🚶♂️Liberal MPs will present official demand for Trudeau to resign in coming days, sources say
Earlier rumblings among some Liberal MPs that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau should resign appear to be quickly snowballing into a serious effort to force him out, with caucus members expected to present within days an official demand that he step down.
Three Liberal MPs said they anticipate the demand to be presented in two steps: first, in writing as soon as this weekend, laying out the fact that constituents are telling MPs that Mr. Trudeau needs to go; and second, in an open microphone session at the party’s next caucus meeting in Ottawa, on Wednesday.
Unlike past talk of a caucus revolt, which gained no momentum, many Liberals say they believe that this time is different and that since Friday it has become clear that the Prime Minister has a problem on his hands.
Saving the sinking ship by any means necessary.
#Trudeau
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Earlier rumblings among some Liberal MPs that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau should resign appear to be quickly snowballing into a serious effort to force him out, with caucus members expected to present within days an official demand that he step down.
Three Liberal MPs said they anticipate the demand to be presented in two steps: first, in writing as soon as this weekend, laying out the fact that constituents are telling MPs that Mr. Trudeau needs to go; and second, in an open microphone session at the party’s next caucus meeting in Ottawa, on Wednesday.
Unlike past talk of a caucus revolt, which gained no momentum, many Liberals say they believe that this time is different and that since Friday it has become clear that the Prime Minister has a problem on his hands.
Saving the sinking ship by any means necessary.
#Trudeau
🍁 Maple Chronicles
The Globe and Mail
Liberal MPs will present official demand for Trudeau to resign in coming days, sources say
Unlike past talk of a caucus revolt, many Liberals say they believe that this time is different and that since Friday it has become clear that the Prime Minister has a problem on his hands
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Poilievre demands names after Trudeau claims Conservatives compromised by foreign interference
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says several current and former Conservative parliamentarians are either engaged in or targets of foreign interference as he lambasted the federal Conservative leader for refusing to get top-level security clearance.
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre accuses Trudeau of “lying” and calls on him to release the unreleased names of parliamentarians alleged by a review committee to have wittingly or unwittingly acted on behalf of a foreign country.
In his testimony, Trudeau said he directed the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) to inform the Conservative party of the intelligence backing the foreign interference claim. But since Poilievre doesn’t have top-secret clearance, Trudeau said that “no one” in the party knows about the intelligence.
#Trudeau #Poilievre
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says several current and former Conservative parliamentarians are either engaged in or targets of foreign interference as he lambasted the federal Conservative leader for refusing to get top-level security clearance.
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre accuses Trudeau of “lying” and calls on him to release the unreleased names of parliamentarians alleged by a review committee to have wittingly or unwittingly acted on behalf of a foreign country.
In his testimony, Trudeau said he directed the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) to inform the Conservative party of the intelligence backing the foreign interference claim. But since Poilievre doesn’t have top-secret clearance, Trudeau said that “no one” in the party knows about the intelligence.
#Trudeau #Poilievre
🍁 Maple Chronicles
National Post
Poilievre demands names after Trudeau claims Conservatives compromised by foreign interference
OTTAWA – Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says several current and former Conservative parliamentarians are either engaged in or targets of foreign interference as he lambasted the federal Conservative leader for refusing to get top-level security clearance.
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❌Canada Revenue Agency fires 330 employees over CERB claims during pandemic
The Canada Revenue Agency says it has terminated 330 employees for inappropriately receiving the Canada Emergency Response Benefit during the pandemic, giving its final update on an internal review.
The CRA launched an internal review in June 2023 into employees who received CERB despite being ineligible for the benefit, which identified 600 employees for further investigation.
The benefit, known as CERB for short, provided $2,000 per month to Canadians whose jobs were lost as a result of public health restrictions during the pandemic.
🍁 Maple Chronicles
The Canada Revenue Agency says it has terminated 330 employees for inappropriately receiving the Canada Emergency Response Benefit during the pandemic, giving its final update on an internal review.
The CRA launched an internal review in June 2023 into employees who received CERB despite being ineligible for the benefit, which identified 600 employees for further investigation.
