Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Pope Leo urged Illinois Governor Pritzker to veto the assisted suicide bill.

Governor Pritzger meeting Pope Leo XIV
Alex Schadenberg
Executive Director,
Euthanasia Prevention Coalition

On December 12, 2025 I reported that Governor JB Pritzger signed assisted suicide Bill SB 9 into law. This was a tragic decision that will result in many deaths and change medical ethics in Illinois by giving doctors the right in law to prescribe poison to their patients.

In the article I stated that it was possible that Governor Pritzker delayed signing the assisted suicide bill because he was scheduled to meet the Pope on November 19.

CNA reported on December 23 that Pope Leo stated that he had urged Governor Pritzger to veto the assisted suicide bill during their meeting. According to the CNA report:
Pope Leo XIV appealed to Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker to veto a bill legalizing assisted suicide during a Vatican meeting last month, the pope told reporters Tuesday.

The pope, responding to a question from Rudolf Gehrig of EWTN News, said he made his opposition to the bill clear in the November conversation with the governor.
The Illinois assisted suicide law will go into effect on September 12, 2026.

The original assisted suicide bill was designed to pass in the legislature. Once assisted suicide becomes legal, the assisted suicide lobby will work to expand the law and  incremental extensions will follow.

Celebrating hope, milestones and success.

Alex Schadenberg
Executive Director
Euthanasia Prevention Coalition

As we celebrate the Christmas Season with hope we also celebrate our milestones and successes with hope for the New Year.

We celebrate that today, the EPC blog surpassing 13 Million pageviews. The last year alone, the EPC blog had more than 3.6 Million pageviews. 

We regularly receive emails from people from around the world either thanking us for the research and information that is published on the blog or asking us for specific information.

There are more reasons to celebrate.

2025 has been a great challenge, but we are pleased with the success of the Slovenian referendum and our soon-to-be-released film: Life Worth Living.

The film project grew out of our work on the successful Slovenian referendum campaign, as well as our work with partners in Victoria, Australia to prevent the expansion of their assisted suicide law and our promotion of Bill C-218, the bill that is sponsored by Tamara Jansen MP which, if passed, would prevent euthanasia for mental illness alone in Canada.

While working on the film project, we shared excellent footage of interviews concerning Canada’s experience with euthanasia, that was used in the Slovenian referendum. The Slovenian referendum was a great success with 53.5% rejecting the Slovenian euthanasia law that had passed in their national legislature last July.

The Slovenian referendum taught us some important lessons and provided great hope for the future. Some of the lessons concern messaging: euthanasia (MAiD) is about poisoning people to death, do not be afraid to tell the truth, as well as euthanasia concerns healthcare and pension savings. Euthanasia reduces costs by killing people.

We also shared footage with our partners in Victoria, Australia who were working to prevent the expansion of their euthanasia law.

We have not fully recovered the  cost of the film, which was around $50,000. Consider making a Christmas donation to EPC and enable us to fully recover the cost of the film. 

Donation to the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition (Donation Link).

Watch the Trailer for our powerful film Life Worth Living (Trailer Link).

We also created footage to specifically support the passage of Bill C-218. For instance, Alicia Duncan, whose mother died by euthanasia in 2021 based on mental health issues, shared her powerful story and Kelsi Sheren shared her story of living with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, after serving Canada in the military in Afghanistan.

The film - Life Worth Living will be available in January. We need our supporters, to organize screenings of the film. You may also want a speaker, such as myself, to lead a discussion forum, after the screening.

The film also features: Roger Foley, a Canadian living with a significant disability who has been pressured by hospital staff to request euthanasia, Dr David D'Souza, a pain specialist in Ontario, Dr Catherine Ferrier, a Gerontologist and a leader of Physicians' Alliance Againt Euthanasia in Quebec, Dr Will Johnston, a family physician and leader of Euthanasia Resistance BC, Kathy Matusiak Costa, Executive Director of Compassionate Community Care and myself.

