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Canadian retailer’s commercial celebrates the ‘hard beauty’ of assisted suicide

FIRST READING: Pro-MAID commercial comes just as Canada learns that at least five veterans were offered MAID in lieu of treatment for PTSD

A still from All is Beauty, a commercial by the Quebec clothing retailer Simons celebrating the decision of a Vancouver Island woman to seek medically assisted death.
A still from All is Beauty, a commercial by the Quebec clothing retailer Simons celebrating the decision of a Vancouver Island woman to seek medically assisted death. Photo by YouTube

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The Canadian federal government has announced that it will be summoning the Russian ambassador in order to officially register their complaint with this tweet issued last week from the Russian Federation’s Ottawa embassy. Russia’s Ottawa embassy has long been a pretty brazen propagandist for the regime of President Vladimir Putin, including frequently dismissing or glossing over evidence of war crimes committed by Russian soldiers in occupied Ukraine. However, this appears to be the first tweet that’s explicitly gotten them into trouble with Global Affairs.
The Canadian federal government has announced that it will be summoning the Russian ambassador in order to officially register their complaint with this tweet issued last week from the Russian Federation’s Ottawa embassy. Russia’s Ottawa embassy has long been a pretty brazen propagandist for the regime of President Vladimir Putin, including frequently dismissing or glossing over evidence of war crimes committed by Russian soldiers in occupied Ukraine. However, this appears to be the first tweet that’s explicitly gotten them into trouble with Global Affairs. Photo by Twitter

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TOP STORY

Just as Canadians learned that their federal government greenlit the doctor-assisted suicide of a veteran who had been seeking treatment for PTSD, international attention has focused on a three-minute commercial by a Canadian retail giant seeming to romanticize the country’s regime of medically assisted death.

“All is Beauty,” released last month by the Montreal-headquartered clothing retailer Simons, profiles the final weeks of 37-year-old B.C. woman Jennyfer Hatch, who was approved for a doctor-assisted death due to Ehlers Danlos syndrome. Hatch died just days before the video was released, although the condition is never once mentioned in the film.

Last breaths are sacred … when I imagine my final days I see music, I see the ocean,” she says against images of her making sand art and gathering with friends on the Tofino shore. “The most beautiful exit,” reads a title in the video.

The film notably makes no reference whatsoever to clothing, home décor or one of the other products sold by Simons.

It’s obviously not a commercial campaign,” Simons CEO Peter Simons – the fifth-generation heir to the company – explained in a video interview accompanying “All Is Beauty.”

Rather, he said it was an effort by the company to use its “privilege” to promote “human connection” and “hard beauty.”

“I think we sincerely believe that companies have a responsibility to participate in communities and to help build the communities that we want to live in tomorrow, and leave to our children,” he said.

Since its release on Oct. 24, the film’s English-language version has accumulated one million views on YouTube, and in recent days has attracted widespread criticism as a glitzy corporate endorsement of Canada’s rapidly expanding MAID regime.

Canadian clothes retailer Simons is actually using suicide to market their products,” read a widely circulated Sunday Twitter post by conservative U.S. commentator Ian Miles Cheong.

In a Monday post, the right-wing National Review called it evidence of “Canada’s Suicide Fetish.”

The ad even drew comparisons to a pro-suicide ad featured in the 2006 science fiction thriller Children of Men.

The film takes place in a dystopian future where humanity has lost the ability to reproduce, and governments are encouraging suicide as a form of population control. Quietus, a euthanasia drug, is shown running commercials similarly featuring an oceanfront theme and relaxing music against the tagline, “You decide when.”

The annual rate of Canadians seeking medically assisted death has been surging by double digits ever since the practice was first legalized in 2016 following a Supreme Court ruling that found prior prohibitions violated the Charter guarantee of “security of the person.”

While the Trudeau government was initially careful to legalize MAID only for those whose death was “reasonably foreseeable,” subsequent court rulings forced an expansion of the practice to apply to any Canadian claiming a “grievous and irremediable” health condition. Starting next year, this will even include Canadians whose only underlying condition is mental illness.

And the policy may still be liberalized further. Just last month, the Quebec College of Physicians suggested to a House of Commons committee that MAID should be extended to newborns with severe malformations. Dying with Dignity Canada, an organization instrumental to Canada’s initial legalization of MAID, is now advocating for assisted suicide to be extended to any Canadian at least 12 years of age.”

In 2021, 10,064 Canadians died by MAID, a 32.4 per cent increase over the previous year’s 7,603. And that, in turn, was a 34.3 per cent increase over the 5,661 Canadians who died by MAID in 2019.

MAID rates have been particularly high on Vancouver Island, where the All Is Beauty film was shot.

About 7.5 per cent of deaths on the island are now due to medically assisted death.

This is more than three times higher than the national average, and a massive surge from just three years prior. In 2018, MAID deaths constituted only 3.6 per cent of total Vancouver Island mortality.