The benefit, known as CERB for short, provided $2,000 per month to Canadians whose jobs were lost as a result of public health restrictions during the pandemic.
🍁 Maple Chronicles
CityNews
Canada Revenue Agency fires 330 employees over CERB claims during pandemic
The agency says 185 individuals were not terminated for taking CERB, but 40 of them faced disciplinary action, such as suspension.
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📊Nearly two-thirds of Canadians feel immigration levels too high: poll
Nearly two-thirds of Canadians believe there are “too many” immigrants currently in the country, according to a new national poll.
The survey, conducted by Leger for the Association of Canadians Studies (ACS), suggests an emerging national consensus on the matter. While slightly over a fifth of respondents felt Canada’s immigration levels were “about the right number,” just two per cent thought the country allowed in “too few” people and 65 per cent said there are too many.
Don't actually need a poll to know that.
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Nearly two-thirds of Canadians believe there are “too many” immigrants currently in the country, according to a new national poll.
The survey, conducted by Leger for the Association of Canadians Studies (ACS), suggests an emerging national consensus on the matter. While slightly over a fifth of respondents felt Canada’s immigration levels were “about the right number,” just two per cent thought the country allowed in “too few” people and 65 per cent said there are too many.
Don't actually need a poll to know that.
🍁 Maple Chronicles
National Post
Nearly two-thirds of Canadians feel immigration levels too high: poll
Nearly two-thirds of Canadians believe there are “too many” immigrants currently in the country, according to a new national poll.
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🐄Billions of litres of Canadian milk were discarded in the last 12 years
"Systemic inefficiencies" in Canada’s supply management system have led to billions of litres of milk going to waste since 2012, according to a new study published in the journal Ecological Economics.
Between 6.8 billion and 10 billion litres of milk was discarded on Canadian dairy farms over 12 years, according to researchers based in Denmark, Michigan and Halifax's Dalhousie University. They found that the amount of tossed milk made up about seven per cent of milk produced on dairy farms over that time, and was valued at up to $14.9 billion.
🍁 Maple Chronicles
"Systemic inefficiencies" in Canada’s supply management system have led to billions of litres of milk going to waste since 2012, according to a new study published in the journal Ecological Economics.
Between 6.8 billion and 10 billion litres of milk was discarded on Canadian dairy farms over 12 years, according to researchers based in Denmark, Michigan and Halifax's Dalhousie University. They found that the amount of tossed milk made up about seven per cent of milk produced on dairy farms over that time, and was valued at up to $14.9 billion.
🍁 Maple Chronicles
CTVNews
Billions of litres of Canadian milk were discarded in the last 12 years. A new study says it has a massive impact
Researchers say billions of litres of discarded Canadian milk has a massive financial, environmental and nutritional impact.
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Homelessness is not stopping this Halifax man from running for mayor
The things you have to do in Trudeau’s Canada to fix your housing situation.
#housing
🍁 Maple Chronicles
The things you have to do in Trudeau’s Canada to fix your housing situation.
#housing
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Atlantic
Homelessness is not stopping this Halifax man from running for mayor
With a crowded field of 16 candidates vying to be Halifax's next mayor, candidates have not always found it easy to stand out. But one thing sets Andrew Goodsell apart and makes him uniquely positioned to comment on a central campaign issue: he is living…
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🗳B.C. smashes advance voting record, over a million ballots cast
A record number of British Columbians have cast their ballots in advance voting before the provincial election on Saturday, Elections B.C. says.
The elections body says 1,001,331 people have already voted, representing more than 28 per cent of all registered electors and putting the province on track for big overall turnout.
#BritishColumbia
🍁 Maple Chronicles
A record number of British Columbians have cast their ballots in advance voting before the provincial election on Saturday, Elections B.C. says.
The elections body says 1,001,331 people have already voted, representing more than 28 per cent of all registered electors and putting the province on track for big overall turnout.
#BritishColumbia
🍁 Maple Chronicles
CBC
B.C. smashes advance voting record with over a million ballots cast | CBC News
A record number of British Columbians have cast their ballots in advance voting before the provincial election on Saturday, Elections B.C. says.