Press Conference on December 5, 2025
Bill C-218 had its first hour of debate in parliament on December 5, 2025. EPC organized a press conference at the Parliamentary Press Gallery on December 5 that featured: Kelsi Sheren, a military veteran who experienced PTSD. Kelsi is also a social media influencer. Alicia Duncan, whose mother died by euthanasia in 2021 based on mental health issues, Dr Paul Saba a family physician in Lachine Quebec and Alex Schadenberg (myself). Kelsi and Alicia joined by remote link.

(Link to the EPC Press Conference)

After the press conference Dr. Saba and I stayed to witness the Bill C-218 debate in the House of Commons. 

Tamara Jansen MP and Andrew Lawton MP gave excellent speeches. Jansen stated in the House of Commons 

“If MAID is expanded, we will be forced into an impossible paradox. A suicidal person calling a crisis line is urged to hold on, yet if they request MAID, that same despair may be treated as justification for death. Bill C-218 is necessary to stop the 2027 expansion to mental illness because the evidence cannot support it and the safeguards cannot sustain it. Vulnerable Canadians are already at risk.”

Link to the speech by Tamara Jansen on Bill C-218 (Article Link).

One of our supporters stated on social media: “Well done Tamara Jansen! How could anyone disagree with her arguments.”

Andrew Lawton (MP) spoke about his own experience with mental illness and a suicide attempt 15 years earlier. Lawton stated in the House: 

"I would not be here today had I been successful. I would not be here today had I not gotten over the darkest, worst feelings of my life, which anyone could encounter. That is something I believe needs to be understood by those who believe this is an abstract question of legal theory and legal rights. These are real people. There are faces to this. If Bill C-218 does not pass, people will die."

Link to the speech by Andrew Lawton on Bill C-218 (Article Link).

The second hour of debate and vote on Bill C-218 is currently scheduled to be in late March, 2026.

Health Canada released the 2024 euthanasia data on November 28, 2025. The number of euthanasia poisonings increased to 16,499 representing 5.1% of all deaths. Quebec continues to have the highest euthanasia rate in the world, now at 7.9% of all deaths. The number of euthanasia deaths of people who were not terminally ill increased by 17% to 732. We have a lot of work to do. Canada needs a massive culture shift.

Read the article on the Health Canada 2024 euthanasia report (Article Link).

The 2024 report indicated that there were 76,475 (MAiD) euthanasia deaths in Canada from legalization until December 31, 2024. 

Based on the 2025 projected increase in euthanasia deaths, 2025 will end with at least 93,500 euthanasia deaths since legalization.

We have hope, and we share hope. Hope is essential in preventing euthanasia, as euthanasia is often requested based on a lack of hope.

Recent/Proposed Policy Changes Will Have Serious Consequences For People With Disabilities

Meghan Schrader
By Meghan Schrader

Meghan is an instructor at E4 - University of Texas (Austin) and is a member of the EPC-USA board.


As I’ve written, the government has made or attempted to make several major policy changes that weaken disability rights laws in the United States, and the people that I know who have defended disabled people’s dignity for decades would oppose these policies no matter who wanted to implement them.


I am not arguing that everyone who voted for this government or everyone who works with it is “evil,” constitutionally “hateful,” or intended for these policy changes to occur. I am not demanding that individuals have perfect disability rights literacy or agree with the mainstream disability rights movement on every nuance of every issue; I am offering education. I hope that this post can help other euthanasia opponents understand why these policies are not minor “cosmetic” changes, nor are they “culture war” issues, they are thoroughgoing policy shifts that will harm people with disabilities; and are generally things that all euthanasia opponents can oppose in good conscience. 


In order to constrain the length of this blog post, I will focus on the subjects of institutionalization, Special Education and efforts to weaken or repeal something called the Final Rule, which enhanced the protections afforded by Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, one of the USA’s flagship disability rights laws. Lastly, I will discuss the implications of President Trump’s nomination of Justin R. Olson to be the United States District Judge for the Southern District of Indiana; because regardless of his qualifications or what kind of person he is, his past statements about disabled people exemplify stigmatizing cultural narratives about disability that I think all euthanasia opponents can work to remediate. 


