Action4Canada - June 13, 2024


Protecting Each Other From Maid With Angelina Ireland June 12, 2024


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 12 minutes

Words per Minute

148.08699

Word Count

10,791

Sentence Count

676

Misogynist Sentences

21

Hate Speech Sentences

15


Summary

Angelina Ireland has been fighting the fight for palliative care in Canada for over 20 years. She is the Executive Director of the Delta Hospice Society, a non-profit organization dedicated to providing care to the terminally ill and their loved ones. In 2016, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that medical assistance in dying (MAID) is legal in Canada and that doctors and nurses should be allowed to kill patients if they consented to it.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 So we find ourselves in a situation where on the one side we have empire made and on the other side we have very little opportunity to protect our people, very little opportunity to provide authentic palliative care.
00:00:18.640 Everywhere we turn, euthanasia has become the king of all procedures.
00:00:24.320 You see, in the Canada Health Act, the way that we organize it as a country is that specialty organizations, specialty facilities exist, that we are not expected to provide every service, medical service in every hospital or facility.
00:00:48.020 For example, in Delta, we see that in the city of Delta, with over 100,000 people, there is no maternity service offered.
00:00:59.380 You must go to another city to have your baby.
00:01:03.020 But when it comes to euthanasia, every single bed in Delta, including places like palliative care facilities, must offer euthanasia.
00:01:11.260 That is, again, across the board.
00:01:13.880 Every health care bed must offer euthanasia, even though not all services are provided in all beds.
00:01:21.360 And we have come to know that our people are not safe when they enter into the health care system because they will be offered, made, even if they don't want it.
00:01:34.480 And there is very little that separates a doctor or nurse from offering it to a person, to a patient, five, six, seven times, which has been our experience, until either the person dies or the person succumbs to accepting this MAID procedure.
00:01:56.160 It's such a pleasure to introduce Angelina Ireland to tonight's Empower Hour.
00:02:05.980 Angelina's journey began in 2013 with a cancer diagnosis, whereupon she became a client of the Delta Hospice Society.
00:02:14.560 When she recovered to good health, Angelina joined the board of directors of the society and in 2019 was elected president of the board.
00:02:22.920 She was involved in a colossal battle against the B.C. government and MAID activists who demanded that the Delta Hospice Society include medical assistance in dying for their patients.
00:02:35.660 And although the B.C. government unlawfully took control of the palliative care facility, the activists were not able to take over the organization.
00:02:44.320 On February 1st of 2024, Angelina became the executive director of the society, where she continues to protect traditional euthanasia-free palliative care in Canada.
00:02:57.600 Angelina has also been traveling across our nation, bringing awareness to citizens regarding the evils of MAID.
00:03:04.500 We're so grateful for the work she's doing and that she can join us for tonight's life-saving Empower Hour.
00:03:10.440 Will you all please help me welcome Angelina Ireland.
00:03:15.020 Angelina, thank you for joining us and welcome to the Empower Hour.
00:03:19.500 Hi. Hi, ladies. Thank you so much for having me tonight.
00:03:22.660 Thank you, Tanya, for joining me.
00:03:24.500 Oh, you hear that?
00:03:26.460 That's Princess.
00:03:28.000 She's also here on the ground joining us.
00:03:33.120 That's okay. That's okay, Angelina.
00:03:35.440 We're all animal lovers on this end, so not to worry about it.
00:03:39.240 Don't you just love that as you go live?
00:03:41.760 But we like to have fun here, and we just appreciate the work that you're doing.
00:03:47.400 I am just so amazed that you have been in such a battle over the years, trying to protect palliative care, the Delta Hospice Society.
00:03:59.380 I mean, you were just in an outright war, not just with the British Columbia government, but with activists who are trying to push MAID.
00:04:07.260 And so I'm looking forward to your presentation.
00:04:10.140 As we said in the weekly action that went out, you know, this all was supposed to have been implemented by the Liberal government way back in 2016.
00:04:22.160 And, of course, the Supreme Court ruling supported it and decreed doctors and nurses could murder the terminally ill patients if they consented.
00:04:30.380 But the emphasis on terminally ill, and, of course, that very quickly expanded to people who are diseased, disabled, and depressed.
00:04:39.180 We know that our veterans, our military are being offered.
00:04:43.180 I don't even want to call this a service because it's just absolutely so dark and so evil.
00:04:49.000 And so I was excited to see that you have some recommendations for people as to how they could protect themselves and their loved ones.
00:04:58.600 So I'd like to turn the show over to you.
00:05:00.920 I'm looking forward to your presentation.
00:05:03.640 All right.
00:05:04.420 Thank you so much.
00:05:05.640 I will share my screen.
00:05:07.260 I have a PowerPoint that I take with me when I try to speak with people.
00:05:14.460 So, first of all, you know, try to keep me on point here because, you know, look, I could talk about this probably for hours, but I know we only have a short time together, so I want to make the most of it.
00:05:27.500 So I want to talk to, you know, you and your audience tonight about truly something that is a national nightmare.
00:05:36.540 They brought it to us as something that was so progressive and fantastic, and we're all going to be so happy.
00:05:47.060 And, you know, what it's really become is a horror show.
00:05:51.820 So, of course, back in 2016, we, the federal government of Canada, under the, I'll call them the Liberal Administration, brought forward this thing called medical assistance in dying.
00:06:04.660 It sounds so lovely.
00:06:05.760 Who wouldn't want to be medically assisted with anything, right?
00:06:08.920 But unfortunately, what it was was basically just an amendment to the criminal code which allowed doctors and nurse practitioners to non-culpably homicide the Canadian people.
00:06:22.680 And very quickly, we found out that physicians and nurse practitioners could actually introduce this thing to patients, even though it was not sought after by the patient, even when there were no other medical treatments available.
00:06:40.580 It became everything that they said it was not going to be, and it became that very quickly.
00:06:46.480 And you'll see here by this graph, the incredible success of this euthanasia program brought forward by the government as it passed it on to the provinces to implement.
00:07:00.600 You can see that the upward graph here, which is, if you're in business, like I have been for many years, you will see that this kind of graph is actually quite difficult to achieve.
00:07:15.400 You know, what we're seeing here is a 30% increase year after year, to the point where we estimate that by the end of 2023, we have over 60,000 Canadians that have been killed.
00:07:31.180 Something obviously is going on here because you don't get a 30% return on investment normally.
00:07:37.080 But when it comes to the euthanasia program, that's exactly what we're seeing.
00:07:43.740 In fact, more Canadians have been mated than died in World War II.
00:07:49.920 We only had 42,000 Canadians die in World War II, and we are looking now at over 63,000 Canadians having been killed.
00:08:00.040 So I say that Maid actually is a predatory regime against the Canadian people.
00:08:09.520 And why do I say that?
00:08:11.340 I'm saying that because we are actually facing an empire.
00:08:15.940 Maid has actually become an empire against the Canadian people.
00:08:20.260 And when I talk about an empire, you know, empires usually have this tremendous power and control over the people.
00:08:29.720 They tend to be very single-minded, somewhat of a supremacy over what they dominate.
00:08:36.540 They have economic power.
00:08:39.300 And they develop an incredible infrastructure which allows them to go forward.
00:08:43.700 And so I'm talking about it now not as a program, but as an empire, an empire that versus team life.
00:08:53.740 You know, that's on the other side of the aisle here.
00:08:55.680 And those little hands that you see there on that, well, that's us.
00:08:58.840 That's us with the little hands, you know, against this army.
00:09:05.320 So why do I say empire?
00:09:06.980 Well, because, you know, we are facing national lobby groups.
