reSee.it - Related Video Feed

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker expresses concerns about MAID, highlighting issues with the drug sodium thiopental used in the procedure. They discuss the potential drowning effect of the drug and criticize the lack of transparency in the process. The speaker questions the ethics of MAID, pointing out the financial motivations behind it and the impact on vulnerable individuals. They emphasize the need for honesty and moral integrity in these practices.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
We have enough equipment and medication in the NHS to ensure a comfortable death. The supply chains for medications like midazolam and morphine are closely monitored to prevent shortages. Prescribing morphine per patient is being reviewed to reduce wastage. The clinical team is constantly discussing ways to optimize the supply of key medicines.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Good death requires equipment, medication, and staff. The NHS has enough syringe drivers to deliver medications for comfort during passing. Precautions are in place to ensure sufficient medications like midazolam and morphine. Morphine is prescribed per patient to prevent abuse. Relaxing morphine prescribing laws for doctors and healthcare professionals could reduce waste in healthcare homes. The government is keeping the reduction of key medicine wastage under review.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A good death requires equipment, medication, and administration. The NHS has enough syringe drivers to keep patients comfortable during their final moments. However, there are accusations of negligence and harm caused by the use of certain drugs. The combination of midazolam and morphine has been deemed dangerous and has led to the deaths of multiple individuals. The use of diuretics to dehydrate patients has also worsened their condition. This scandalous situation is known as the paradoxical effect, where the very treatment meant to help actually harms. The consequences have been devastating, with waves of deaths occurring due to this cycle.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
When medically assisted dying (MAID) became legal in Canada in 2016, it was limited to those facing imminent death, but accessibility expanded in March. Critics argue that MAID devalues the lives of people with disabilities, particularly those living in poverty. The Netherlands has monthly reviews of assisted dying cases, while Canada only publishes annual statistics. Last year, MAID accounted for 3.3% of deaths in Canada, with cancer as the leading cause. Although many seek MAID, the federal government emphasizes safeguards to ensure eligibility is carefully considered. Canada is set to further expand MAID eligibility to include individuals with mental disorders, potentially increasing its prevalence to about 4% of all deaths, similar to Belgium and the Netherlands.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Since 2016, euthanasia has been legal in Canada, with plans to extend it to mental health conditions next year. In June 2019, Alan Nichols, 61, requested euthanasia after being hospitalized in Chilliwack and died by lethal injection. His brother, Gary, shares that while assisted dying can be compassionate, its loose application can put families in difficult situations. Before hospitalization, Alan faced challenges from a benign brain tumor diagnosed at age 12, which led to surgeries that impaired his right side and hearing. Despite these challenges, he lived a relatively normal life, engaging in daily activities, and was not completely incapacitated. Gary emphasizes that Alan's life was still worth living, raising concerns about the criteria for euthanasia.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Dan Dix opens by presenting a stark portrait of Canada, praising compassion and healthcare but asserting a dark secret: ninety thousand lives have been killed through Canada’s medical assistance in dying program (MAiD) since legalization in 2016. He asserts this number is an estimate based on what is known and that the true figure could be higher, noting that doctors are sometimes under pressure to propose MAID even when patients do not raise it. He frames MAiD as a system that is accelerating, claiming it has become the leading cause of death in some provinces and that, in 2024, nearly five percent of all deaths in Canada were due to MAID—one in every twenty deaths. Dix argues the scope has expanded beyond terminal illness to include poverty, mental health, or simply feeling like a burden. He alleges veterans with PTSD, disabled individuals, and people who cannot afford housing are being offered MAID. He contends this is not compassionate care but a “conveyor belt to death” sold as dignity, and accuses the government of not fully disclosing the data. He provides anecdotes, saying he knows a man who was offered MAID three times during a single hospital visit, clarifying that the person wanted help, not an option to end his life. He characterizes Canada’s euthanasia regime as a machine “chewing up the vulnerable, the poor, and the broken, and spitting out body bags,” and asserts the world is watching, labeling Canada as “progressive” while describing the situation as a dystopian nightmare. In addressing what should be done, Dix encourages discussion, sharing the video, and demanding answers about why Canada is promoting death as a solution to suffering. He emphasizes the 90,000 figure as representing real people with families and futures. Dix references his video featuring Angelina Ireland from the Delta Hospice Society, describing how the government allegedly took her property for refusing to participate in MAID and allegedly sent “death cult activists” to shut her down. He asserts that there is resistance to MAID and calls for support for that movement. He promotes audience action: share the video, join the fight for life, and support his efforts via donations at pressfortruth.ca/donate, with options for one-time PayPal donations, monthly contributions, e-transfer to Dan@pressfortruth.ca, or mail to his P.O. box. Dix concludes by urging viewers to choose life over death, promising more video reports, and signing off with a call to subscribe, like, share, and stay tuned. He closes with a reiteration of “truth” as the guiding message.