As I’ve shared, I have experienced several bouts of refractory mental illness. I am doing pretty well now, but I have already experienced the consequences of society deprioritizing community support, and President Trump’s executive order increasing federal reliance on psychiatric hospitalization puts me at higher risk of being placed in a long-term, dysfunctional setting during a relapse. I encourage readers to imagine the terror and despair of someone unnecessarily confined in a psychiatric institution, wandering around a dingy, cold hallway listening to other people screaming, trying to get through some bureaucratic, dysfunctional process of being released and establishing support in the community for weeks, months or even years. I don’t think it’s fair for people like me to endure that Hell when other social structures and resources could be used to support us.


Furthermore, education is one of the most important tools that people have to attain jobs and all of the benefits that come from having a job. It’s also a critical component of people learning to socialize, learn critical thinking skills and form healthy relationships. Therefore, our Secretary of Education not knowing any details about The Individuals With Disabilities Act is harmful to students with disabilities and I hope that she learns more about it before making other decisions about Special Education. Dismissing the majority of the Department of Education’s Special Education and Rehabilitation Services staff during the government shutdown interrupted their ability to manage education and employment for vulnerable people. Radically shrinking programs and staff for post secondary transition and employment services for young people with disabilities while nixing plans to phase out subminimum wages will increase disabled Americans’ risk of the same poverty that is driving disabled Canadians to seek “MAiD.” Canceling Special Education grants that fund teacher training and deafblind students, and various proposed overhauls to the Special Education system are also likely to harm those students’ futures. These issues are personal to me, given that I teach young people with intellectual disabilities and was a Special Education student


Various moves related to the Final Rule also potentially undermine disabled people’s well-being. The Final Rule was an amazing legislative update to the flagship disability rights law Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act. It established new moral guardrails for the treatment of disabled people, such as increased access to community supports that help prevent institutionalization, new opportunities for disabled parents and better internet access.


The Final Rule also set minimum nursing home staffing requirements to keep residents from being neglected. Nevertheless, the government recently rescinded the Final Rule’s minimum staffing requirements at institutions. The Final Rule’s staffing stipulation was meant to help prevent situations in which disabled and elderly people living in institutions were left to be hungry and sit in their own filth. The repeal of that staffing requirement will worsen the impact of assisted suicide on vulnerable people living in those institutions and is unjust whether “MAiD” is legal or not. 


Indeed, the Texas vs. Kennedy (formerly Texas vs. Becerra) lawsuit, which is often framed as solely seeking to repeal the Final Rule's classification of gender dysphoria as a disability, actually also seeks to repeal the entire Final Rule. (The lawsuit originally contained language asking to repeal Section 504 itself, but apparently that part of the lawsuit has been dropped.)


Regardless of what one believes about whether the Final Rule’s clause about gender dysphoria ought to exist, it’s a fact that the Texas vs. Kennedy lawsuit could be limited to the one clause about gender dysphoria. Instead, the Demand For Relief on page 42 of the lawsuit proposes to do away with all of the Final Rule, because it “creates regulatory burdens” and “imposes additional costs to the states.” 


Frustration with the “burdens” of caregiving that underlies assisted suicide ideology should not be allowed to find its way into other policies. One need not support the Final Rule’s clause about gender dysphoria to conclude that the rest of the provisions in the Final Rule are acts of compassion that the human community owes to all people with disabilities. 


For instance, the  Final Rule also stipulates that healthcare providers use accessible medical equipment. Bear in mind that one of the ways hospital staff have tried to bully disabled Canadian Roger Foley into assisted suicide is to withhold medical equipment and procedures needed to meet his basic needs, and that disabled Canadian Normand Meunier died by “MAiD” because a hospital didn’t  keep an accessible mattress on hand which resulted in him developing a festering bedsore. The government repealing the minimum nursing staff requirements in the Final Rule and the Texas vs. Kennedy lawsuit’s efforts to repeal it completely regresses US institution practices so that they are more like Canada’s. 


