Sheila Gunn-Reid defends Made: The Dark Side of Canadian Compassion, a documentary critiquing MAID’s expansion under Trudeau, citing viewer feedback like Susan’s gratitude despite stage four cancer and Joseph L.’s February 2023 loss of a friend to drug-induced paralysis. Gunn-Reid dismisses Kim’s "propaganda" claim by offering pro-MAID evidence, including cases like autism and delayed care, while warning of its slippery slope—now covering minors, the mentally ill, and marginalized groups. Financial strain from Trudeau’s policies and RV odors (steak, Doritos) linger as she thanks supporters for sustaining Rebel News’ paywall-driven mission. [Automatically generated summary]
I'm in Northern British Columbia touring our latest documentary, but that's not your fault.
And so that's why I made you the guest tonight.
I'm Sheila Gunn-Reed and you're watching The Gunn Show.
You don't have my green screen background.
You don't have all of my cameras and my lighting and my setup.
Right now I am in a rental RV because I'm in the middle of our latest documentary tour.
We are taking this RV right now across Alberta and then British Columbia showing our latest documentary.
It's called Made, The Dark Side of Canadian Compassion, and it tells the stories of Justin Trudeau's radical euthanasia policies and how they've touched people in the most horrific of ways, damaged families in ways they may never heal from.
And it's only going to get worse.
But the good news is we included people in our documentary who are working hard every day to save people from the clutches of fatal despair.
If you'd like to know more about the documentary or find a showtime near you, you can go to endmade.com because after we're done in British Columbia, we're headed to Ontario and we are looking to add more dates and times.
So keep checking back.
It's at endmade.com.
Now, last week when I filmed the show, some of you regular viewers may know it also was not in my home studio because I was in Calgary for the world premiere of our documentary.
And so, look, you come here for a show and if I'm busy, that's not your problem.
I've got to meet my obligations to you.
So I filmed my gun show in a parking lot with my friend Kian Simoni.
He's my filmmaking partner on the documentary.
And really, the brains and the artistic visionary behind the documentary.
I get to talk to the people.
He gets to put it all together.
And I think that's really the most important job because he has to put together these horrible stories in a way that you might want to watch while paring down their stories about the worst day of their lives in a respectful way that still captures the crux of the horrors that they're warning us of.
But anyway, I was in that parking lot and it started to rain and I was worried about the state of Kian's very expensive camera that we were using and so I cut the show short.
I did not allow you, as I always do, to provide viewer feedback.
And I didn't like that.
So then I thought, since I sort of denied you your opportunity to have your say last week, why didn't I turn the show completely over to you this week?
Some of you got an email in your inbox from me saying, send me your viewer feedback on this topic or any topic.
And it came to me in an automated form.
I have read absolutely none of it because I was on the road today and then setting up for the documentary because it's just us.
So we are selling merch.
We are dealing with the venue.
We're checking in tickets.
We travel light because, well, it's just us and we don't have any big bucks from Justin Trudeau.
Not that we would take them anyway.
But I thought, you know, without you, there is no rebel news, as I say on the show every single week.
So today's your show.
You're the guest.
So I just thought I would take all of your viewer feedback.
You're the guest tonight.
It's your show.
Let you have your say and just read your viewer comments or questions.
And if it needs answering, I'll answer it.
Otherwise, I'll just read it.
Sound good?
I have the form right in front of me as I sit at the table of the RV, which will be turned into a bed later on.
And I'm hotspotted on my phone over to my computer.
So hopefully that maintains connection as we go through this.
And let's get to it.
So we've got first letter is from Andy.
First letter because he was the first person to reply to the email that went out.
And he says, Rebel News is great to all staff in Canada.
God bless you all.
The truth prevails.
Love you all.
Well, that's great.
I'm feeling kind of tired after this documentary tour, and we're not even close to being done.
So that sort of stuff fills up the moral tank for myself and for Kian, that's for sure.
And we have one Roadie who works for the company.
You won't know him.
He works behind the scenes.
But if you come to our events, you know who I'm talking about.
And he's the driver because Kian and I still have to work as we drive across the country and deal with car sickness while we're trying to look at our computer screen.