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 recalls a case: “patient, he was sick. He looked like he was dying, but they just, like, pushed morphine. He had no pain. You know, they do a pain score, so zero to 10. This guy had zero pain.” Then, “they pushed insulin to drop his sugar, and his glucose was fine. And then he died three minutes later.” He says he “turned him into medical board. I reviewed this chart and turned him into medical board. Nothing.” “But, yeah, they definitely that definitely went on during COVID.” Speaker 1: “Jesus. That is such a terrifying thought that someone would just decide so many people are dying. This guy's definitely gonna die. Yep. This is 100% real?” Speaker 0: “Yeah. Definite. Definite.” Speaker 1: “It's It seems like something” Speaker 0: “they would call it tell euthanasia. They don't call it euthanasia.” Speaker 1: “It seems like something I would tell me, and then I would have to ask you. Like, this is something someone told me. I'm sure this” Speaker 0: “is send you the record that I read to you.” Speaker 1: “It seems like something I would be bringing up to you as a ridiculous thing, and you'd shoot it down.”

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 states that the Journal of Death and Dying, in 2025, published Health Canada's plans to save money by shifting to MAID (medical assistance in dying) rather than palliative care. The plan projects savings from 2027 to 2047 amounting to $1,273,000,000,000 by providing fourteen point seven million Canadians with MAID. The breakdown of those fourteen point seven million Canadians includes: - Over nine million projected to be elderly. - Over four million projected to be mentally ill and suicidal. - Over three hundred thousand projected to be Indigenous. - The remainder described as addicts, homeless, and others. Speaker 0 emphasizes that Canada is running a program and intends to expand it, including a mentally ill only qualification beginning in 2027. They note that the statistics are "disgusting" to them and direct listeners to check the SAGE journal, or the Journal of Death and Dying, for the detailed breakdown, stating that the sources go through the numbers. They also mention that they have covered these figures on their series as well.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
It's crazy. They'll do it if you're just depressed. They'll do it if you don't like being overweight. It's awful. It's a lot of the vaccine injured are doing it. They're going to Switzerland to Canada for this. The Canada numbers are bananas. More than fifteen thousand people received medical assisted assistance in dying in Canada in 2023. Yes. What is it in 2024 now? Imagine 2025, where they're this is crazy. 15,000 people, they've helped them die instead of, like, help them live. Instead of, we used to call suicide hotline. Hey. Don't do it, Bob. And now Canada's, like, come on in. Press 1 if you want the suicide and see appointment for you.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In hospitals, a drug called midazolam, previously used for euthanasia and lethal injections, is now being used to induce a comatose state in patients. Shockingly, it has also been administered to elderly individuals in UK care centers, with their deaths being attributed to COVID-19. It is important to note that midazolam is known to be lethal. This information has been observed in medical reports.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
People are going to Switzerland and Canada for medical assistance in dying, including vaccine-injured individuals. In Canada, over 15,000 people received medical assistance in dying in 2023. The speaker questions this, suggesting that the focus should be on helping people live instead of facilitating death. They compare it to suicide hotlines that aim to prevent suicide. The speaker suggests exploring options to improve people's health and well-being, addressing hormone levels and other physical issues that may contribute to depression.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In 2016, Canada and California legalized medical assistance in dying. Despite having similar populations, California has seen only 893 cases of assisted suicide, while Canada has reported over 50,000. This stark difference raises concerns about Canada's approach, which some view as predatory. Critics argue that instead of providing palliative care, Canada is expanding eligibility for assisted dying to vulnerable groups, including children as young as 12, the mentally ill, homeless individuals, and addicts.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker discusses concerns about Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID) in Canada, highlighting issues with the drug sodium thiopental and its potential for causing drowning during the procedure. Autopsies reveal troubling details about the process, contradicting claims of a painless death. The speaker also mentions cases of families being denied access to autopsy reports. These revelations raise questions about the ethics and transparency of MAID practices in Canada.