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Tobacco giants to pay $32.5B to Canadian provinces, smokers in 'historic' proposed deal
Three major tobacco companies are set to pay close to $25 billion to Canadian provinces and territories, and over $4 billion to Quebec smokers and their families, as part of a proposed deal stemming from a long-standing legal battle. The plan was filed in an Ontario court after five years of mediation.
The companies—JTI-Macdonald Corp., Rothmans, Benson & Hedges, and Imperial Tobacco Canada—entered creditor protection in 2019 after losing an appeal in a Quebec court case.
Under the new arrangement, provinces and territories will receive phased payments, with $6 billion paid upon implementation. Quebec plaintiffs could receive up to $100,000 each, while smokers in other provinces with lung or throat cancer or COPD diagnosed between 2015 and 2019 could claim up to $60,000.
#Quebec #Ontario
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Three major tobacco companies are set to pay close to $25 billion to Canadian provinces and territories, and over $4 billion to Quebec smokers and their families, as part of a proposed deal stemming from a long-standing legal battle. The plan was filed in an Ontario court after five years of mediation.
The companies—JTI-Macdonald Corp., Rothmans, Benson & Hedges, and Imperial Tobacco Canada—entered creditor protection in 2019 after losing an appeal in a Quebec court case.
Under the new arrangement, provinces and territories will receive phased payments, with $6 billion paid upon implementation. Quebec plaintiffs could receive up to $100,000 each, while smokers in other provinces with lung or throat cancer or COPD diagnosed between 2015 and 2019 could claim up to $60,000.
#Quebec #Ontario
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Canada's National Observer
Tobacco giants to pay $32.5B to Canadian provinces, smokers in 'historic' proposed deal
Three tobacco giants would pay close to $25 billion to provinces and territories and more than $4 billion to tens of thousands of Quebec smokers and their loved ones as part of a newly proposed deal in a corporate restructuring process triggered by a long…
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Committee reviewing euthanasia in Canada finds some deaths driven by homelessness fears, isolation
An expert committee reviewing euthanasia deaths in Canada’s most populous province has identified several cases where patients asked to be killed in part for social reasons such as isolation and fears of homelessness, raising concerns over approvals for vulnerable people in the country’s assisted dying system.
Ontario’s chief coroner issued several reports Wednesday reviewing the euthanasia deaths of people who weren’t terminally ill. The expert committee’s reports are based on an analysis of anonymized cases, chosen for their implications for future euthanasia requests.
#healthcare #MAID
🍁 Maple Chronicles
An expert committee reviewing euthanasia deaths in Canada’s most populous province has identified several cases where patients asked to be killed in part for social reasons such as isolation and fears of homelessness, raising concerns over approvals for vulnerable people in the country’s assisted dying system.
Ontario’s chief coroner issued several reports Wednesday reviewing the euthanasia deaths of people who weren’t terminally ill. The expert committee’s reports are based on an analysis of anonymized cases, chosen for their implications for future euthanasia requests.
#healthcare #MAID
🍁 Maple Chronicles
AP News
Committee reviewing euthanasia in Canada finds some deaths driven by homelessness fears, isolation
An expert committee reviewing euthanasia deaths in Canada’s most populous province has identified several cases where patients asked to be killed in part for social reasons such as isolation and fears of homelessness.
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Canada’s Indigeous chiefs reject $47.8B child welfare reform deal
First Nations chiefs have voted to reject a landmark $47.8-billion child welfare reform deal, reached in July with the Canadian government.
At a special chiefs assembly in Calgary hosted by the Assembly of First Nations, 267 out of 414 chiefs voted against a resolution in support of the deal after a lengthy debate that at points was emotionally charged as they argued either for or against it.
Mary Teegee, the chair of the Our Children Our Way Society.
48 billion not good enough?
🍁 Maple Chronicles
First Nations chiefs have voted to reject a landmark $47.8-billion child welfare reform deal, reached in July with the Canadian government.
At a special chiefs assembly in Calgary hosted by the Assembly of First Nations, 267 out of 414 chiefs voted against a resolution in support of the deal after a lengthy debate that at points was emotionally charged as they argued either for or against it.
This was not a good agreement: we have to do better for our children.
Mary Teegee, the chair of the Our Children Our Way Society.
