'Post-Christian social ethics': Alarming number of young Canadians think the poor and mentally ill should be eligible for voluntary extermination by the state



Canada is one of several Western nations rushing to loosen the laws around euthanasia. While its expansion of access to voluntary extermination by the state can be attributed in part to a concerted campaign in recent years by the leftist Trudeau government, it is clear that a significant portion of the population is also on board.

A new survey from the Vancouver-based market research outfit Research Co. has found that 73% of Canadians support the current euthanasia regime in Canada, whereby adults with an irremediable medical condition can consent to be put down by the state. However, a significant cohort of younger respondents indicated a keenness to radically expand the option to the poor and the homeless.

Mario Canseco, president of Research Co., indicated that on the basis of a poll conducted from April 22 to April 24 among 1,000 adults:

  • 43% said mental illness is a good enough reason for a Canadian over the age of 18 to seek state-assisted suicide;
  • 20% said state-assisted suicide should always be allowed;
  • 24% said parents who helped off their terminally ill son or daughter should receive no penalty whatsoever;
  • 50% said they would support the volunteered extermination of persons with disabilities;
  • 28% said they would agree to allow adults to receive state-assisted suicide due to poverty; and
  • 27% said they would agree to allow adults to receive state-assisted suicide due to homelessness.

The responses varied greatly by generational cohort.

\u201cNew Canadian survey on attitudes to euthanasia. 27% think people should have access to euthanasia because of poverty (41% among the 18-34). 28% for homelessness, 43% for mental illness, and 50% for being disabled (60% among the 18-34).\u201d
— Yuan Yi Zhu (@Yuan Yi Zhu) 1683511767

Younger Canadians more than happy to thin the herd

60% of respondents in the 18-34 age group said that a person with a disability should be able to request a state-administered suicide. By way of comparison, 46% of respondents in the 35-54 age group and 44% of those in the 55+ age group suggested that the disabled should be eligible for voluntary extermination.

41% of those in the 18-34 age group answered that homelessness was a good enough reason for state-assisted suicide. 29% of respondents in the 35-54 age group agreed that the homeless should be given a legal lethal way out by the Canadian government.

Zoomers and Millennials majoritively (55%) reportedly reckon mental illness is a justifiable reason for state-assisted suicide.

TheBlaze previously reported that as of March 17, 2023, Canadians whose only medical condition is a mental illness are able to request state-assisted euthanasia. That includes persons suffering from depression, bipolar disorder, PTSD, and various other mental issues.

With less religion, fewer qualms about killing the weak

Some suspect a correlation between this apparent support for the state's elimination of the weak and infirm and the decline of religion in Canada — a nation that recently removed all Christian religious imagery from its heraldry and has witnessed a precipitous decline in regular religious engagement.

Historian and broadcaster Tom Holland said of the survey results, "Now, this really IS post-Christian."

Marry Harrington, an editor at Unherd, similarly remarked, "Welcome to post-Christian social ethics."

Statistics Canada indicated that whereas religious affiliation was approximately 85% among Canadians born between 1940 and 1959, that number is 32% for those born between 1980 and 1999, reported Global News.

David Brooks, writing in the Atlantic, indicated that the euthanasia laws seen in Canada and elsewhere throughout the Anglosphere reveal what "happens when a society takes individualism to its logical conclusion."

While Brooks suggested Canada's so-called Medical Assistance in Dying program was originally "well defined," he acknowledges that the movement to extinguish complicated lives raced precisely to those extremes where critics like Cardinal Thomas Collins of Toronto said it would go.

Collins wrote in 2020, "Pain medication and other resources and procedures can indeed be used effectively to medically assist people who are dying. But that is not what MAiD involves: it means giving a lethal injection to people who are not dying, so that they will die."

"Those who oppose euthanasia expressed concern in 2016, when it was first legalized, that once the state legally provided death for some, it would only be a matter of time before its criteria would be expanded," wrote Collins. "This was dismissed as a slippery slope argument; we were told that 'safeguards' would protect the most vulnerable. Now, less than four years later, we are far down the slope."

Collins stressed that those persons whom younger Canadians now see as prime candidates for voluntary extermination "should never be seen as a burden to our society. These people need assisted living, not assisted death."

In his Atlantic piece, Brooks wrote, "As assisted suicide has become an established part of Canadian society, the complex moral issues surrounding the end of life have drifted out of sight. Decisions tend to be made within a bureaucratic context, where utilitarian considerations can come to dominate the foreground."