00:09:12.060 We're facing government ministries and bureaucracies, the judiciary, these not-for-profits, this unlimited access to this death machine,
00:09:21.320 and an incredibly potent narrative that pushes it all forward.
00:09:28.500 You know, one of the first people on the side of this empire that I have to call out is Dine with Dignity Canada.
00:09:35.780 You know, Dine with Dignity Canada is a national lobby group whose mission is to widen access to euthanasia, period.
00:09:45.280 And they have become an incredibly formidable political force with access to federal ministers, provincial governments.
00:09:54.840 Sometimes I say I think they have them on speed dial.
00:09:57.040 I think they can get a hold of them so fast.
00:09:59.240 They have charitable status, so they can provide tax receipts to their donors.
00:10:02.860 They have permanent paid staff members, which is actually quite exceptional because a lot of groups that are, you know,
00:10:09.920 on the other side of the aisle, like on the pro-life side, they just have volunteers, right?
00:10:14.800 We don't get paid staff members to focus sort of their 24-7 attention on this kind of thing.
00:10:21.540 And because of that, you know, we see that Dine with Dignity has this enormous political media and court presence.
00:10:30.920 And they get big money.
00:10:32.800 They get big money.
00:10:34.540 They get money not only from the government year after year in terms of federal grants,
00:10:39.360 but they have huge private donors.
00:10:42.080 People like Pfizer, actually, who give Dine with Dignity money.
00:10:48.060 So, you know, that's hard to compete with, right?
00:10:50.620 And then, of course, you get the bureaucracies.
00:10:52.780 You get Health Canada that has this end-of-life unit with, again, full-time staff members focusing on the expanding access to MAID.
00:11:02.340 And they're coming up with this model practice standard for MAID, establishing unified practices and procedures nationally.
00:11:12.500 And, in fact, they've actually even come into having their attention focused on children,
00:11:20.020 children between the ages of 6 to 12 years of age when they come up with these interesting books, activity books, focusing on kids.
00:11:30.500 Here we look at this as the Medical Assistance in Dying Activity book.
00:11:35.800 Welcome, it says.
00:11:36.860 Welcome, little ones, to the idea of killing your family.
00:11:43.120 And here they have, again, an example of activities.
00:11:46.200 They bring the little ones through all of these nice puzzles and things in this activity book
00:11:51.580 to the point where they're actually normalizing.
00:11:56.580 Normalizing the killing of grandma.
00:12:01.440 Here we say, don't worry, Johnny, because we'll be right back.
00:12:04.120 We're just going off to put grandma down.
00:12:06.760 And I think that's actually what we're doing in this country.
00:12:08.780 We're normalizing the idea of killing the elderly, killing the vulnerable,
00:12:15.880 to the point where, you know, the next generation up really isn't batting an eye.
00:12:19.940 And then, of course, MAID has tremendous support from the courts.
00:12:25.500 Like you mentioned earlier, Tanya, you know, the Carter, the Carter decision,
00:12:29.600 which basically put MAID into legislation.
00:12:34.140 But that wasn't it, right?
00:12:35.680 Because the Carter decision just brought this idea of a terminal death,
00:12:40.620 that if you have a terminal death, you should be, you should have access to being allowed to kill yourself.
00:12:44.940 Well, that's not where it stopped, though, right?
00:12:47.620 Because the next thing we saw was the Truchon decision in the lower Quebec court,
00:12:53.940 which basically said that, you know, just killing people that have a terminal death,
00:13:00.520 well, that's discriminatory.
00:13:03.120 That's not acceptable.
00:13:04.740 You have to really be allowed to kill people who have, you know, any kind of a, an unreasonable sort of situation.
00:13:16.260 And so that was passed, basically opening up access to euthanasia
00:13:22.100 and really normalizing it again so that reasonably foreseeable death,
00:13:29.380 that's just really not, that's unconstitutional, that, you know, this sort of idea of something that you can't handle, right?
00:13:42.200 Like, for example, I think that it's really difficult to handle sleeping under a bridge, for example, in the winter, right?
00:13:49.540 That's kind of an unreasonable situation.
00:13:52.460 So that, you know, you should be allowed to kill yourself for that reason.
00:13:54.900 And we have found that, you know, again, the federal government went along with this idea, right?
00:14:01.540 That an unreasonable situation was a reason enough to allow someone access to euthanasia.
00:14:11.900 And we saw that the federal government didn't really do anything with that.
00:14:15.100 They didn't insist that that decision be appealed to the highest court of Quebec.
00:14:22.120 We didn't see them, you know, invoking the notwithstanding clause.
00:14:26.800 We didn't see them trying to take that kind of a decision to the Supreme Court of Canada.
00:14:31.460 Oh, no, what we saw happen was Bill C-7.
00:14:35.500 And Bill C-7 basically opened up this new stream to allow people to be killed by doctors again
00:14:44.700 for things that were really difficult to deal with.
00:14:52.340 So a new stream was opened up where the first stream was if you had a foreseeable death,
00:14:58.420 you could ask for made and pretty much get made the same day for people with cancer.
00:15:03.760 And this next stream where if you if you wanted to kill yourself, well, you'd have to, you know,
00:15:07.800 you'd have to wait 90 days.
00:15:08.980 And that truly opened up Pandora's box in this country where we're looking at people with depression
00:15:15.520 should be allowed to kill themselves.
00:15:18.820 People with autism, people with diabetes, people with any kind of medical condition,
00:15:24.680 be it physical or psychological, should be allowed to have the state kill them.
00:15:31.820 And so we go forward again with not with with the not for profits and not for not for profits
00:15:39.280 that are just springing up.
00:15:42.300 One of them, the Canadian Association of Maid Assessors and Providers was started out here
00:15:47.380 in British Columbia by six prolific maid suppliers.
00:15:52.900 And they, too, are getting getting big money from the government.
00:15:57.540 You know, it's kind of funny because these people who are really interested in providing
00:16:00.720 maid, they get big money from the government and those on the other side of the aisle who
00:16:05.720 don't want to have anything to do with maid, well, they get their assets taken away.
00:16:10.460 They don't get money.
00:16:11.780 They get they get like negative money.
00:16:14.340 We've got to give them our assets because we don't go along with this maid sort of situation.
00:16:20.220 So CAMAP came onto the scene establishing guidelines to educate.
00:16:26.840 They're going to educate clinicians.
00:16:28.420 They're going to educate doctors and health care workers across Canada on their obligations
00:16:33.860 to provide euthanasia.
00:16:37.360 And some of the big, you know, these are the big players in CAMAP.
00:16:41.400 We also see are some of the big players in Dying With Dignity Canada.
00:16:46.920 Are some of the big players in Maid House.
00:16:49.180 And what we're finding, very interestingly, is that the big players in Canada, where it comes
00:16:57.580 to MAID, are sitting on the same advisory councils, the same board of directors.
00:17:07.260 And, you know, if now again, if this was business, we'd call this interlocking directorships.
00:17:13.180 That's what we do.
00:17:14.600 And we wouldn't like it because we say that the power is being concentrated in the hands
00:17:21.980 of a few.
00:17:23.200 And that's exactly what we're finding in Empire Made.
00:17:27.020 The power, the money, the decision making are all being concentrated into the hands of a few.
00:17:35.480 A maid house, another charity.
00:17:39.500 Everybody gets to be a charity.
00:17:41.120 Everybody gets to get money from the government.
00:17:43.340 Everybody gets to get big private donations.
00:17:46.360 And this one in particular, their mission is to have one of these houses in every city
00:17:53.520 in the country.
00:17:55.360 And what these houses do is they just provide space.
