Assisted Dying Today. Forced Dying Tomorrow - David Icke
|
Time
Text
Hello, my name is Sarah Jane Smith and I'm a Quantum Healing Hypnosis Practitioner.
This technique achieves the deepest possible level of hypnosis.
This unique way of hypnosis is a very powerful tool which can help people with mental, emotional and physical trauma.
This therapy is so powerful that all you need is one session.
You can get answers to all of your life questions.
First, we'll get an understanding of what caused the issue so that healing can begin.
Expand your consciousness and remember who you truly are.
Are you ready to unlock the potential of your soul and free your mind?
I'm out.
I'm out.
Well, more than sometimes these days.
And it's like they're reading my books to me.
In terms of things that I said, this is the plan, a long time ago, now suddenly get introduced.
And this week in Britain, there has been a vote in Parliament for Four, a bill to introduce what's called assisted dying.
State-sanctioned killing that will no longer be illegal.
Now, it's got some...
Levels that it has to go through, a sequence it has to go through.
But the first time it was voted upon this week, it had a positive support in the Houses of Parliament, the Commons.
So this assisted dying law is leading...
Although they obviously won't say this.
To something I'll come to in a second.
Called the demise pill.
Which takes you from assisted dying.
These are people that are terminally ill.
To compulsory dying, which is where this is really leading to.
So anyway, here's a report on the assisted dying bill and a look at its implications.
Britain's Parliament voted in favour of a new bill to legalise assisted dying on Friday.
The eyes to the right, 330. The nose to the left, 275. The eyes have it, the eyes have it.
The vote opens the way for months of further debate over an issue that has sparked a national conversation with a dignity in death and end-of-life care.
Here is Labour lawmaker Kim Ledbetter.
Look, we've shown Parliament in its best light today.
Very respectful, very compassionate debate, irrespective of the different views that people hold.
We take the bill to the next stage now.
We continue the process and it will be a very thorough process.
The bill would provide mentally competent, terminally ill adults in England and Wales who are assessed by doctors to have six months or less left to live, the right to choose to end their lives with medical help.
As it makes its way through both the House of Commons and the House of Lords, it could still be changed or even voted down.
Those in favour of the bill say it is about shortening the death of those who are terminally ill and giving them more control.
But opponents say vulnerable ill people may feel they should end their lives for fear of being a burden to their families and society rather than prioritizing their own well-being.
Others expressed concern that there had not been enough time to consider the bill before voting.
People in favour of assisted dying, who had gathered in groups outside Parliament, hugged and cheered after the result of the vote was announced.
If the law comes in quickly enough, it'll give me a bit of insurance in my pocket in case things go a bit squiffy.
There are a lot of people who it's going to help.
Hopefully I'll be one of them.
There are so many people out there that have a hope that they may not have to suffer the way that so many loved ones have suffered in the past.
The bill would change the law in England and Wales.
As to the other countries in the United Kingdom, Scotland is considering a change to its own law to allow assisted dying.
But there are no such proposals in Northern Ireland.
With assisted dying you are caught in a bit of a bind.
Because on one level you don't want people to suffer.
And so you can be through compassion for them led to support assisted dying.
But Without the streetwise knowledge of where this is meant to go, you can start the process that doesn't end with assisted dying of the terminally ill, but encompasses more and more and more people until you have the demise pill.
Where you reach a certain age and you are compulsorily forced to take this pill and go to the great beyond.
And That's not supposition in terms of the progression once these bills are enacted.
This is the evidence from everywhere that assisted dying has been made legal, not least Canada.
Canada's assisted dying program has gone too far, says lawyer who tried to take his own life.
Canada introduced assisted dying in 2016 for adults with a terminal illness.
Exactly what this bill in Britain is about.
That's where it's supposed to end.
Not meant to.
In 2021, it was extended to people with no terminal illness and the disabled.
On 17th of March, 2027, anyone with a serious mental health problem will also be eligible.
Campaigners in Canada argue that the program, known as MAID, Medical assistance in dying has gone too far.
Are you kidding?
Orlando De Silva has struggled with crippling depression since he was a nine-year-old boy.
The high-flying Ontario lawyer is 56 years old now and has tried to take his own life a number of times.
He says if maid had been offered to him when he was at his lowest, he would have taken the option to end his life.
But he argues that people like him need help with their condition, not help to die.
We need help.
We need help.
We need to give hope.
We don't need, rather, an easy death.
Like, I want us to be a better society than that.
Yeah, but the cult doesn't, mate.
So, he says, thank God I didn't succeed.
Thank God I failed because if I had succeeded, I would never have met my wife.
I never would have had three beautiful daughters.
I never would have had the rewarding personal and professional career I've had since I would have never learned all that's beautiful in the world from them.
He is now using his experience to try to help others like him who might choose an assisted death when they are allowed to do so in just over two years.
So what they're doing is people who are not in the course of a terminal illness, but just fed up with life, Are being offered the option of assisted dying.
Now, this is meant to reach the point where it's not assisted, it's compulsory.
And here is a view from the British Conservative MP, Danny Kruger.
And what he says is obviously true.
I think we should look at Canada with great concern about what an assisted dying law would do, because there in Canada you have many, many cases of people being offered an assisted death without having suggested it themselves.
People being offered this when really what they needed was Just care, not even palliative care, but just care to live well.
So people with serious disabilities not being able to get the social care package or the adjustments to their home that they wanted in order to live well, but being offered this cheaper option of an assisted death and taking it.
In Canada, you've got people with With diabetes, with eating disorders, being offered it and taking it.
But I'm afraid these sorts of terrible stories apply everywhere.
I mean, there's not a country in the world which has assisted dying where people with eating disorders haven't made use of it.
Now, when I talk about the demise pill, I'm talking about a guy who I've featured on At length in my books, and particularly at length in this one,
Phantom Self, where I lay out in detail what this guy, Richard Day, who was a big Rockefeller family insider and a pediatrician, What he said to fellow pediatricians at an event in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1969 And what he did is he stood up.
No one knows why he did this, but I'm glad he did.
And he said he wanted people to turn off recording equipment and not to take notes because he was going to tell them how the world was going to change.
Because basically what he represented was going to change it.
And anyone that's read my books and what I say about Richard Day and what he said that night, We'll know that he described in fine detail often what has since happened.
He worked, for instance, in weather manipulation during the Second World War.
And he talks in this presentation to these pediatricians about how they can control the weather.
And they can use it as a weapon of war, not least against the people.
It's human-caused climate change.
He said in 1969 that they were going to make boys and girls the same.
And he talked about the demise pill.
And the compulsory killing of old people once they get to a certain age.
And there was a pediatrician in the audience called Lawrence Dunagan, who did take notes.
And later, he did a series of interviews in which he described what Day said that night.
Because he had realized by then that what Day said was going to happen was actually happening.
And so Day said that...
This is just part of it.
He said that there was this plan to have compulsory end of life.
And he put it like this.
This is Dunagan describing what he said.
And the idea was that if everybody says enough, what a burden it is on the young to try to maintain the old people, then the young would become agreeable to helping mum and dad along the way, providing this was done humanely and with dignity.
And then the example was that there could be a nice farewell party, a real celebration.
Mom and Dad had done a good job.
And then after the party's over, they take the demise pill, which would take them out of this world, shall we say.
And that is where this is leading, and is always meant to be leading.