Opponents say it’s proof of the classic slippery slope.
The program is moving from terminal illness, to chronic conditions, to mental illness and soon to minors.
In the meantime, the human toll keeps climbing.
Families and faith leaders warn that the system risks normalizing death as a solution to suffering, or even inconvenience, in ways that echo the darkest chapters of history.
As the country barrels ahead, one uncomfortable fact stands out: the euthanasia industry in Canada is growing faster than the ability to staff it.
That’s not compassion; that’s a machine that can’t slow down.
READ MORE – Canada Moves to Begin Euthanizing Children Without Parental Consent
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