00:17:58.460 Space for euthanasia.
00:17:59.860 You can bring your own death doctor to this particular place and got one in Toronto, which
00:18:04.760 is quite lucrative, apparently.
00:18:07.120 And they brag about having MAID at 125 people in 2022 alone there.
00:18:11.860 Right?
00:18:12.600 You want MAID, just come over to our house.
00:18:15.500 And again, right, doctors and lawyers are sitting on their board of directors, on their advisory
00:18:20.220 councils and planning about how they're going to sort of increase Empire Made.
00:18:26.060 Down to the point where, you know, even funeral homes are getting in on the act.
00:18:31.060 They're so efficient in Empire Made, you can just go to the funeral home, they'll MAID you
00:18:36.740 in one room, and then they'll stick you in a coffin in the next room.
00:18:40.740 And this is a picture of one of them that's going on in London, Ontario, right?
00:18:46.020 MAID in one room and just put you in a coffin in the next.
00:18:49.200 You know, they don't even have to come to your house, which they will.
00:18:52.020 They'll send MAID, the MAID team to your house to do house calls.
00:18:55.280 I wonder when the last time was anybody in this country got a house call from a doctor.
00:19:00.620 Right?
00:19:01.060 You have a problem, well, you've got to get in line and wait for months to see a doctor
00:19:05.240 to get a procedure done.
00:19:06.700 Then they'll come right to your house, and they'll MAID you.
00:19:10.800 To the point where now I'm wondering if, you know, Tourism Canada is going to get in on
00:19:14.560 the act, and they'll MAID you in a national park.
00:19:17.920 You know, come to Canada, get MAID in Jasper or BAM.
00:19:22.600 You know, it's beautiful, but unfortunately, access to MAID is everywhere.
00:19:29.360 And, you know, and so again, how are they getting their people?
00:19:36.700 How are they getting their clients, their customers?
00:19:39.920 Well, I think it has a lot to do with this incredibly potent narrative.
00:19:43.740 This narrative of, you know, MAID euthanasia is a choice.
00:19:51.380 It's what freedom looks like, right?
00:19:54.560 Choose when you're going to die.
00:19:57.680 Unfortunately, you know, the truth around that particular narrative is that it's the
00:20:04.260 government.
00:20:05.040 It's the government that is taking the power to kill its citizens.
00:20:12.940 But they're calling that human right.
00:20:16.200 Right?
00:20:16.700 That's rather ironic, I think.
00:20:18.160 And of course, the second narrative around all of this is this, it's so beautiful, and
00:20:23.840 it's so peaceful, this MAID procedure.
00:20:27.080 But luckily, you know, the truth about that is now starting to come out to smash that narrative,
00:20:32.400 much to the chagrin of people like Dying with Dignity Canada.
00:20:36.700 Because people like Dr. Joel Sivitt and his actual testimony to the Senate of Canada is
00:20:46.920 coming out, where he said that, you know, this MAID cocktail that they're using is very
00:20:52.780 similar to the cocktail that they use on death row in the United States when they execute
00:21:00.340 people.
00:21:01.240 It's a very similar type of cocktail.
00:21:04.020 You know, perhaps not, it's not the exact drug, but it's the same family of drugs that
00:21:08.780 they've used for a long time to execute criminals that they're now using.
00:21:13.700 Like, that's not, those aren't my words.
00:21:16.560 So anybody watching this doesn't have to come and get angry with me.
00:21:19.520 I just quote people like Dr. Joel Sivitt.
00:21:22.220 I just give up the testimony and the transcripts of the, what he said at the, at the Senate of
00:21:29.240 Canada back in February of 2021, right, which everybody seems to have been able to hide,
00:21:35.700 that is now coming forth, now coming forward on podcasts produced by Jordan Peterson.
00:21:42.880 You know, this, this information is now getting out and thanks be to God for that, because
00:21:47.000 people really need to know what they're signing up for when they think that they're having a
00:21:51.760 beautiful and peaceful death, when honestly, it's more akin to drowning and waterboarding.
00:21:57.280 That's what made it in this country, where they put, give you a paralytic, according to
00:22:03.200 Dr. Sivitt, a paralytic that freezes people.
00:22:05.800 So it looks beautiful and it looks peaceful.
00:22:10.320 So now I've given you a little bit of a, an idea on what's standing on one side of the
00:22:17.420 aisle, empire made.
00:22:19.040 Let's take a little look, look and see at what's standing on the other side of the aisle.
00:22:23.760 You know, those little hands, those little hands that are trying to provide people an
00:22:27.720 actual option for life.
00:22:30.560 And one of the greatest things that we have on team life is palliative care.
00:22:34.480 Palliative care, which is a, uh, something that I would consider to be, um, a gift to
00:22:43.260 humanity that helps to reduce the severity of the disease and the condition that helps
00:22:48.620 you live well to your natural end.
00:22:50.980 So you don't have to try to look at other more horrible options like made something that
00:22:57.960 is provided to you from a time of diagnosis to your natural end, um, support that is
00:23:04.280 for physical and emotional and spiritual support.
00:23:09.260 You know, and Canada actually has a, a wonderful history with palliative care from our own Dr.
00:23:17.220 Balfour Mount, who operated out of McGill University in Quebec, that allows a medical discipline of
00:23:24.740 over 40 to 50 years to help people protect themselves without hastening death by a lethal dose of
00:23:34.280 to end their life.
00:23:37.640 Something that people may not know is not part of MAID.
00:23:42.100 You see, uh, euthanasia has nothing to do with palliative care.
00:23:46.240 Although in this country, they've been trying to push MAID into palliative care facilities.
00:23:52.200 Actually, uh, palliative care has nothing to do with MAID because it does nothing to hasten
00:23:57.620 one's death.
00:23:58.260 And our expert father of palliative care himself says that MAID, as legislators of Canada has
00:24:08.700 termed it, is not part of palliative care.
00:24:12.440 It is not part of the international specialty of palliative medicine.
00:24:16.200 So back in 2017, it looked like maybe we were going to score a point for team life.
00:24:24.360 Maybe we were going to be able to, uh, protect palliative care and give palliative care to
00:24:29.880 more people across this country because it was pledged a $6 billion over five years.
00:24:35.860 But after that five years was said and done, uh, many things did not change around palliative
00:24:43.780 care in Canada.
00:24:45.380 Uh, what did not change is that family members, family caregivers, and community organizations
00:24:51.120 like the Delta Hospice Society were the ones that were actually contributing significantly
00:24:56.140 to palliative care.
00:24:58.420 But I'll tell you something that did change.
00:25:00.840 The actual definition in Canada apparently has changed to have palliative care only be
00:25:07.400 introduced to people, um, from three to six months before they died.
00:25:12.740 And that, of course, is not what palliative care is.
00:25:15.900 Palliative care is something from diagnosis to natural end.
00:25:20.400 But, uh, we are finding that as we look across the country, that MAID is being pushed into
00:25:28.280 palliative care facility.
00:25:31.960 That centers the story of the Delta Hospice Society, which I've had a lot to do with for
00:25:36.460 the past really 10 years from being a cancer patient myself, uh, to getting back to good
00:25:43.060 health to be part of the board of directors as the president and now as the executive director.
00:25:49.040 And, you know, our story, uh, with palliative care is that, um, as a private organization,
00:25:55.540 we raised over $8 million to build a hospice palliative care resident.
00:26:04.160 So we got a land lease from the Fraser Health Authority.
00:26:08.320 On that land lease, we built these two buildings here, the hospice residence and the supportive
00:26:12.980 care center.
00:26:13.660 The hospice itself had 10 beds.