Most importantly for the assisted suicide fight, Section 84.56(a) of the Final Rule forbids doctors from making “quality of life” decisions that cause disabled people’s deaths. This provision is a huge help to our assisted suicide fight; I hate to see us loose that tool because the entire Final Rule was declared unconstitutional. (If you wish to write and ask the 17 attorney generals who filed Texas vs. Kennedy to drop the part of the lawsuit that challenges the entire Final Rule, and/or ask them to specifically preserve Section 84.56 (a), contact information is available here.) 


Finally, I think the possible judicial appointment of Justin R. Olson provides an opportunity for opponents to consider how they can help remediate harmful attitudes about disability. When Olson was an ordained elder in the Reformed Presbyterian Church of North America, he gave a sermon saying that marriage was not intended for “our handicapped friends or our persons with physical disabilities that might prevent the robust marriage that we’re called to.” When Republican Senator John Kennedy asked Olson about that statement, he said, “I was explaining the meaning of Christ’s words that some are, um, to use Christ’s words, are eunuchs by birth, and explaining the meaning in the context of that verse of those who are called to singleness.” Olson then asserted, “I was using that statement as an illustration of why some don’t get married, not as a kind of reason why someone shouldn’t.” 


Regardless of context or intent, I think Olson’s statement naturally carries the implication, “Your marriages are inferior so God wants you to be single, disabled people.” I think it’s important for euthanasia opponents to know that such messages alienate disabled people from the support of our faith communities, reinforce the idea that disabled people are sexually and personally undesirable, and thematically constitute what has been called “Preaching Eugenics;” during the original American eugenics era a segment of the clergy promoted that movement’s message that God did not intend for disabled people to get married or procreate. I don’t want people who think like that to have power over disabled people’s lives, so regardless of whether he is confirmed, I hope Olson’s perspective on disability evolves to become more accurate and fair. 


Irrespective of anyone’s character or intentions, these attitudes and policies are not ethical, and I think that good-hearted euthanasia opponents from all over the political spectrum are able to understand that they are not ethical. I have faith that America and countries around the world can create better policies and attitudes because there is a long history of bipartisan support for sound disability policies. I have met people from all over the ideological spectrum who care about disabled people, so I hope that our current leaders will begin to make decisions that prioritize disabled people’s well-being. And, I hope that whichever leaders take the place of our current ones-whatever political party they are or wherever they stand on various “culture war” issues-will work with disability advocates to create creative policies that put disabled people’s well-being first. Part of fighting “MAiD” is correcting the pattern of circumstances that make killing disabled people seem acceptable and humane.

 

Monday, December 22, 2025

New York Governor to Sign Assisted suicide bill

This article was published by National Review online on December 17, 2025.

Wesley Smith
By Wesley J Smith

To the surprise of absolutely no one, New York Governor Hochul has said that in January, after some minor changes are added, she will sign the bill legalizing assisted suicide. From the Spectrum News 1 story:
Hochul said the new amended bill will include additional safeguards, or “guardrails,” to protect family members, caregivers and doctors and ensure that vulnerable populations are not pressured or misled.
Of course, these “guardrail” protections–such as they are–will come under sustained assault once the law goes into effect as “barriers” to a good death. They are unlikely to last for very long.

Governor Kathy Hochul
But let’s take a look at some of the supposed improved protections:
A mandatory waiting period of five days between when a prescription is written and filled.
Assisted suicide laws used to require a 15-day waiting period, so you can see the liberalization started even before the bill was signed.
An oral request for medical aid in dying must be recorded by video or audio.
Not much different than signing a form.
A mandatory mental health evaluation by a psychologist or psychiatrist.
These exams are likely to be cursory and probably won’t stop terminally ill people with depression from suicide, nor those with other mental illnesses, as most suicide facilitation laws only require that the suicidal patient be “capable,” that is, have the ability to make and communicate decisions. Depressed and mentally ill people are often quite “capable.”
Limiting access to New York residents.
This is an improvement, such as it is. But remember, one can become a New York resident quite easily, within days, actually.
Requiring that the initial physician evaluation be in person.
Believe it or not, some states allow virtual assisted suicide examinations. This is better, for what it is worth.
Allowing religiously-oriented home hospice providers to opt out of offering medical aid in dying.
The devil will be in the details here. And conscience rights shouldn’t be limited to religiously oriented facilities, as assisted suicide is a direct violation of the hospice philosophy of care — which includes suicide prevention — a potential protection the governor did not insist upon.
Extending the effective date to six months after signing to allow the Department of Health and healthcare facilities to implement regulations and train staff.
Continuing “medical” education on making patients dead. This is the state to which the profession has descended from the days when the Hippocratic Oath held sway.