So thankfully we have a driver and a helper and these tours couldn't be possible without him either.
Coal's Garden Burden00:11:12
Next one from Susan.
Hi, sweetheart.
I suppose that's me.
Thank you, Susan.
I'm sick with stage four cancer.
No treatment for me, so I'm just waiting to pass away.
I'm so sorry to hear that, Susan.
I'm not afraid, though.
I just want to thank you so much for all you do for Canadians.
I pray that for people being forced or feeling forced to MAID, how dare murder more people after the COVID scandal.
He's murdered thousands.
I think JT, how dare JT murder more people after the COVID scandal.
He's murdered thousands.
Blessing, sweet lady.
You are truly helping.
You know what?
That's all we want to do with this documentary.
For those of you who've seen the documentary already, thank you for that.
We wanted to tell the stories of some very severely normal people.
Like the people in our documentary could be your neighbor, could be your grandma.
And that was important to me because it's not somebody that you don't know.
The numbers show that people accessing MAID are people in your community.
It's becoming the leading cause of death in this country.
And at the end of the documentary, when all is hopeless, when it feels hopeless, we talk to some people who are working to change the euthanasia protocols in this country, but also one person by one person by one person.
Rescue people from the depths of despair that drives them to MAID.
And hopefully we can do a little bit more of that.
Next one is from Laverne, who writes, I live in a long-term care home.
I am angry that a long-term care home is shutting down because the sprinkler system is not feasible in the home, putting out 92 residents 140 on the wait list.
Could you investigate?
You know, this is a story we heard over and over again while making this documentary.
It's that there are not enough adequate long-term care beds for our aging population and not enough community support so that people can stay in their homes longer or near their families longer.
So that people aren't left to feel like they're a burden to their communities and then choosing MAID.
Next one from Robert who says, I don't know how our country ever got to this point in its short history.
Might have been dictator-style politics or the fact we didn't stand tall against the so-called emergency with COVID and the World Health Organization.
All I know is we let our guard down and our government took advantage.
If the World Health Organization gets to shut us down and the nut bar in Ottawa takes our guns away, we're screwed.
What do you think, Sheila?
You're good at explaining from my vantage point.
Thanks for the wonderful coverage and pro-journalism.
Have a great show.
Regards, Bob.
You know, I think a lot of people sort of sleptwalk into this.
A lot of people voted because they wanted young and they wanted, I don't know, different, progressive.
And look what it got us.
You know, give me boring old Stephen Harper in his sweater vest and his little Lego man hair any day of the week.
But I think, I think things will change in October 2025.
Because even if you want to vote for fancy socks and progressive politics and abortion, which the liberals are using as a wedge issue these days, if you can't afford to buy a jug of milk, none of that matters.
And affordability is really a big issue for the young people who see themselves not able to choose a life that their parents had.
They see it as completely unattainable.
So I don't know if our country is totally destroyed.
I think we can recover.
Why?
Because look around this country.
This is a very foreboding place.
Like take the cities out of the equation.
Outside of the cities, we have turned a very cold, sparsely populated place into a wonderful, robust place to be in spite of our politicians.
And, you know, I think about when my great-great-grandparents came to Alberta and they cleared the land with their bare hands and created a farm that fed generations of their people.
That's we're still those people.
We can fix this.
Just need to get rid of that idiot stick in Ottawa.
Okay, Donna writes.
Enter Nenshi, the NDP destroyer.
Nenshi, that's the former mayor of Calgary who is now running to be the leader of the NDP.
We'll stop that too.
Don't worry.
The NDP destroyer.
Alberta can't risk another NDP.
Most people are completely unaware of any NDP negatives.
Notley is put on a pedestal.
Don't worry.
We'll let them know.
I know memories are short and I get worried about that too, but don't worry.
I've got a plan for these people.
And by the way, you can read my book, The Destroyers, and my other book, Stop Notley, if you need a quick refresher on what the NDP are and what they did to Alberta during their time, those dark four years in power.
Okay.
Neighbors is the community blog in Edmonton.
It has no facts except glossy reports of Notley.