00:26:17.080 The supportive care center had 7,500 square feet for programming, uh, for the promotion
00:26:24.240 of palliative care, uh, within, uh, within our community.
00:26:30.820 This is what the, this is what our hospice looked like, called the Irene Thomas Hospice.
00:26:36.880 And when you walked in, this is what it looked like when you walked in the door, an open area
00:26:42.060 place for people to caught, to come together if they wanted to have community and places
00:26:47.580 where they could be private if they wanted to have privacy.
00:26:50.720 And each of these rooms, we had 10 of these, which were the, uh, the rooms for the residents.
00:26:56.200 And, and on that, on those, each of those rooms was a private garden that people could
00:27:02.260 go outside and enjoy the garden next to it.
00:27:05.700 This was our supportive care center, uh, where we, of course, provided our palliative care
00:27:11.380 program, counseling, bereavement counseling, counseling for people going through cancer,
00:27:17.840 uh, all kinds of different programs, which also included programs for children.
00:27:24.700 But then when, when MAID, uh, was introduced, uh, MAID was being pushed into every hospice and
00:27:32.120 palliative care facility in British Columbia, forcing, uh, palliative care, uh, societies
00:27:39.140 and facilities to participate in euthanasia.
00:27:45.660 Now, when we would refuse to participate in euthanasia, we not only had our, our service
00:27:52.700 agreement canceled, uh, but we were also evicted, evicted from those buildings that we, that we
00:28:01.160 built, uh, uh, with a 25 year land lease still in existence.
00:28:06.980 The Fraser Health Authority canceled that lease and kicked us out, gave us 30 days to get off
00:28:12.760 the property.
00:28:14.040 And so, of course, we had to leave those buildings because we couldn't just pack them up.
00:28:17.980 And the buildings were then looked at as, uh, fixtures to the land, like some old shed or
00:28:23.520 fence.
00:28:23.820 And we had to leave them behind.
00:28:26.280 And of course, this is moving day where we were kicked out of our property, uh, kicked out of our
00:28:31.020 buildings and we had to pack up and we had to get moving.
00:28:36.420 Um, and so what happened to our facility was it was shut down.
00:28:40.320 Uh, it was shut down for two weeks once we vacated and our, also our patients were evicted
00:28:46.760 from the hospice and we were told that that was the end of us in terms of a palliative care
00:28:52.740 organization.
00:28:53.160 We would never be allowed to have a palliative care facility again.
00:28:57.420 Uh, so they didn't stop with us.
00:28:59.420 Of course, uh, Catholic health care, they went after Catholic health care also and told them
00:29:04.800 that they're also going to have to provide maid, uh, with the religious exemption that they
00:29:08.900 had.
00:29:09.340 You see, we were a palliative care organization, um, and we were not safe, but we thought that
00:29:15.080 that Catholic health care would be safe, um, that they wouldn't have to provide maid.
00:29:21.560 But again, uh, we were mistaken and the, the Providence health care had to figure out a way
00:29:27.620 to appease the government.
00:29:29.700 And the workaround was to build a little slaughterhouse next to St. Paul's hospital
00:29:36.580 and a corridor between the two where they would, where Providence would have to, uh, discharge
00:29:44.840 their patient.
00:29:45.440 They go down the hall and then they would be readmitted to coastal health, brought into
00:29:50.360 the little slaughterhouse and they would have maid there.
00:29:53.720 And we noticed that also, again, not only is British Columbia not safe, but Quebec is not
00:29:58.600 safe.
00:29:59.400 Quebec again has the same sort of mandates against them where palliative care homes would
00:30:05.400 have to offer maid, assisted suicide, euthanasia, uh, that they had no immunity to it.
00:30:14.680 And they also would have to provide maid or lose funding or be kicked out of their residences,
00:30:20.120 et cetera, et cetera.
00:30:21.800 Um, even Catholic health care also in Quebec would have to succumb to euthanasia law.
00:30:28.200 So we find ourselves, um, in a situation where on the one side we have empire made and on the
00:30:40.200 other side, we have very little opportunity to protect our people, very little opportunity
00:30:47.880 to provide authentic palliative care.
00:30:51.160 Everywhere we turn, euthanasia has become the king of all procedures.
00:30:57.800 You see, in the Canada Health Act, um, the way that we organize it as a country is that
00:31:05.000 specialty, uh, specialty organization, specialty, uh, facilities exist.
00:31:10.040 That we are not, uh, we are not expected to provide every, uh, service, medical service
00:31:17.160 in every hospital or facility.
00:31:20.600 For example, in Delta, uh, we see that in the city of Delta with over a hundred thousand
00:31:27.320 people, there is no maternity service offered.
00:31:31.960 You must go to another city to have your baby.
00:31:34.840 But when it comes to euthanasia, every single bed in Delta, including places like palliative
00:31:41.400 care facilities must offer euthanasia.
00:31:43.800 That is again, across the board, every health care bed must offer euthanasia.
00:31:50.360 Um, even though not all services are provided in all beds.
00:31:54.040 And we have come to come to know that our people are not safe, uh, when they enter into the
00:32:03.000 healthcare system because they will be offered, made, even if they don't want it.
00:32:07.880 Um, and there is very little that separates a doctor or nurse from offering it to a person,
00:32:16.280 to a patient five, six, seven times, which has been our experience, um, until either the person dies
00:32:23.640 or the person succumbs to, um, accepting this made procedure.
00:32:28.760 Um, so having had, uh, a tremendously, uh, uh, arduous journey through all of this,
00:32:39.560 we know that we must provide people tools.
00:32:43.400 We must provide people tools in order to protect themselves from empire made.
00:32:49.320 And so the first thing that we did, uh, was we provide, we, uh, got, went to a lawyer
00:32:54.440 and drew up a do not euthanize advance directive, uh, for every province in Canada.
00:33:03.160 Uh, this legal document protects the holders against attempts to have their lives terminated
00:33:09.080 unnaturally through medical intervention.
00:33:12.360 We have these as legally specific for all Canadian provinces
00:33:16.920 and territories, and they comply with that province's health regulation.
00:33:22.280 We give these free to anybody who wants them.
00:33:25.720 And we have given thousands of them out for free across Canada.
00:33:35.720 Um, and so along with our do not euthanize advance directive, we now offer a national registry
00:33:43.560 and a DNE wallet card.
00:33:45.560 So first step is to get your do not euthanize advance directive with a province that you live.
00:33:53.960 And we will then send you a card.
00:33:56.280 It looks just like this.
00:33:57.080 This is the front and the back.
00:33:58.680 And this is a do not euthanize wallet card that you can keep on your person.
00:34:04.760 And we will put you on a national registry.
00:34:07.480 We will send you a customized card with your national registry number.
00:34:11.640 And we will keep track.
00:34:13.320 We will keep track on our, on our database, on our secure database that you have signed
00:34:18.040 a do not euthanize advance directive.
00:34:20.280 You want nothing to do with euthanasia.
00:34:25.000 We will send you this card free of charge.
00:34:27.880 We will send you the do not euthanize advance directive free of charge.
00:34:31.400 And we think that this is one of the best ways that we can protect you from, um, what we consider
00:34:38.920 to be a predatory regime known as MAID.
00:34:46.280 And the second thing that we have done is we have created a guardian angels program.
00:34:51.960 And guardian angels is a volunteer health advocacy program that will partner, uh, people who are in
00:34:59.480 a palliative state to access appropriate health care and not MAID.
00:35:05.640 Now, when I say palliative, I mean something that you have been diagnosed with.
00:35:10.280 This is not from three to six months to your death.
00:35:13.480 We talk about palliative care.