The sponsor of the bill justified radically changing the ethics of medicine in New York with a sophistic comment:
“Since we first introduced this legislation nine years ago, I have consistently said this bill is not about ending life, it’s about shortening death,” he said.
Dying isn’t dead; it is a sometimes very difficult stage of living. We should provide people with the care they need so that they do not want immediate death rather than abandoning them to poison pills.

Hochul approached the issue as if religion were the only reason to oppose assisted suicide.
In an opinion piece published in the Albany Times Union, Hochul acknowledged that her decision may be rejected by the Catholic Church but said her own beliefs and reflection guided her. “I was taught that God is merciful and compassionate, and so must we be. This includes permitting a merciful option to those facing the unimaginable and searching for comfort in their final months in this life,” she wrote.
But the AMA opposes assisted suicide, and it isn’t religious (or conservative). Disability rights activists have been as vociferous in their opposition as the Catholic Church–and they are generally secular in their outlook and liberal in their politics.

So why the fuss among this cadre? They know that people with disabilities are the real targets of this movement, that once assisted suicide becomes normalized, the categories of killable people will expand well beyond the terminally ill.

Soon, about half the country will live in jurisdictions that allow doctors to prescribe poison pills to patients. That’s awful, but it is what many in this country want.

Ah well. Remember the old bromide, “Be careful what you ask for . . .”

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Eileen fraudulently died by assisted suicide in Washington State.

Eileen Mihich was battling serious mental distress. But Washington’s assisted-suicide regime gave her lethal assisted suicide drugs instead of care and support, even though she did not qualify under the law.


Aging with Dignity has uncovered the story of Eileen Mihich who was a lonely 31 year-old woman who fraudulently received a lethal assisted suicide poison cocktail even though she:
 
    • She suffered from serious mental illness
    • She was not a Washington resident
    • No doctor verified she was terminally ill
    • No waiting period was enforced
Eileen's story proves that there is no real oversight of the law. After contacting - A Sacred Passing: Death Doula, Eileen forged documents by claiming that she was a doctor and by claiming that she had stage 4 cancer.
 
The story of Eileen Mihich shows us how little oversight exists in the assisted suicide law. It also asks the big question, how did Eileen receive the lethal poison that killed her?

Assisted suicide was legalized in three US states in 2025. Are you concerned?

Alex Schadenberg
Alex Schadenberg
Executive Director, 
Euthanasia Prevention Coalition

In 2025, assisted suicide was legalized in Delaware, Illinois and New York. This means that there are now 13 US states plus Washington DC that permit assisted suicide. The 13 states include California, Illinois and New York, three of the six most populated states in America.

This is tragic and will result in many early deaths and will lead to the further medical abandonment of people in need.

Previous to this year, the last state that legalized assisted suicide was New Mexico in 2021.

Are you concerned? I am concerned.

I watched the recent online US assisted suicide lobby political meeting. During the meeting the assisted suicide lobby outlined that, in 2026, there will be at least 18 states with bills to legalize assisted suicide. 

We are very concerning with some of the listed states which included: Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, Nevada and Virginia. There are other states that the assisted suicide lobby are focusing on that are less likely to legalize assisted suicide in 2026 including (but not limited to) Arizona and Florida.

Our allies have been very successful in the past few years but the issue seems to be changing How are we to respond?