We need a recap of just what Notley did so we can give her a reminder of an NDP government.
Like I said, I've got two books about it.
I should remind people that we should also be never Nenshi, not even once.
He did his damage in Calgary.
We don't need to do that to everywhere else.
Give me time.
I ask a simple yet profound question.
This one is from Jerry.
He says, who made the video recording of the Alberta Premier and Cabinet Ministers on the roof of the Sky Palace?
First should be given credit for what they accomplished, bringing down Premier Kenny.
That's just the beginning.
I don't know if that picture brought him down, but it severely hurt him.
Because that's when we knew that even he didn't believe the things he was saying.
I think the truckers very much helped get rid of him.
And I think the pastors who stood up also helped get rid of him.
I think the business owners like Chris Scott, who stood up, also helped get rid of him.
What we knew at the end of the day is that he was phony, that even he didn't believe the lockdown measures he was throwing other people in jail for.
Next one, Joanne.
I cannot find enough words to tell you and your research people how important your work is.
This is a time of great change and you are accelerating it.
You're making a place in the history of the awakening of the human race.
People need to know that the way to fix this is for each one to stand up wherever they are and wherever they can.
Love, love, and strength to you for each and every day.
Well, I thank you for that.
Next one from Vanessa.
I'm taking care of two elderly people that are shot injured because of the health and government sisters.
Excuse me, let me try that again.
It's from Vanessa.
I'm taking care of two elderly people that are shot injured.
We know what that means.
Because of the health and government systems scaring and restricting people for not complying.
Now who takes care of them?
No one.
Doctors don't even want to admit it to it.
What can I do for them?
Our documentary tells us that even if you're not able to help, people are driven to medical assistance and dying out of despair.
And sometimes it's just as simple as playing cards with someone.
You don't need money.
You just need time for a card game.
Hello, Sheila.
How can a government justify a carbon tax and tell Canadians that we have to do our part in fighting a climate crisis when we sell Canadian thermal coal to China?
Yes, yes, yes.
China, India, South Korea, and Japan to burn.
In 2020, we mined 10 million metric tons and sold over 8 million tons to these countries for $7.7 billion.
You know what?
I'm glad.
Burn coal, roll coal, as they say.
We got paid to pollute elsewhere, and Trudeau has the nerve to point fingers at these countries for polluting.
Hypocrite, cut the carbon tax.
Knowledge is power.
Thanks for all you do in our fight for freedom against the globalists.
Cheers, Mike.
You know, here's the thing: I love coal.
I live in Alberta.
We've got 800 years of clean burning coal under our feet that apparently we're not allowed to use, but we can mine it and ship it to those guys.
I want to use it too.
Why?
So that I don't get power grid alerts when it's minus 53 telling me to not run my dryer because we don't have enough electricity, because we don't have capacity because we came off coal too fast.
Thanks to Notley.
So, yeah, I mean, it's ridiculous what Trudeau's doing.
But I want to burn the coal too.
I just, I don't, whatever they're doing in India, I want to do that too.
They're burning my coal.
I want to burn it too.
Madeleine says, Hi, I wanted to send my deep appreciation of all Rebels and Rebel News.
I have been with y'all since the beginning, not as a subscriber, but a regular donor.
Hey, we appreciate you.
Gratitude for all you freedom fighters.
Hello, Sheila.
Thank you for all that you do.
I just wanted to ask, will you be screening the MAID documentary in Toronto?
Stay tuned.
We're doing our best to set up a screening there.
Amy says, sorry, that last one was from Leanne.
Sorry to breeze by.
Next one from Amy.
Thank you for addressing this issue among many important issues, but this one stands out.
I hope we will be able to watch the documentary online.
Yes, you can.
Go to endmaid.com.
If you are a regular subscriber to Rebel News, like a paywall subscriber watching the show behind the paywall right now, you have already have access to the documentary.
It's there.
Or you can rent it for a couple of bucks at endmade.com.
Meld 777.
Hi, Sheila.
Just planted the biggest garden that we've ever had thanks to Chinese ginseng and Chinese garlic at the local grocery store.
After seeing Chinese infiltrating our produce, my family and I bought seeds and row to till more yard.