At the same time, there has been a reliable stream of controversial cases in which Canadians have either sought – or been offered – MAID on issues for which non-lethal treatment was feasible. This included at least five Canadian combat veterans who were offered MAID by a Veterans Affairs caseworker after seeking help for issues ranging from depression to PTSD.

As revealed during a House of Commons committee hearing last week, one of the five veterans took up the caseworker on the suggestion, and was reportedly among Canada’s 10,064 2021 MAID deaths.

  1. Vancouver man Ray Chwartkowski holds up a picture of his sister Cheryl (seen as a child in the picture with her mother, Rose). Cheryl received medical assistance in dying in 2019 at age 50 and Chwartkowski believes his sister (who suffered from lifelong mental health issues) should not have been eligible as she did not have a terminal illness.

    How Canada ignored warnings that euthanasia would immediately go too far

  2. In March 2023, Canada will become one of the few nations in the world allowing medical aid in dying, or MAID, for people whose sole underlying condition is depression, bipolar disorder, personality disorders, schizophrenia, PTSD or any other mental affliction.

    Canada will soon offer doctor-assisted death to the mentally ill. Who should be eligible?

IN OTHER NEWS

With the sudden news that the Liberals quietly introduced an amendment that would criminalize millions of Canadian long guns, Taleeb Noormohamed was among the first of the Liberal caucus to weigh in on the changes. In a Sunday tweet, he wrote “let’s be clear: we’re not banning hunting rifles & shotguns.” Except that the sentiment is … not true. While previous Liberal long-gun bans at least attempted to stick to firearms with military esthetics, this latest one pretty clearly encompasses hundreds of rifles and shotguns that are explicitly designed and marketed to hunters.

My friend The Hon. @marcomendicino & I met to discuss the importance of Bill C-21 to strengthen gun control laws & keep our streets safe.

By banning assault style firearms, we’re building safer communities for us all.

Let’s be clear: we're not banning hunting rifles & shotguns. pic.twitter.com/69757NDYvp

— Taleeb Noormohamed 🇨🇦 (@Taleeb) November 28, 2022

It’s not the first time the current cabinet has defended a gun ban by saying things that aren’t particularly true. Over the summer, when the Liberals introduced a freeze on the sale or transfer of handguns, Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino said the move “doesn’t target law-abiding gun owners.” However, law-abiding gun owners were literally the only constituency affected by the ban for the simple reason that law-breaking gun owners were already happily ignoring prior federal regulations on restricted firearms.

Two RCAF officers will face disciplinary hearings for attributing an “inappropriate” call sign to a fellow CF-18 pilot. Unfortunately, the military has refused to say what the inappropriate call sign actually was, so we’re forced to use our imagination. However, given the Department of Defence’s ongoing problem with sexual misconduct within the military, it’s a good bet that the callsigns probably had sexual connotations that the air force no longer wanted being used in official radio communications.

You may wonder who goes to brick-and-mortar bookstores anymore. In Canada, at least, bookstores appear to be a place for random foreign politicians to hang out. Last week, the President of Estonia reported that he ducked into a Toronto Indigo location where he ran into former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (she also ran for president once, if you remember).
You may wonder who goes to brick-and-mortar bookstores anymore. In Canada, at least, bookstores appear to be a place for random foreign politicians to hang out. Last week, the President of Estonia reported that he ducked into a Toronto Indigo location where he ran into former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (she also ran for president once, if you remember). Photo by President of Estonia
The Canadian federal government has announced that it will be summoning the Russian ambassador in order to officially register their complaint with this tweet issued last week from the Russian Federation’s Ottawa embassy. Russia’s Ottawa embassy has long been a pretty brazen propagandist for the regime of President Vladimir Putin, including frequently dismissing or glossing over evidence of war crimes committed by Russian soldiers in occupied Ukraine. However, this appears to be the first tweet that’s explicitly gotten them into trouble with Global Affairs.
The Canadian federal government has announced that it will be summoning the Russian ambassador in order to officially register their complaint with this tweet issued last week from the Russian Federation’s Ottawa embassy. Russia’s Ottawa embassy has long been a pretty brazen propagandist for the regime of President Vladimir Putin, including frequently dismissing or glossing over evidence of war crimes committed by Russian soldiers in occupied Ukraine. However, this appears to be the first tweet that’s explicitly gotten them into trouble with Global Affairs. Photo by Twitter

In other military news, Gen. Wayne Eyre, chief of the defence staff, politely hinted to his bosses last week that the Canadian military can’t really do anything anymore. It’s strapped for equipment and hemorrhaging personnel to the point that the Canadian Armed Forces would be “hard pressed” to mount any kind of operation beyond its current job of desperately maintaining the status quo, Eyre told CTV.

Get all of these insights and more into your inbox every weekday at 6 p.m. ET by signing up for the First Reading newsletter here.

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