48 billion not good enough?
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Sooke News Mirror
Canada’s Indigeous chiefs reject $47.8B child welfare reform deal
Assembly of First Nations vote fails to pass after lengthy debate
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🇨🇦🇺🇦Canada to give $65 million in military aid to Ukraine
Canada plans to give Ukraine a $64.8 million (US$47 million) military aid package that will include small arms, ammunition, and protective gear, Defense Minister Bill Blair said in a statement on Friday.
The aid package, which also allocates money for training Ukrainian troops, is part of a $500 million military funding committed by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in July.
#Ukraine
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Canada plans to give Ukraine a $64.8 million (US$47 million) military aid package that will include small arms, ammunition, and protective gear, Defense Minister Bill Blair said in a statement on Friday.
The aid package, which also allocates money for training Ukrainian troops, is part of a $500 million military funding committed by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in July.
#Ukraine
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Reuters
Canada to give C$65 million in military aid to Ukraine
Canada plans to give Ukraine a C$64.8 million ($47 million) military aid package that will include small arms, ammunition, and protective gear, Defense Minister Bill Blair said in a statement on Friday.
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🇵🇰Pakistani taxi driver in Canada tells a woman that if they were in Pakistan, he would kidnap and rape her, but since they’re in Canada, he cannot do anything.
🍁 Maple Chronicles
🍁 Maple Chronicles
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🗳Initial count finished, but 49,000 ballots still to be reviewed in B.C. election
Nearly 50,000 ballots remain uncounted in the B.C. provincial election, and their contents – as well as the outcomes of any recounts – will determine the final result of the vote.
Elections BC announced Sunday that it has completed its initial count in the 43rd provincial general election, after a nail-biting election night during which no party won enough seats to form a majority government.
As of Sunday afternoon, the agency showed the B.C. NDP leading in 46 ridings, the B.C. Conservatives in 45, and the B.C. Greens in two, leaving all parties short of the 47 seats required for a majority.
#BritishColumbia #election
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Nearly 50,000 ballots remain uncounted in the B.C. provincial election, and their contents – as well as the outcomes of any recounts – will determine the final result of the vote.
Elections BC announced Sunday that it has completed its initial count in the 43rd provincial general election, after a nail-biting election night during which no party won enough seats to form a majority government.
As of Sunday afternoon, the agency showed the B.C. NDP leading in 46 ridings, the B.C. Conservatives in 45, and the B.C. Greens in two, leaving all parties short of the 47 seats required for a majority.
#BritishColumbia #election
🍁 Maple Chronicles
British Columbia
Initial count finished, but 49,000 ballots still to be reviewed in B.C. election
Nearly 50,000 ballots remain uncounted in the B.C. provincial election, and their contents – as well as the outcomes of any recounts – will determine the final result of the vote.
Media is too big
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Khalistan separatists are doing their best to strain relations between Canada and India.
One has to be suicidal to support such “activists” and offer them asylum.
🍁 Maple Chronicles
One has to be suicidal to support such “activists” and offer them asylum.
🍁 Maple Chronicles
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Former B.C. premier Christy Clark interested in replacing Trudeau if PM steps down
Former B.C. premier Christy Clark is suggesting she would be interested in replacing Trudeau, should he decide to step down.
Clark wrote that she was open to returning to public life and "would like to be part of the discussion about the future direction of the Liberal Party and the country."
Trudeau hasn't left yet, but the Liberals are already vying for his seat.
#Trudeau
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Former B.C. premier Christy Clark is suggesting she would be interested in replacing Trudeau, should he decide to step down.
Clark wrote that she was open to returning to public life and "would like to be part of the discussion about the future direction of the Liberal Party and the country."
Trudeau hasn't left yet, but the Liberals are already vying for his seat.
#Trudeau
🍁 Maple Chronicles
CBC
Former B.C. premier Christy Clark interested in replacing Trudeau if PM steps down | CBC News
As Prime Minister Justin Trudeau faces a rebellion from his own MPs in caucus this week, former B.C. premier Christy Clark is suggesting she would be interested in replacing him, should Trudeau decide to step down.