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0: The problem they have, like I say, or had, is that they weren't getting enough deaths to really find the population. So they needed a lot of people to die very quickly in the 2020. So what they did in Britain, they did it in other countries too, but I can talk about the British example, is we had a health secretary at the time called Matt Hancock, and he oversaw the ordering, not least two years supply from France, of an end of life drug called midazolam, which is used in by a number of American states in the execution process. It's a sedative, and if you give too much of it, you kill people, and I've seen documented evidence. We've done a documentary about it on Iconic. I've seen documented evidence given to me that shows that the levels of midazolam that were given to people were lethal and would have been known to be lethal. And another effect of midazolam, ironically, is that it suppresses respiration and respiratory, the respiratory process. So if you take midazolam, you start to have breathing problems. And the more midazolam they give you, the more breathing problems you have until it kills you. And these connection to the breathing problems and the suppression of respiration is actually in the regulations of midazolam use. It's all there to be seen. So in Britain, you had this massive, massive delivery of midazolam in the 2020, and they used midazolam in the preparation for operations, but they stopped operations except the most emergency. So all that midazolam that would have been used in operations was now not being used in operations. Suddenly, in the same period, April 2020, the midazolam use went through the fricking roof way beyond anything that's been used before. And this is what they've done, and they did it in America, and they did it in other countries. They said to the hospitals in Britain, this is through Hancock and those that control him, it's the porn, a psychopathic porn, yes, but a porn. We've got to clear the beds for this big influx of COVID people that's coming in this pandemic, which never actually came. That's why you saw all these nurses on TikTok doing their dancing in empty hospitals, nobody bloody there. So we've got to get clear the beds. So what the hospitals did, they did this in America. Mhmm. The same thing happened there with another drug, and they they they put them into the care homes. And if you're in a hospital and you're elderly, your health is in serious trouble. But they put these very seriously ill people into care homes, and they fed them midazolam. At the same time they fed them midazolam, they were putting do not resuscitate orders on them, not only on the elderly, but on people with learning difficulties, people with psychological problems, just like the Nazis. And these people were dying in droves. What will happen is thousands and thousands and thousands of old people in Britain died in this very same period from midazolam. And they said they died of COVID nineteen because it was their respiratory thing that did that did for them. Right? Well, that was caused by the midazolam, you psychopath. And what did they call that? Thousands of people dying. The first wave of COVID, because they didn't have a virus, so they had to make it seem as if they did. In America, they used a drug called Remdesivir that was mandated for use on so called COVID patients. They tested positive with a test not tested with the virus by the psychopath, Antti DiFauci. And what remdesivir does is it stops the kidneys function, stops other organs function, but it stops the kidneys function, it's infamous for it. And so what happens is the abdominal cavity started filling up with water of people, and their lungs filled up with water, and they literally drowned. And they called this the first wave of COVID in America. This is how it was done.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The Liverpool Care Pathway (LCP) was introduced in the 1990s to provide end-of-life care in hospitals. While it aimed to improve comfort and dignity, there were controversies surrounding its implementation. Families reported treatments being removed too quickly and patients being put on the LCP without consent. In 2013, the LCP was scrapped in England, Scotland, and Northern Ireland, but concerns remain that similar practices continue under different names. There are allegations that the sedative midazolam, which suppresses the respiratory system, is being used inappropriately on COVID-19 patients, potentially leading to premature deaths. Whistleblowers have raised concerns about the lack of consultation and the normalization of euthanasia in care homes.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A patient who looked like he was dying was given morphine despite having zero pain, according to the pain score. Insulin was also administered even though his glucose was fine, and he died three minutes later. The speaker reported this case to the medical board after reviewing the chart, but they did nothing. The speaker states that this definitely went on during COVID. The speaker refers to this as euthanasia, though it is not called that. The speaker offered to send the record that was reviewed.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