Do you agree that we need a revival of Canadian-made produce?
Yes.
Yes, I do.
I garden in self-defense, as I say, and I think so many people do.
Food is so expensive, and especially fresh produce.
And so I garden, but I try to use heirloom varieties.
I live in zone two, if you can believe that, which means that I have one of the shortest growing seasons possible.
And I plant plenty of root vegetables because they keep all year.
I'm not much of a root vegetable eater.
As many of you know, I live a very low-carb lifestyle, but I don't condemn the rest of my family to my bizarre eating habits.
But fresh lettuce, onions, tomatoes, a greenhouse.
Incentive for Despair00:05:36
I think it's important also.
If you want to check out of the tyranny, what's the first thing they control?
The guns and then the food supply.
So I'm doing, like I said, I'm gardening in self-defense.
I'm taking back at least control of the little bit of the food supply that I can manage, right?
Locally source your meat and garden.
Garden in self-defense.
It's a good rebel t-shirt, I should suggest that.
Thelma Dirks, why does the Prime Minister murder thousands through MAID to reduce our overcrowded Canada and then admit millions through immigration?
It's not to reduce Canada from being overcrowded.
It's to take the burden off the healthcare system.
It's your civic duty to die so that they don't have to innovate in the healthcare system.
It's really that simple sometimes.
Next one, Joseph L.
I lost my best friend of almost 50 years to MAID last summer.
He had been managing sciatica and a couple of other long-term medical conditions for years, but was suddenly inflicted with unbearable pain February 2023.
His Ontario medical team gave up on finding a cause after four arduous emergency hospitalizations and just suggested he request MAID.
After holding out for a few extra weeks, he finally gave in.
I now understand the cocktail of drugs used to perform MAID are controversial with concerns about how many minutes it will actually take for the patient to finally succumb to the effects and that because the patient is initially paralyzed, he or she is not able to display or indicate discomfort or distress, which may include the sensation of slowly drowning.
Finally, they also asked my friend's family to consent to donating his organs.
We're just all raw materials, aren't we?
I find this final insult very troubling because this can easily create an incentive for unscrupulous people to financially benefit from using their apparent positions of authority to facilitate and or encourage vulnerable people to give up on life and request MAID.
We know how many medical officials, hospitals, and institutions were financially rewarded to increase COVID cases and hospitalizations, even when patients did not die from or even have COVID.
The public must not be taken in again.
It is illegal in this country to sell an organ.
However, let me just tell you that there are the majority of MAID deaths in this country are done by a very small, ideologically driven group of practitioners.
I can't see that there's a financial incentive for the doctors themselves.
However, you know, they do get paid by the things that they do.
More MAID, more money, you know, more visits, right?
More money.
The real incentive is to the medical system.
And as my friend Michelle Sterling points out, unfunded pension liabilities.
We've got a lot of people who've been paying into a pension and the money's not there.
What do we do about that?
All right.
There seems to be, this one is from Joanne.
There seems to be too many people still wearing the diaper aka face mask.
Is it time for everyone to stop using it?
She goes on to further say, my question is, when will the mandates be totally off-finished?
The reason I hate masks is because I depend on lip breeding.
I'm deaf since birth and I depend on lip breathing since I was little.
It's very hard to understand people and wish that every Rebel News has closed caption.
Well, thank you for suggesting that.
I can see what is happening and I now just heard that carbon emissions, carbon emissions in Vancouver is going to be banned.
Is that the truth?
Not carbon emissions.
I haven't seen that, but this is already, like I'm in Fort St. John.
They call this the energetic city because there's so much natural gas here.
But even I see signs saying BC is a no-idling province.
Like you can't idle your vehicle here.
It gets cold here like it does in Alberta and they can't idle their vehicles.
I mean it's just crazy.
Thank you for the suggestion about closed captioning.
I'll see what I can do about that for you.
As far as the masks, I realize the inconvenience for you.
I don't care if people wear a mask, but don't ever make me.
So I'm not going to.
All right.
My question is, this one, next one is from Fern.
My question is about your documentary.
Is there a way for me to send a link to a couple of friends so that they can watch it?