00:35:14.920 We talk about people with a chronic condition, uh, people that yes, that do have cancer or do have a
00:35:20.840 condition that, that will not go away that they were are living with.
00:35:23.960 And a guardian angel will be matched with you, um, to watch over you.
00:35:29.960 Basically, it's a health care advocate to ensure that you are receiving health care and not MAID.
00:35:39.240 Because we are committed as an organization to protecting people, to protecting people so that
00:35:45.160 they can access authentic palliative care.
00:35:47.960 And in this moment, um, we are not only looking for guardian angels, we are also looking for clients.
00:35:56.360 We are also looking for people who are palliative, uh, that have a chronic condition from diagnosis
00:36:02.520 that are going through the health care system.
00:36:06.280 So we ask you to not only consider becoming a guardian angel, but consider to reach out to us
00:36:11.960 if you need an angel.
00:36:14.280 And we will provide you with a health care advocate.
00:36:18.840 So we need you.
00:36:20.120 We need not only, uh, guardian angels, but also people who need angels.
00:36:27.240 And of course we need your pet because as angels, and you heard it, princess, she's always in there.
00:36:32.040 She's always beside me, uh, helping, guiding, doing what she can as well to help people,
00:36:38.120 um, when they are entering the health care system.
00:36:41.000 Because unfortunately, uh, what we think is that, um, it's more like a buddy system now.
00:36:47.480 You don't go in alone.
00:36:49.240 You need somebody standing by you.
00:36:51.080 You need somebody walking with you on your journey because it has become an arduous journey.
00:36:58.760 So for those who are interested in becoming guardian angels, uh, we will train you.
00:37:02.840 Um, and those who want guardian angels, we ask that, uh, you contact us.
00:37:10.440 I'm going to give you the information where you can contact us in a moment, uh, where you can contact
00:37:15.640 us to get a do not euthanize advance directive, where you can get onto our national registry,
00:37:21.160 where you can get a guardian angel and where you can become a guardian angel.
00:37:26.200 But ultimately our mission is one of hospice sanctuary.
00:37:30.120 Uh, we can never forget that in this moment, uh, we as an organization are not allowed
00:37:37.160 to provide sanctuary for the dying.
00:37:40.280 Uh, we had our hospice taken away from us because we would not participate in MAID.
00:37:45.160 But the important thing that we must think about right now is getting a sanctuary for the dying,
00:37:51.320 getting an authentic palliative care facility again.
00:37:54.920 Um, and this is really the, our ultimate dream. It's become like a fairy tale at this point
00:38:01.480 in our province of British Columbia and across many provinces in Canada. But this is something that we
00:38:06.440 must come together as a people to demand. And that is that of hospice sanctuary.
00:38:11.960 And we recognize as an organization, um, that truly we can't do this alone, that truly this is something
00:38:21.640 that we must, we must pray about because we are the ones that on team life with the secret weapon,
00:38:29.240 not empire mate. We're the ones with the secret weapon. Uh, it is only God that will help us, uh,
00:38:35.000 to create a hospice sanctuary. You know, I don't know how this will happen right now, but I do have
00:38:42.760 faith that this will happen, that we will have a sanctuary that we can take care of our people.
00:38:47.880 But until that time, you know, we as an organization are offering ways to help you
00:38:52.680 protect yourself from something that has become a national nightmare.
00:38:57.160 So yes, we are part of team life. We are the Delta Hospice Society. We ask you to go to our website,
00:39:06.520 delta hospicesociety.org, to order your do not euthanize advance directives, to order your wallet
00:39:14.440 sized cards that we will customize and send to you, and to become part of our guardian angels program.
00:39:19.800 We have a toll free number. We offer this program to across the, across the country, any province in Canada,
00:39:27.800 we will send you information about the DNA. Any province in Canada, we are starting guardian angels
00:39:33.480 program. Because you know, this is what grassroots looks like. We cannot depend on governments. You
00:39:39.080 know, we cannot depend on healthcare systems. We must take this into our own hands. And we must help each
00:39:46.280 other, because that's the only way that we're going to be able to protect each other. So I'm going to pass
00:39:51.400 this back over to Tanya. I'm going to ask that the delta hospicesociety.org, that this telephone
00:39:58.440 number becomes someone something that you use. We would love to hear from you, we would love to be
00:40:03.400 able to provide our resources to you and to your loved ones. So thank you so much for listening to
00:40:09.320 me this afternoon or this evening, depending on where you're listening from. And this is something
00:40:14.200 that we want to partner with, with all of you. Thank you. Thank you so much, Andalina. I was sitting
00:40:19.800 back here at times horrified by the information that you are providing, but it is absolutely so
00:40:25.960 essential that Canadians understand how serious this problem is. We've had reports, I've had reports of
00:40:33.880 people's elderly parents who were in a care home, and they ended up getting euthanized, because they
00:40:41.800 didn't actually have the wherewithal to understand what it was that was being offered to them. And
00:40:49.480 you've got people with dementia, and depending on the time that they sign, are they already in advanced
00:40:54.520 dementia? Do they actually know what they're signing? It's very nefarious. Then we've had the multiple
00:41:00.920 reports of people with COVID-19 mRNA gene therapy injuries, like the gal that's paralyzed now from the
00:41:09.160 neck down. And she's been offered to be euthanized three or four times. Veterans have told us their very
00:41:16.520 sad stories that when they call in for help, same thing. There's a national suicide line
00:41:24.520 And I would never hand that number over to anybody. Because what do you know, one of the first things
00:41:30.360 you could be offered is actually to be euthanized to just put you out of your misery. It's really
00:41:36.360 frightful, the state of affairs here in Canada. Yeah, it is, which is why, I mean, we need to be doing
00:41:44.360 something right. We need to take power back into our own hands. We need to get our loved ones protected,
00:41:53.160 get them a DNA, get them a wallet sized card, because that card in your wallet may speak for
00:41:58.520 your life, if for some reason you are not able to. Well, we need to get involved. Yeah, during COVID,
00:42:05.880 Action for Canada actually had a medical, advanced medical directive card that we had people tape to
00:42:14.840 their medical card. And that as soon as the hospital, whoever took that out, they saw that,
00:42:20.440 don't you dare put me on an intubator, don't give me remdesivir, and certainly don't give me
00:42:26.520 the COVID mRNA vaccine. And we had reports of people who ended up in emergency and said, you know what,
00:42:32.840 they never touched it, they never even pressured me. It was amazing. So I am just sitting here,
00:42:39.160 and I know the work that goes into doing something like that and offering it, and I could never even
00:42:45.560 put a price on it. So we were as well, we gave away them on our website for free. So I really
00:42:52.280 appreciate that. And I'm going to encourage people like even if you go for the directive, donate $10 to
00:42:58.760 the hospice society, give something for this incredible service that they're providing. The
00:43:04.440 fact that it also goes in a national registry, and I love the guardian angels. And you know,
00:43:11.160 I'm a guardian angel for my mom, because she's 83 and a half years old. And I'm telling you,
00:43:16.600 she's not walking into an emergency or a hospital without me right there. I will not leave her side,
00:43:23.240 because of the threat towards our elderly over these last four years in multiple ways. They're
00:43:29.640 just out to do them in, get them off any medical care, get their pensions canceled. I mean, it is so
00:43:36.920 nefarious, and so evil. I like I say, I'm at loss for words sometimes.
00:43:41.720 It is. I had the same experience with my mom, 90 years old.
00:43:45.400 Is that right?
00:43:45.960 Yep. And all she needed was medical care. She's turned away from two hospitals,
00:43:51.080 sent home in an Uber. The third time we sent a guardian angel with her, and she was admitted,
00:43:56.840 finally. But the first visitor she had was a maid doctor. And of course, we primed her very well.