Let's look at the most recent successful campaign. 

The Slovenian people voted on an assisted suicide referendum on Sunday, November 23, 2025 and voted to overturn the assisted suicide bill that was passed in the Slovenian legislature in July 2025. More than 53.5% of the voters rejected the assisted suicide law.

This was a great victory, that was accomplished by a small group of committed citizens who stuck to their talking points. They achieved the victory for people who are sick, people with disabilities and pensioners against all odds, as they were up against the government and a well funded death lobby.

Slovenia is not the United States, but the principles in the successful campaign will transport to North America.

They weren't afraid to call it what it is. They used the term poisoning. Assisted suicide is to provide a lethal concoction to poison a person to death. 

The never used the language of the other side. The other side continuously lied about what the assisted suicide law said or what assisted suicide is. The campaign focused on telling the truth and challenging the lies.

They called assisted suicide, health care reform. Most jurisdictions require health care reform to enable a more equitable provision of care. Assisted suicide poisons a person to death. Dead people don't need health care.

The called assisted suicide pension reform. Slovenia, like most jurisdictions, invest a significant portion of their budget into the pension system. Assisted suicide poisons a person to death. Dead people don't collect pensions.

Proper medical care. The other side focused on suffering. The campaign opposing assisted suicide talked about proper care, and explained that assisted suicide forces people, who cannot attain proper medical care, to be poisoned to death.

The Slovenian campaign was more aggressive than most campaigns, but they won even though they were massively out-spent.

The take-away from the Slovenian referendum is that people innately oppose killing people, but you must be willing to state what assisted suicide is. The Slovenians built their campaign on a few key talking points and stuck to them. Hiding behind nice language or presenting the issue in a way that seems more socially acceptable avoids the reality that assisted suicide is about killing people by poison.

I am not afraid to say that I oppose killing people.

Sad news: New York Governor will sign the assisted suicide bill.

The assisted suicide lobby are already lobbing for expansions of the law.

Alex Schadenberg
Executive Director,
Euthanasia Prevention Coalition

I have bad but possibly not unexpected news.

New York Governor Kathy Hochul wrote an article that was published in the Albany Times Union explaining why she will sign the assisted suicide bill. When Bill A136/S138 is signed it will make New York the 13th US state to legalize assisted suicide. Legalizing assisted suicide gives medical professionals the right to be involved with poisoning their patients to death.

Governor Kathy Hochul
Jimmy Vielkind reported for the Gothamist that:
The Democratic governor wrote Wednesday in the Albany Times Union that she’s approving the legislation after state lawmakers agreed to enact additional safeguards. They include residency restrictions, a five-day waiting period, and a requirement that patients record their oral request to end their lives.
Vielkind reported for the Gothamist on December 3 that Hochul was negotiating amendments to the bill with the sponsors of the assisted suicide bill.

After Hochul signs the bill, the sponsors will have to introduce a bill in the new year to amend the legislation based on the agreement with Governor Hochul.


Mandi Zucker, the executive director of End of Life Choices New York stated in a letter to their supporters that:
We will also continue to advocate for changes to the law once enacted that will make the option of medical aid in dying more accessible to everyone.
Once assisted suicide is legal, the assisted suicide lobby will lobby or launch court cases to expand the law. The original assisted suicide bill is designed to pass in the legislature, once passed incremental extensions will follow.

Lessons from Illinois legalizing assisted suicide.

Gordon Friesen
Gordon Friesen
President, Euthanasia Prevention Coalition

Illinois Governor JB Pritzker signed assisted suicide bill SB 9 into law on December 12, 2025. The law will go into effect on September 12, 2026.

I spent a day in the distasteful task of pouring through new medical homicide legislation from the State of Illinois, to see what the citizens of that State may now expect, and to find lessons for others.

Illinois has done nothing new with eligibility and process. The common limits of terminal condition, self-ingestion, and state-residency have all been maintained.

However, any relief felt on that account would be misplaced. For this new law is no less sinister for its familiarity.