Over 10,000 Canadians were put down by the state via MAID in 2021, making up 3.3% of all deaths in Canada that year. Well over 31,664 Canadians have been killed via the MAID program since 2016.

81% of euthanasia requests were approved.

Columnist Ross Douthat wrote in the New York Times in December that "it is barbaric ... to establish a bureaucratic system that offers death as a reliable treatment for suffering and enlists the healing profession in delivering this 'cure.' And while there may be worse evils ahead, this isn’t a slippery slope argument: When 10,000 people are availing themselves of your euthanasia system every year, you have already entered the dystopia."
Douthat stressed that "the further de-Christianization proceeds, the stronger the impulse ... to rationalize the new order with implicit reassurances that it’s what some higher power wants."

The Spectator noted last year how, prior to the legalization of the MAID amendments, Canada's parliamentary budget officer released a report indicating how much money would be saved as a result of Bill C-7, which broadened and loosened the language of Canada's euthanasia law. Extra to the $86.9 million per year previously saved by state-facilitated killings, an additional $62 million in costs would be reduced.

The Trudeau government recognized that it could save money by taking lives, even if the taxpayers had to pay $2,327 every time a fellow citizen reached the breaking point.

The man credited with founding the Canadian health care system, Tommy Douglas, was a eugenicist who advocated for the sterilization and segregation of some of the very people now being exterminated by the state.

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Registered repeat sex offender allegedly chases down naked teen boy, executes him in the street



A registered sex offender is facing homicide charges in the shooting death of a teenage boy in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, the Morning Call reported.

In 2015, the suspect was entered as a lifetime sex offender into Pennsylvania's Megan's Law registry for involuntary deviate sexual intercourse.

Boy dies after Harrisburg shooting; sex offender charged: police https://t.co/QMlyim2Bry
— PennLive.com (@PennLive.com)1598751234.0

What are the details?

Registered sex offender Orlando P. Duarte, 45, reportedly gunned down a teenage boy on Saturday on a city street.

The teen, identified as 16-year-old Kyan King, was allegedly naked and fleeing from Duarte when the registered sex offender reportedly gunned him down in cold blood.

Investigators said that Duarte fired several shots at the child.

Police responded to a call of shots fired on Sunday morning and discovered an armed Duarte after a brief chase. He was immediately taken into custody without incident and remains in custody at the Dauphin County Prison without bail.

The teen was taken to a nearby hospital, where he later died.

Eyewitness Tracy Burton told the outlet that the teen was begging Duarte for his life.

Burton said that she was on her porch when she saw the naked boy speed by shouting, "Help me!"

At least five gunshots soon followed the teen's cries for help, Burton added.

A witness also told the Patriot-News that she saw the teen run by, telling her that he had been raped, and a man armed with a gun was chasing him. The unnamed witness ran into her home to get a towel for the boy, but by the time she returned, he had been shot.

The outlet reported, "A third witness said he saw the boy at Duarte's apartment in the 600 block of North 17th Street earlier that day. Inside the apartment, police found a box of .22-caliber shell casings and two letters. One letter appeared to be from Kyan, saying 'If you're reading this, I'm dead.' The letter went on to say how much he loved everyone."

Disturbing history of deviant sexual violence

In addition to murder charges, Duarte also faces charges of prohibited possession of a firearm.

Duarte in 2012 was sentenced to four to eight years in prison as well as 10 years of probation on charges that included involuntary deviate sexual intercourse with a child, aggravated indecent assault of a child, aggravated indecent assault without consent, indecent assault of a person less 13, unlawful contact with a minor and corruption of minors, the outlet reported.

In 2008, he was sentenced to six to 23 months of confinement and probation after pleading "no contest" to charges of simple assault, recklessly endangering another person, indecent assault of a person less than 16, and disorderly conduct.

Anything ele?

A GoFundMe page has been set up to help the teen's family with funeral and related expenses.

The page has received more than $24,000 in donations so far.

Destiny Williams, a King family member, said that she couldn't wrap her head around why someone would do something like this.

"A lot of anger. A lot of hurt. A lot of confusion as to why that man would want to do something to an innocent 16-year-old," Williams told WHTM-TV. "That's something that I would never fathom. Like how do you do that to someone, especially him."

The teen's sister, Nyairrea Jones, warned families to keep their loved one close.

"Keep your kids close because there's predators out here," she insisted. "Ones just walking amongst us. Ones we don't even know about."

Iran Hints at Stopping Execution of Dissidents After Trump Joins Twitter Protest

The Iranian judiciary on Wednesday hinted that it might halt the executions of three young men who were arrested during protests against the regime in November.