When medically assisted dying (MAID) became legal in Canada in 2016, it was limited to those facing imminent death. Accessibility expanded in March, raising concerns about the devaluation of life for people with disabilities living in poverty. The rapid increase in requests for MAID, particularly among those in financial distress, has surprised many. Unlike the Netherlands, Canada lacks regular reviews of assisted dying cases, although it does provide annual statistics. In the last year, MAID accounted for 3.3% of all deaths in Canada, with cancer being the most common reason. The federal government emphasizes enhanced safeguards, asserting that two doctors would unlikely approve MAID if a person's suffering could be alleviated through available treatments. Canada is set to further expand eligibility to include those with mental disorders, aligning with practices in Belgium and the Netherlands.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A committee at Harvard invented brain death without conducting any studies or collecting patient data. They concluded that brainwave testing is not necessary after studying only 9 patients, 2 of whom still had brainwave activity. The speaker argues that people declared brain dead are actually alive and can recover. They criticize the practice of harvesting organs from conscious individuals who cannot communicate. The speaker emphasizes that unconsciousness does not mean the absence of consciousness. They also highlight the issue of pain, explaining that even if patients cannot demonstrate pain due to paralysis, their physiological responses indicate they are experiencing it. The speaker claims that brain death is primarily a means to obtain organs and describes the tactics used to convince families to donate. They assert that only healthy organs from living individuals are used for transplantation. The speaker also mentions the increasing number of organs obtained from drug overdoses and criticizes the practice of administering Narcan to overdose victims to bring them to the emergency room for organ harvesting. They find these practices morally repugnant.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker received a call from a care home stating her father had fallen and was agitated, and would be given morphine. She was shocked he was on an end-of-life path of injecting to stop his issues. She later learned midazolam, one of the medications being used, is considered by some practitioners to be like being waterboarded because it floods the lungs. The speaker was not advised about a specific end-of-life care plan for her father. She expressed concerns to the care home manager about what she had seen and the way end-of-life care was being administered. Despite a DNR in place from the first care home, she learned her father had been mobile and trying to get to the toilet. She felt it was a random decision to keep him quiet, in isolation, in a comatose state.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Brain death was invented without patient data or basic science studies, and brainwave testing is not required, despite some patients in initial studies having brainwave activity. Organ harvesting is performed on living individuals who may be conscious but unable to communicate. Paralyzing agents are used during organ removal, though patients may still exhibit pain responses like increased heart rate and blood pressure. Brain death was created to procure organs and reduce costs associated with long-term care. Designated requesters, often clergy or pastoral care, befriend relatives to facilitate organ donation. Organs for transplant must be healthy and can only be obtained from living persons, not cadavers. The speaker claims that the information is suppressed because it is upsetting. Organ procurement targets children and individuals aged 16-30. More organs are now obtained from drug overdoses than from accidents and gunshot wounds. Narcan is administered to overdose victims to get them to the emergency room for organ harvesting.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A good death requires equipment, medication, and staff. There are enough syringe drivers in the NHS for comfort care. Precautions are in place for medication supply, including morphine and midazolam. Morphine is prescribed per patient to prevent abuse, but there is consideration to relax laws to avoid waste. The supply chain team and clinical team discuss reducing wastage of key medicines. No further comments were made on this topic.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
As a psychiatrist in community mental health, I've seen how MAID affects my patients. Some express a desire to stop treatment, feeling they can choose to die instead. This shift undermines our efforts to support their recovery; we're now focused on preventing MAID as much as preventing suicide. I recall a patient, Ray, 62, with metastatic lung cancer, who had long sought MAID. When I confirmed his eligibility, I witnessed a physical transformation in him—his shoulders relaxed, and he smiled for the first time. He decided to proceed with MAID, and during the process, he expressed gratitude, saying, "I think you saved my life." This highlights the importance of providing care for those who truly need and want it.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A woman shares a heartbreaking story about a 13-year-old girl who had cancer and was convinced by doctors and nurses at a hospital in Edmonton, Alberta to end her own life using medical assistance in dying (MAID). The girl's parents had left her briefly to get some supplies when this happened. The mother, who had come to the hospital the day after her daughter's death, was devastated and felt helpless because the girl had signed the consent form. The speaker expresses anger towards the healthcare system and advises parents to keep their children away from hospitals. They also mention an article from CBC that claims MAID will save a significant amount of money in healthcare expenses.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The government is aggressively expanding the MAID program to include mental health disorders for euthanasia. A 27-year-old woman with autism and ADHD was approved for MAID and euthanized despite her father's efforts to stop it. There are concerns that vaccine-injured individuals will be pushed towards MAID. Canadians are complacent about these changes, which now include allowing children to make end-of-life decisions without parental consent. Canada has the loosest standards for euthanasia globally. The UK is also facing similar terrifying developments.
View Full Interactive Feed