Indeed, it is a great error to think only of the scope of choice allowed to those who seek death. We must also (and even more urgently) consider what has been taken from those who wish to live.

To be perfectly clear: the only way for patients to enjoy real medical care, is for institutions to exclude medical homicide. But institutions in Illinois will no longer be able to do that.

We can forget public institutions, of course. For these will all become MAID-compliant. But worse still, not even private institutions are now effectively able to protect their patients.

For it is not enough to forbid the actual practice of medical homicide. It is also necessary to recruit and maintain teams of truly life-affirming professionals. And that is where the problem lies.

Illinois law, is typical in this regard. It allows institutions to prevent their employees from practicing medical homicide, but only on their own premises, and only while working within the terms of their employment. Nor can these be prevented from contracting with patients, privately, to act outside of those bounds.

Furthermore, nothing whatever can prevent death-biased professionals from raising the subject of medical homicide, under pretext of presenting all treatment options, according to accepted standards of care respecting informed consent.

In other words, an institution may prohibit the actual practice of medical homicide on-site. But it cannot stop its employees from marketing that service to patients, nor even from contracting with them to provide that service off-campus.

Also, in a specially perverse twist: Illinois statutes harshly condemn "coercion and undue influence", but does so equally, in regard to both steering people towards medical homicide, and attempting to steer them away.

Finally, this effective ban on traditional medicine is made functionally universal, by a definition of regulated "health care entities" which includes every conceivable form of hospital, clinic, long-term care, palliative care, hospice, home-care or nursing service.

Taken all together, we see that no patient, might ever reliably find any place, in the State of Illinois, where they might not be harassed --in their most vulnerable moments-- by doctors (and nurses) who are fully committed (and sordidly attracted) to the satisfaction of killing people.

But even if such a patient were to find the care of a real Hippocratic doctor, that doctor's hands would still be tied from fear of being disciplined (or sued) for "undue" influence in attempting to help patients to continue living.

This then is the lesson for other States considering similar legislation:

Libertarians beware! Death-medicine and Life-medicine are mutually exclusive. Medical homicide is not about providing a choice of death for some. It is about taking real medical care away, from all. 

Previous articles by Gordon Friesen (Articles Link).

Sunday, December 14, 2025

Trailer for the powerful new film: Life Worth Living

Alex Schadenberg
Executive Director, Euthanasia Prevention Coalition

The Euthanasia Prevention Coalition upcoming film - Life Worth Living - will be released in January 2026. Watch the powerful trailer for the 60 minute film.


This powerful film features:
  • Alicia Duncan, whose mother died by euthanasia with conditions based on mental health, 
  • Kelsi Sheren, a Canadian military veteran who came back from combat with PTSD and other disabilities. Kelsi is a social media influencer and a life coach.
  • Roger Foley, a Canadian man living with a significant disability who has been pressured by hospital staff to request euthanasia.
  • Dr David D'Souza, an Ontario pain specialist.
  • Dr Catherine Ferrier, a Quebec Gerontologist and a leader of Physicians' Alliance against Euthanasia, 
  • Dr Will Johnston, a Vancouver family physician and leader of Euthanasia Resistance BC
  • Kathy Matusiak Costa, Executive Director of Compassionate Community Care,
  • Alex Schadenberg, (myself), author, keynote speaker, International leader opposing euthanasia and assisted suicide.
The Euthanasia Prevention Coalition needs your help.
  1. Make a donation to enable Life Worth Living to be widely viewed. (Donation Link).
  2. Arrange to have Life Worth Living shown in your community. Contact us at: info@epcc.ca
  3. You may want a speaker at the event to lead a discussion.

Friday, December 12, 2025

Bioethicists: Euthanasia Okay for ‘Unjust Social Conditions’

This article was published by National Review online on December 13, 2025.

Wesley Smith
By Wesley J Smith

Once killing the sufferer becomes a societally acceptable means for ending suffering, there becomes no end to the “suffering” that justifies human termination. We can see this phenomenon most vividly in Canada, because it is happening there more quickly than in most cultures. 