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💰Replacing Canada's crumbling water, road infrastructure would cost more than $300B: Statistics Canada
On Monday, the national statistics agency released the results of a 2022 survey of government agencies responsible for public infrastructure. Statistics Canada estimates that it would take $356.7 billion to replace road or water systems the survey says are in "poor" or "very poor" condition.
That cost estimate has jumped by more than $100 billion since 2020, the first year the survey was conducted.
The agency defines "very poor" items of infrastructure as those posing a public health or safety hazard and needing immediate replacement of "most or all of the asset."
🍁 Maple Chronicles
On Monday, the national statistics agency released the results of a 2022 survey of government agencies responsible for public infrastructure. Statistics Canada estimates that it would take $356.7 billion to replace road or water systems the survey says are in "poor" or "very poor" condition.
That cost estimate has jumped by more than $100 billion since 2020, the first year the survey was conducted.
The agency defines "very poor" items of infrastructure as those posing a public health or safety hazard and needing immediate replacement of "most or all of the asset."
🍁 Maple Chronicles
CBC
Replacing Canada's crumbling water, road infrastructure would cost more than $300B: Statistics Canada | CBC News
Statistics Canada estimates that it would take $356.7 billion to replace road or water systems considered to be in “poor” or “very poor” condition.
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🇮🇳🇺🇸Federal officials provided intelligence about India to Washington Post, sources say
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s national security adviser and the deputy minister of foreign affairs provided sensitive intelligence about India to The Washington Post days before the RCMP publicly alleged that Indian government agents have been linked to homicides, extortions and other violent criminal activities in Canada, two sources say.
#India #US
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s national security adviser and the deputy minister of foreign affairs provided sensitive intelligence about India to The Washington Post days before the RCMP publicly alleged that Indian government agents have been linked to homicides, extortions and other violent criminal activities in Canada, two sources say.
#India #US
🍁 Maple Chronicles
The Globe and Mail
Federal officials provided intelligence about India to Washington Post, sources say
Trudeau’s national security adviser and a deputy minister at Global Affairs briefed the U.S. newspaper on India’s interference efforts in Canada before RCMP made allegations public
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💅Parents pull students from Nova Scotia school after nonbinary drag queen gives compulsory gender identity presentation: report
Parents at a Halifax-area, Nova Scotia school are furious that Oyster Pond Academy allowed a drag queen to deliver a presentation on gender identity to kids aged 12 to 15. Some parents pulled their children from class on Friday to protest the school’s decision.
Teo Ferguson, who calls himself nonbinary and works as a drag queen, shared some of his social media pages – replete with sexualized material – with the children. Ferguson also works at The Youth Project, a non-profit that influences young people to transition to another gender identity or experiment with their sexual orientation.
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Parents at a Halifax-area, Nova Scotia school are furious that Oyster Pond Academy allowed a drag queen to deliver a presentation on gender identity to kids aged 12 to 15. Some parents pulled their children from class on Friday to protest the school’s decision.
Teo Ferguson, who calls himself nonbinary and works as a drag queen, shared some of his social media pages – replete with sexualized material – with the children. Ferguson also works at The Youth Project, a non-profit that influences young people to transition to another gender identity or experiment with their sexual orientation.
🍁 Maple Chronicles
The Post Millennial
Parents pull students from Nova Scotia school after nonbinary drag queen gives compulsory gender identity presentation: report
“He could see people were not comfortable and that other people asked to leave, and they weren’t allowed to. There wasn’t any other option.”
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Canada is potentially heading for a labour supply decline as immigration policy abruptly changes
A series of rapid policy changes aimed at reducing the temporary resident population in Canada could lead to an overall shrinking of the labour force and a potential economic slowdown, economists predict.
A new report from Bank of Nova Scotia says that Ottawa could be “over-correcting” in its attempt to rein in the number of temporary residents in the country, which topped three million people for the first time this July, or 7.3 per cent of the total population.
The bank’s economists predict that the cumulative effect of Ottawa’s shift in immigration policy could lead to a 1-per-cent contraction in Canada’s labour force over the next two years and weakening economic growth if businesses do not boost productivity accordingly.