00:44:04.280 And she told them to take a walk, get lost. And she got her surgery, you know, and she recovered,
00:44:11.400 and she's home. And soon she'll be 91. But, you know, this, we have to protect our elderly. You
00:44:18.680 know, they are absolutely being targeted. There is no question. You know, they've had a good life,
00:44:25.480 it's time for them to go kind of attitude. And they are the ones that we must stand by.
00:44:32.520 And I was shocked by your numbers, how they have advanced since I've had David
00:44:37.800 Cook on several times. He's also very focused on euthanasia. And I think it was something like 28,000
00:44:45.880 murders, homicides, as you call it, as you rightly refer to it, this is homicide. And now in 2023,
00:44:52.040 figure 62,000. This is going on right under our noses. And I even wonder, you know, how accurate
00:44:58.840 those numbers are. Exactly. We know through COVID.
00:45:02.760 I don't believe them. I have said that. I don't believe them. I think it's kind of like China,
00:45:08.040 where they like forget a zero when it's, you know, it's convenient. Yes. Honestly, you know,
00:45:13.080 and you know, I've taken so much heat, personally, for, you know, my opinions, for my position. But it's
00:45:23.960 absolutely necessary, you know, that we call this stuff out, and we protect our people. I can't,
00:45:31.320 I can't, which is why I quit my job. I do this full time now, just because the threat is so imminent,
00:45:39.320 that as a nation, we must stand to protect each other.
00:45:43.480 That's right. You and I are two peas in a pod, as well as many on our core team here,
00:45:48.600 that we've just given up everything to focus on proclaiming the truth. And we're seeing many
00:45:55.160 wins, not only in Canada and America and around the world. I mean, huge wins in Europe right now,
00:46:00.920 as the nationalist leaders are elected into government, and they're overturning
00:46:07.000 all of these incredibly bad, evil policies. And so can I, I actually want to show Canadians
00:46:14.760 a little bit of where this is heading, what's going on in other countries. I'll just ask to
00:46:18.680 share my screen in a moment, Trenzio. But we have to be on the front line proclaiming the truth. We
00:46:27.880 have to be bringing the awareness. But what we also need to be doing is knowing who we're electing,
00:46:35.240 knowing where they stand on these issues, and then voting them into office. And not only that,
00:46:41.720 my friends, you need to all be out there finding out who the candidate is, that is your choice,
00:46:47.880 that is against all of this evil. And you need to be out there door knocking with them. If you're
00:46:53.640 not able to do that, maybe you could be doing phone calling, and you could be the boots on the
00:46:58.760 ground. Maybe if you can't do any of those, you could donate even $10 towards a candidate. I mean,
00:47:04.920 this is a huge commitment on their part, to work on all of our Canadians behalf, as we are on the
00:47:12.600 front line, making these frontline issues at the political level. It's the squeaky wheel that gets
00:47:19.320 the attention. It's the squeaky wheel that has gotten us into this mess. So I'm just going to share my
00:47:25.080 screen for a moment. I had reported on this one other time, that in Switzerland, they've actually
00:47:31.800 legalized what's called a suicide machine. You can actually order these, they can be delivered to
00:47:38.600 your home, you can do yourself in and then they come and pick you up. And that's called a suicide
00:47:44.840 machine. It's not a suicide machine, it's a murder machine. And then the other thing I found out
00:47:49.960 yesterday, as I was preparing for Angelina to come on, is that in China, they have death vans. So what they
00:47:58.520 do is they drive this van up, they euthanize you, and they transfer you then immediately into a van
00:48:06.360 that does cremation. You won't be able to hear the sound, but you can just see at 10am. And this is
00:48:11.640 what they're doing with their convicts. But you can imagine if you're against the government, if you're
00:48:18.120 an activist, can you imagine them just rolling up and doing this? I don't think it's people who are
00:48:23.480 possibly even political prisoners in China. We know how that goes. And so the workers have
00:48:28.920 everything prepared in advance. As the car door closed, the trip officially begins. They euthanize
00:48:35.320 the individual in 130 seconds. And then they transport you into a van that cremates you.
00:48:45.080 If this doesn't horrify you, you know how Justin Trudeau...
00:48:49.480 Okay. Actually, what I want to do as well while I'm on here, I love to help people along because,
00:48:55.560 Angelina, during your presentation, you were talking about people coming to the Delta Hospice Society.
00:49:02.120 It's deltahospicesociety.org. You'll land on this page. Right here it talks about the
00:49:08.920 Do Not Euthanize Advance Directive. You can click on this link and this is where you can find the cards.
00:49:16.600 It's as easy as that. You fill out the information. Is there anything else you want to mention,
00:49:23.240 Angelina, while I'm on your page?
00:49:26.920 Nope. That's perfect. Just go right there and order both. Order the DNE and the wallet card.
00:49:34.760 So you have to kind of order the wallet card. We can't just... because the wallet card puts you on
00:49:39.240 a registry, so we need your permission to do that. So you have to order the DNE and you can just click
00:49:45.400 two boxes there. It's pretty straightforward. All right. And then up at the top...
00:49:49.240 And we will have that... it becomes a... I should have brought my note, but it's a
00:49:53.240 it's a laminated card. So it's customized with your name, your number. It's laminated.
00:49:58.200 So it should last you years, years. Okay. Okay. Awesome. And then up in the right corner,
00:50:04.600 it says right here, it goes the Guardian Angels. I think my image is over it a little bit, but
00:50:11.000 on the same page, you can go up in the top right corner and become a guardian, Guardian Angel. All
00:50:17.320 right. So we'll just... You can want on both sides. So if you want to be involved in the Guardian
00:50:22.680 Angels program, or if you want to be a client and request a Guardian Angel. All right. Is that on this
00:50:29.560 page? Yep. Oh, there you go. See, become a volunteer. And then do you actually need a Guardian Angel? You can
00:50:38.440 sign up right there. What a beautiful program. All right. Thank you so much, Terenzio. And
00:50:44.120 all right. So I've got a few questions for you. I really appreciate you telling the story about what
00:50:50.120 you went through with the Delta Hospice Society. I mean, here you were on a 25-year lease. What did
00:50:55.880 you mean by you still... No, it was a... That lease is still open?
00:50:58.440 It's... Yeah, it was a 35-year lease. 35.
00:51:01.720 We had operated our hospice for 10 years. And so there was 25 years left that needed to be cancelled.
00:51:08.360 And, you know, I just want to, you know, make it clear that to your audience that, you know,
00:51:14.600 everything that we do here is for the promotion and advocacy of palliative care, right? A palliative
00:51:21.160 care that does not include killing the patient. So that is what motivates us. That is our mission.
00:51:27.160 It is to make sure that people get palliative care and not death.
00:51:34.120 I remember when you were going through this with the government and the activists, the MAID activists,
00:51:39.400 and Action for Canada did a call to action on your behalf. You and I had many conversations.
00:51:45.000 And the fact that was it next door across the street, they already had a MAID facility. There was
00:51:50.760 literally no reason except for the fact that they want to have this available at any possible point
00:52:00.840 that a person could be struggling so badly that there would be a moment of weakness. And I know for
00:52:06.360 myself, my grandma was 90 when she passed away. And I have four uncles and my mom, and we literally took
00:52:12.120 turns around her bedside. She had been declining, she got dementia, and then her body started to shut
00:52:18.680 down. And as I say, you know, I'm sure that you've experienced this, but I'd never smelt death in a
00:52:24.120 room. But there was no pain. There was no suffering. We held her hand. We saw her through it. It wasn't a
00:52:31.400 bad ordeal. And that was, I love how you had also termed that, that this three to six months before they die,
00:52:41.160 it's like this timeline on it. But in palliative care, it's a diet from diagnosis to natural end.