For example, a recent poll found that 27 percent of Canadians polled strongly or moderately agree that euthanasia is acceptable for suffering caused by “poverty” and 28 percent strongly or moderately agree that killing by doctors is acceptable for suffering caused by homelessness.

Euthanasia mutates a society’s soul. I can’t imagine that being true ten years ago before euthanasia became legal.

This kind of abandoned thinking finds enthusiastic, albeit not unanimous, expression among secular bioethicists. In fact, two Canadian bioethicists just published a paper in the Journal of Medical Ethics — a prestigious British Medical Journal publication — arguing that “unjust social conditions” justify lethal jabs (euphemistically called MAiD, for “medical assistance in dying”). The argument claims that killing is a form of “harm reduction.”

The authors even admit such cases have already occurred legally in Canada. From “Choosing Death in Unjust Conditions: Hope, Autonomy, and Harm Reduction” (my emphasis):
In 2022, an individual in Canada, who had been diagnosed with multiple chemical sensitivities (MCS), received MAiD. However, by their own description, their decision to choose MAiD was driven primarily by the fact that they were unable to access affordable housing compatible with MCS. While it was true that they suffered from an illness, disease or disability that caused ‘enduring physical or psychological suffering that is intolerable to them and cannot be relieved under conditions that they consider acceptable’ as specified under the eligibility criteria of Bill C-14 [that recently expanded eligibility beyond death being “reasonably foreseeable], the primary source of their suffering was an inability to find appropriate housing, not the condition itself. Another person, also with MCS, writes: ‘I’ve applied for MAiD essentially because of abject poverty’.
Good grief. The patient in question is dead — not because of their medical but housing conditions. And doctors used the physical issues as pretext for justifying the killing as within the law!

The authors approve of allowing euthanasia for reasons of social injustice as a means of “harm reduction.” And in the context of medical issues, the authors claim that this includes killing patients who would not want to die if they could access proper treatment:
In the case of the availability of MAiD in Canada to people who not only might but have explicitly said they would choose differently if they had access to the options they preferred, we argue that the least harmful way forward is to allow MAiD to be available.
This, even though Canada’s socialized health-care system is in crisis:
Access to healthcare across nearly all dimensions continues to deteriorate in the wake of the pandemic even outside of long-term and palliative care, from basic care, to surgical backlogs, to a general consensus that the system is in a state of collapse. In this context, refusing options to people who autonomously pursue MAiD amounts to perpetuating their suffering, hoping that this will ultimately lead to a better, more ‘just’ world. This is a world that currently does not exist and is unlikely to emerge in the near future. Even if it did, it is unfortunately even more unlikely that the people whose current suffering has led them to request MAiD will realise its benefits.
So, socialized medicine fails, and a splendid answer to the problem for patients in need is euthanasia. Do you see now why I call euthanasia/assisted suicide “abandonment?”

The authors conclude:
We disagree with any claim that the unjust lack of choices available to people is alone sufficient to undermine their autonomy. Those who launch legal proceedings or request and receive MAiD are unlikely examples of people whose reduced opportunities have led them to lose all hope and motivation for pursuing personally meaningful courses of action. Moreover, neither a reduction of opportunities in itself, nor the existence of oppressive ableist norms, is sufficient to directly undermine autonomy…Restricting an autonomous choice to pursue MAiD due to the injustice of current non-ideal circumstances causes more harm than allowing the choice to pursue MAiD, even though that choice is deeply tragic.
Bioethics is growing increasingly monstrous. And that matters because these are the so-called “experts” who exert tremendous influence on our laws and regulations, in court rulings, over the attitudes of journalists, among the purveyors of popular culture, and, ultimately, upon public attitudes.

Moreover, Canada is our closest cultural cousin. If such a crass death-embracing attitude developed there so quickly with the legalization of euthanasia, it will happen here too — and, indeed, almost all state laws allowing doctor-prescribed death already expanded their guidelines. Which is why, if we want to follow the truly compassionate course, it is a matter of great urgency that we reject all further legalization of assisted suicide in the United States.