🍁 Maple Chronicles
A series of rapid policy changes aimed at reducing the temporary resident population in Canada could lead to an overall shrinking of the labour force and a potential economic slowdown, economists predict.
A new report from Bank of Nova Scotia says that Ottawa could be “over-correcting” in its attempt to rein in the number of temporary residents in the country, which topped three million people for the first time this July, or 7.3 per cent of the total population.
The bank’s economists predict that the cumulative effect of Ottawa’s shift in immigration policy could lead to a 1-per-cent contraction in Canada’s labour force over the next two years and weakening economic growth if businesses do not boost productivity accordingly.
🍁 Maple Chronicles
The Globe and Mail
Canada is potentially heading for a labour supply decline as immigration policy abruptly changes
Scotiabank economists warn that Ottawa may be ‘over-correcting’ as it reins in the temporary resident population
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🚶♂️Immigration minister calls efforts to oust Trudeau 'garbage'
Immigration Minister Marc Miller today called efforts by disaffected Liberal MPs to oust Prime Minister Justin Trudeau "garbage" and said it would be better for the team to pull together to take on their main opponent: Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre.
Miller, who is a close personal friend of Trudeau, also said the MPs planning a caucus revolt should come out of the shadows and tell the prime minister in person that they want him gone.
There are plenty of people willing to "come out of the shadows" and tell Trudeau he has to go. But he won't listen.
#Trudeau
🍁 Maple Chronicles
Immigration Minister Marc Miller today called efforts by disaffected Liberal MPs to oust Prime Minister Justin Trudeau "garbage" and said it would be better for the team to pull together to take on their main opponent: Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre.
Any minute spent on this garbage is a minute that's not spent on Pierre Poilievre and what he wants to do to this country, and I think that is very dangerous.
Miller, who is a close personal friend of Trudeau, also said the MPs planning a caucus revolt should come out of the shadows and tell the prime minister in person that they want him gone.
There are plenty of people willing to "come out of the shadows" and tell Trudeau he has to go. But he won't listen.
#Trudeau
🍁 Maple Chronicles
CBC
Immigration minister calls efforts to oust Trudeau 'garbage' | CBC News
Immigration Minister Marc Miller today called efforts by disaffected Liberal MPs to oust Prime Minister Justin Trudeau "garbage" and said it would be better for the team to pull together to take on their main opponent: Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre.
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💉Nova Scotia woman was asked if she knew about assisted dying before mastectomy surgery for breast cancer
The Nova Scotia woman was steeling herself for major surgery, a mastectomy for breast cancer, when an unfamiliar doctor ran through a series of pre-operative questions: What was her medical history? What medications does she regularly take? Any allergies? Was she aware of medical assistance in dying?
Fifteen months later, before a second mastectomy, “it happened again,” the woman said. Different doctor, same inquiry. “In the list of questions about your life and your past and how are you treating these things was, ‘Hey, (MAID) is a thing that exists,'” she said.
Her experience is drawing fresh concerns about doctors in Canada raising euthanasia before their patients do, a practice that is prohibited or strongly discouraged in most jurisdictions in the world with legalized assisted death.
#MAID
🍁 Maple Chronicles
The Nova Scotia woman was steeling herself for major surgery, a mastectomy for breast cancer, when an unfamiliar doctor ran through a series of pre-operative questions: What was her medical history? What medications does she regularly take? Any allergies? Was she aware of medical assistance in dying?
Fifteen months later, before a second mastectomy, “it happened again,” the woman said. Different doctor, same inquiry. “In the list of questions about your life and your past and how are you treating these things was, ‘Hey, (MAID) is a thing that exists,'” she said.
Her experience is drawing fresh concerns about doctors in Canada raising euthanasia before their patients do, a practice that is prohibited or strongly discouraged in most jurisdictions in the world with legalized assisted death.
#MAID
🍁 Maple Chronicles
National Post
Nova Scotia woman was asked if she knew about assisted dying before mastectomy surgery for breast cancer
The Nova Scotia woman was steeling herself for major surgery, a mastectomy for breast cancer, when an unfamiliar doctor ran through a series of pre-operative questions: What was her medical history? What medications does she regularly take? Any allergies?…
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