00:52:49.080 And, and I just, I support it so much. And I just hope that our viewers will understand how amazing
00:52:57.080 it is, the work that you've been doing, and how you continue to be on the front line of this traveling
00:53:03.960 across the country to advise others and bring awareness. So to all of our viewers, I'm going to ask
00:53:09.240 you that once this video is up tomorrow, you're going to share it far and wide. This is critical
00:53:14.280 information. We will have the links to the Delta Hospice Society in the description below and other
00:53:21.720 information. So I see that there's one, I think there's a question in the Q&A here. Let me just see.
00:53:27.240 Uh, so there's a care house for older people who cannot care for themselves in 2020 more than maybe
00:53:34.440 it's just, um, oh, there is a question in 2020, more than 20% of people in this home died suddenly
00:53:41.320 because of so-called COVID as was announced. There was no death in nearby care house with old people
00:53:47.880 who could care about themselves. Is it possible to organize minimum investigation of this care house,
00:53:54.840 of this care home? Could there be an investigation of this care home?
00:54:02.840 Uh, of course, yes. Um, uh, there's, in fact, there's tremendous amounts of legislation around,
00:54:09.480 uh, governing of, uh, care facilities. Uh, so all you need to do is just, uh, you know, um,
00:54:16.040 look, look at it. I think it's the care residents, residential care act, um, and find out where you
00:54:24.760 should be, um, lodging complaints. Uh, you see, they, they try to weaponize these, these acts that
00:54:33.240 these, this law, um, so to, to get people to do exactly what they want them to do. Uh, but I would say,
00:54:39.640 to, to use that, use the law, um, and go after the care home based on the law and have, you know,
00:54:49.160 have a investigation. Um, but you'd have to do a little bit of research. So I think it's called
00:54:54.600 the residential care act. It's been, it's been amended many times, um, and take a look at it
00:55:01.880 and, you know, make the law your friend. Is it possible that this person could reach out to the
00:55:08.760 Delta Hospice Society and just speak with someone to get help, get them headed in the right direction?
00:55:13.880 Yeah. Okay. Yeah. All right. That's awesome. Um, somebody else had asked as well, is MAID done
00:55:20.680 in BC care homes? Oh, absolutely. Oh, it's done everywhere. You know, this is the,
00:55:29.320 this is the horrible thing about it's done in your house, in every care bed must have must
00:55:37.400 make it available. You know, uh, it's set, like I said, it is the king of all procedures.
00:55:47.080 Yeah. And there's a directive, uh, coming down from the top, this is a global agenda. It's all part of
00:55:52.840 lowering the world population. Everything that the Trudeau government is doing is in lock,
00:55:59.300 step with a foreign unelected body. That's interfering with our democracy and focused on
00:56:05.700 killing as many Canadians as possible. Trudeau is a traitor and he needs to be arrested and he
00:56:11.780 needs to be locked up for ever and ever till the end of his natural days. And, uh, I don't know that
00:56:20.340 he should be offered palliative care in the end. Um, that will leave to whoever determines that in the
00:56:26.740 end. Um, maybe he'll be offered some of his own, uh, you know, uh, whatever that he's, uh, promoting
00:56:34.340 at this time. I, I, I don't even want to go down that aisle, but this is, it is so evil and so wicked
00:56:39.380 are the drugs that are being used in euthanizing people. Are they actually all approved by health Canada?
00:56:47.620 No, see the drugs, there's no drug that's been approved to kill people. These are all repurposed
00:56:56.340 drugs, right? So, um, they'll just use an incredibly large dose of whatever drug cocktail,
00:57:04.580 the recipe is. So, um, again, if you would like more information about that, then please go on our
00:57:11.780 website, send us an email or call us and I will send to you the transcripts from Dr. Joel Sivett,
00:57:18.420 uh, as he testified to the Senate of Canada. See, all of this information is out there. You just need
00:57:25.220 to know where to look or who to ask to give it to you. So if you have information, if you have
00:57:30.260 interest in the pharmacology around MAID, um, you know, please contact us and we'll send you that.
00:57:39.780 Um, and that, you know, that's just a public service because, you know, this was, um, all
00:57:45.140 supposed to be, it is actually on their website. You just need to know the Senate of Canada website.
00:57:48.980 You just need to know where to find it. Uh, but it's, you know, it, it, it brings to light some very,
00:57:56.100 very important questions, um, particularly to smash the narrative around MAID, uh, questions that now
00:58:06.340 in 2024 are being asked about information that was provided to the government in 2021.
00:58:14.580 So, you know, uh, you know, we'll certainly do that, um, as public service and let, let people,
00:58:20.900 get people access to that information.
00:58:23.780 Okay. Thank you. I know with Dr. Zivot, it was that, uh, video that went viral with Dr. Jordan
00:58:32.100 Peterson and that other gal, I believe you're on a speaking tour with her soon. And it was the matter
00:58:37.460 of, they were comparing this to waterboarding and of course, waterboarding became illegal because of
00:58:43.700 how cruel it was. And so just to give people an idea, if you haven't seen that video with Dr.
00:58:49.540 uh, Peterson, then you can go to the weekly email that we sent out in preparation for Angelina to
00:58:57.380 come on. And we've included the video on that page, uh, for ease of finding it, but it was horrific to,
00:59:03.620 uh, understand that they're actually giving you a paralytic. And so a person could be in their body,
00:59:10.980 just absolutely wanting to scream out loud and incapable of moving to say that they're actually
00:59:18.100 drowning in this fluid. Yeah. Yeah. Due to the drugs, it's reminiscent of the government, uh,
00:59:27.700 mandating or providing the protocol to treat so-called COVID with Remdemsevir. And if people
00:59:34.340 don't know what Remdemsevir does is it shuts down your kidneys and then your body fills with fluid and
00:59:41.060 especially around your heart and sorry, in your lungs, and then they intubate you. And that's,
00:59:47.380 that's the death move is that you actually drown in your own fluid. And this is what the government
00:59:53.860 was recommending instead of hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin. And it's, um, all of this will come to
01:00:02.260 light one day. I mean, we were just ringing the bells in 2020, trying to help people to understand
01:00:10.100 in 2021 and throughout what the proper protocol should be that they could have done at home and
01:00:16.020 saved many of their loved ones and especially avoided taking the mRNA shot. So Angelina, I know
01:00:22.420 that you have to run. So is there anything else that you would like to add or any advice? I know,
01:00:29.060 actually, there was one question. Somebody had asked, what is involved in palliative care?
01:00:33.380 Okay, so palliative care is actually a huge continuum of care, right? Many times people
01:00:40.420 only know about the last stages of it, where someone is, you know, facing an imminent death,
01:00:45.300 and they maybe have very only very short time left. But you know, in that circumstance,
01:00:52.500 palliative care, being a 50 year medical discipline, has a lot of pharmacology involved,
01:00:58.420 a lot of technology where, and it's a specialized field, so people actually have to be trained in
01:01:04.500 palliative care. And, you know, one of the great gifts to humanity that palliative care offers is its
01:01:11.860 pain relief, right? It's the ability to make people comfortable, that they need not suffer in pain.
