Executive Director, Euthanasia Prevention Coalition
An article published in the Toronto Sun on April 25 and written by Brian Passifiume concerns David Baltzer, a Canadian veteran who was offered euthanasia instead of medical treatment in December 2019.
Baltzer, a two tour Afghanistan combat veteran with the Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry (PPCLI,) told the Toronto Sun that:
he was offered MAID in Dec. 23, 2019 — possibly making him among the first Canadian soldiers offered therapeutic suicide by the federal government.The Toronto Sun reported Baltzer as saying:
“It made me wonder, were they really there to help us, or slowly groom us to say ‘here’s a solution, just kill yourself,”
“I was in my lowest down point, it was just before Christmas,” he told the Sun.Baltzer said that the suggestion left him reeling. Passifiume reported that Baltzer was offered treatment for PTSD (post traumatic stress disorder) after returning from Afghanistan. The treatment was unsuccessful. Baltzer then turned to alcohol and substance abuse to deal with his trauma. Passifiume reported that:
“He says to me, ‘I would like to make a suggestion for you. Keep an open mind, think about it, you’ve tried all this and nothing seems to be working, but have you thought about medical-assisted suicide?'”
The story first came out when when he was interviewed by CAF veteran Mark Meincke, whose trauma-recovery podcast Operation Tango Romeo broke the story.Meincke and Baltzer are calling for a complete reform of the Veterans Affairs.
Meincke said Baltzer’s story shoots down VAC’s assertions blaming one caseworker for offering MAID to veterans, and suggests the problem is far more serious than some rogue public servant.
“It had to have been policy. because it’s just too many people in too many provinces,” Meincke told the Sun.
Meincke said that he knows at least 5 veterans who were offered MAiD by veterans affairs.