01:01:19.540 You know, that's where palliative care can come in, in the last stages. In earlier stages, you know,
01:01:24.180 all of us can be palliative care practitioners, you don't have to be a doctor or nurse,
01:01:28.180 it's people taking care of our loved ones, you know, providing psychological support, emotional
01:01:33.380 support, spiritual support, that is all part of that holistic discipline of palliative care. And that's
01:01:40.100 why we say it starts from diagnosis, right on until natural end. But what it does not include
01:01:48.420 is killing. It would never, it does never include that. People all over the world who are invested
01:01:55.060 in this discipline will tell you that straight up, it's only countries like Canada that have this ongoing
01:02:01.060 coercive makeover of what palliative care is. And somehow palliative care is, you know, three to six
01:02:07.140 months to death. And, you know, it includes euthanasia, this all this, like, literally whack
01:02:13.300 stuff. No, it isn't. That's like this revisionist idea. Like, that's something else, right? If that's
01:02:20.100 what you want, that's entirely something else, that is not palliative care. So, you know, don't drag us
01:02:25.460 into this, this macabre kind of existence that the only thing that you can do is kill somebody
01:02:31.620 to make their pain go away. This is nonsense. So that's what palliative care is. It is truly a
01:02:37.380 national treasure for Canada. We've had a lot to do in terms of developing this medical discipline.
01:02:45.140 And it is something that should not never be destroyed.
01:02:49.380 You know, something that led up to this that I'm just thinking as you're speaking about palliative care,
01:02:53.620 I mean, I grew up in a generation where we were taught very much to respect our elders and to care for
01:02:59.540 them. I remember going and picking my grandmother up to bring her to the Christmas party or taking
01:03:04.180 her to the mall in her wheelchair or picking up groceries. I mean, these are all the things that we
01:03:09.460 do to provide care for our loved ones. And this new generation, what they have done and fed them
01:03:16.660 through the media and Hollywood is, it's all about you. You need to enjoy life. Use your fast food
01:03:24.100 credit card to get whatever you want. And everything is now and it's and it's focused on you. There's no
01:03:30.100 sacrifice. There's unless we're really bringing up our own kids to understand sacrifice. And if you've
01:03:35.620 got them in the education system, they're undoing it because this is the kind of lack of compassion
01:03:40.980 and empathy that they are teaching within the school systems as well. And so we need to get back to
01:03:48.180 traditional values all the way around. Vote for traditional people, right? Get them into office.
01:03:55.300 And I really believe that we have the control and the power to turn this around. And it may be one
01:04:02.500 elected official at a time, but it is within our power and within your vote to make a change. So thank
01:04:09.540 you, Angelina, so much for coming on. If you have another PowerPoint presentation or more information that
01:04:15.860 you would like to share, please get in touch with me because I'd love to have you back on the show
01:04:19.540 again. Thank you so much. Thank you for your support. God bless you. God bless Canada. Let us stand
01:04:26.260 together. Thank you, Angelina. God bless you. Okay. Bye-bye. Bye. All right. Well, that was an amazing show.
01:04:34.340 We're so grateful to Angelina and the work she's doing. Make sure you visit their website, support the work
01:04:40.580 that she's doing as well. If you hear that she's in the community and she's doing a presentation,
01:04:45.700 please make sure you support her and attend and invite others. Next week, David Hunt is coming
01:04:52.580 on. We're going to be talking about homeschool versus private public education. He specializes
01:04:57.620 in statistics. There's nobody with statistics like David Hunt. And so if you're thinking about
01:05:03.620 homeschooling or just on, you know, kind of sitting on the fence still, as you finish up a new year with
01:05:08.980 your kids, the public education is toxic. A lot of the private schools are headed that way. So come
01:05:16.180 and join us next week. It's going to be again, a very impactful and power hour. And again, I ask you,
01:05:21.620 once again, please donate to Action for Canada, help us continue the amazing work that we're doing,
01:05:26.580 fighting for Canadians, fighting to protect our borders, fighting to protect the future for the next
01:05:32.740 generations. All right. The verse for today is going to be from Psalm 62, 11 to 12. One thing God has
01:05:44.260 spoken, two things I have heard. Power belongs to you, God, and with you. Lord is unfailing love and you,
01:05:53.860 reward everyone according to what we have done. And so when we get to heaven one day, God's going to know
01:06:08.180 whether, you know, we just sort of sat on the fence and were passive and silent, or if we actually used
01:06:16.100 our voice and our gifts and talents to protect the widow and the orphan and our borders and to lead
01:06:23.140 people to Jesus. I mean, even all of these Muslims and the Palestinians and the Sikhs and the Hindus
01:06:31.460 and the Buddhists that are currently in Canada right now, they are following false religions and
01:06:37.860 multiple false gods that are set up by, um, the foundation is, uh, is, is demonic. And when we take
01:06:45.620 a look at all of those religions and there's very, very precious people, uh, following those religions,
01:06:51.540 and I don't want to disrespect them, but I, if I love them enough, I'm going to talk the truth.
01:06:56.260 And we've talked to people who have converted from Hinduism to Christianity, and they said they
01:07:01.140 were always so confused because they have hundreds of gods and who do they pray to, who they look to,
01:07:07.220 do they have salvation? Do they have hope? Or, you know, they're the ones that die and come back as a
01:07:12.580 cat next time. And, uh, you know, if they're lucky enough, they come back as a dog. Uh, you know,
01:07:17.460 it's, it's, it, there is no hope in these other religions as there is in Christianity with a hope
01:07:23.140 in Jesus Christ as Lord of ours and savior, who gave his life on that cross so that we could have
01:07:28.660 salvation. And so we just want to direct you to the cross, to the one and only God. And you need to
01:07:34.740 know that Jesus died on that cross and you need to ask him for forgiveness, uh, for your sins,
01:07:39.700 and then ask him into your heart to be Lord and savior. And then you are assured eternity. And
01:07:46.020 that's, uh, that's just an incredible gift. So I just want to thank you for joining me
01:07:51.540 on the weekly news update tonight. God bless you and God bless Canada.
01:07:57.860 Today's episode was sponsored by Galatians 5.1 Freedom Coffee. Galatians 5.1 is the first
01:08:04.580 freedom fighting coffee company focused on bringing unity back into community by bridging the divide
01:08:11.060 with gourmet coffee. It goes beyond fueling the fight for freedom. Action for Canada receives 10%
01:08:18.020 of all coffee sales made. Galatians 5.1 offer a wide selection of coffee products. Go to
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01:08:32.900 That's what I've got to say. Look at this crowd.
01:08:49.300 I'm going to thank God and God alone for the ground that I'm standing on.
01:08:56.180 I'm going to thank our founding fathers for giving their lives and sacrificing so much for our freedom.
01:09:12.020 And I'm calling on you today. Don't put them to shame. Don't waste what they did. We have guaranteed
01:09:21.220 rights in this country.
01:09:29.940 We are putting chapters across the nation. We are going to be in every town and every city.
01:09:37.140 And we are going to build communities within these communities of like-minded people who are
01:09:42.260 actually going to care for one another again and love on each other and give each other the help when
01:09:47.380 they're down. We are going to use the teams and the people that build within chapters to support our
01:09:54.820 businesses. The government's actions are completely 100% unlawful. Judgment will again be found on justice
01:10:06.260 and those with virtuous hearts. You have a virtuous heart if you are here today pursuing freedom and
01:10:16.980 righteousness. And then verse 23 comes along with a promise. God says he will turn the sins of evil
01:10:26.900 evil. I take great comfort in that because I serve a mighty living God who has allowed us to go through this
01:10:44.500 season of discomfort because we as a nation have turned our backs on him and we need to get right.
01:10:52.180 So I am just going to thank you so much. I'm going to say God bless you and God bless Canada.
01:11:22.180 God bless you.
01:11:52.180 Thank you.
01:12:22.180 Thank you.