They both live in the USA and thus do not have a membership.
Is there a way to donate to the effort and then get a couple of VIP passes so I can share it?
If you go, as I said, to endmaid.com, you can get the documentary there for just a couple of bucks.
They can rent it.
We realize that perhaps becoming a monthly member to Rebel News Plus is not in everybody's budget and it is very difficult to find venues to host our documentaries.
So and the point is, look, if we're making this documentary to change the culture in this country away from being a culture of death, then we must make the documentary as accessible as possible.
Catholic Doctrine and Hate Speech Laws00:06:08
So that's what we're trying to do.
Altena says, all I want to say is thank you for the amazing investigative journalism that you do.
Well, thank you.
You are greatly appreciated.
And I wish we had Rebel Journalists here in New Brunswick.
Yeah, I do too.
I love New Brunswick.
Vern says, God bless you, Sheila and your associates at Rebel News.
Have a blessed trip.
Well, thank you.
We're doing our best.
This RV, though, smells like steak.
And potato chips.
If I had to put like a name to the smell.
All right.
Current Beck says, there should be t-shirts about what the UN, the WEF, and the World Health Organization has tried to do to us, which is criminal.
They should be dismantled and everybody should be wearing them across the world in bright colors.
Please go to rebelnewsstore.com.
You'll find some UN, WE, I think WEF t-shirts there for sure.
Natalie, this one's from Natalie, a youngster.
Hey, Sheila, I'm finishing up grade 12, homeschooled, high school.
Good for your parents.
And my question is related to a paper I have to write.
I'd like to get your thoughts on the recent statements by Deborah Lyons, the Canadian envoy on combating anti-Semitism and how she'd like to remove religious protections from hate speech laws.
Yeah.
That is chilling to me because That would put it's chilling for me as a Catholic because what it does is it puts Catholic doctrine in the category of hate speech when we talk about sexual gender identities, right?
As a Catholic, it's we view gender transition as wrong.
We don't we think the act of homosexuality is inherently sinful.
It's not prescribed by the church.
And so if a priest were to communicate Orthodox Catholic teaching in his church, just read from Catholic doctrine, that would run him afoul of hate speech laws.
And it wouldn't just affect me.
I'm sorry, I'm bumping my camera because I'm on a wobbly table, but it would also affect Orthodox Christians of other forms, our evangelical friends, our Pentecostal friends.
It would also affect our Muslim friends.
So that's crazy because it criminalizes religious teaching that runs afoul of the government, which is bizarre.
Bizarre.
Especially when, for example, you would hear from a Christian priest or pastor would say, like, we all say it, hate the sin, love the sinner.
Pray harder for the sinners.
But she would, you know, if you're calling something sinful, well, then I guess that's going to be hate speech now.
Okay, lady.
Let's keep going.
I understand there has been a lot of virulent anti-Semitism lately, particularly on our college campuses where I'm in no hurry to go.
I know I've got one going to university next year, but she's minoring in Christian theology, so I'm going to be okay, I think.
But this seems to take things way too far.
The U.S. House has already passed an anti-Semitism awareness act that based on the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance's definitions would make the factual statement, Jews killed Jesus, a hate crime.
Now, as a Christian, this is terrifying.
To clarify, I believe that we are all responsible for the death of Jesus, but the Jews represented all of us in handing him over to Pilate.
We know that, like, Jesus died for all of our sins.
And so we're all responsible.
But yes, there were a lot of people on Team Barabbas that day.
Let's keep going.
Do you think there are other alternatives to combating anti-Semitism?
Personally, I think hate speech laws are the wrong way to go.
I do too.
I think like calls for genocide, that's in a different category.
I don't think you should criminalize being an idiot, saying idiotic things, but that or people who disagree with your political positions.
And I think a lot of the LGBTQ alphabet people stuff is now taken on like a political connotation.
I do, I think expanding hate speech laws, it's crazy.
You know, like, like I said, calls to genocide, bad.
Threats of violence, bad.
But I, and by the way, we don't really enforce the existing hate speech laws we do have, do we?
Well, we've got these little Hamas mobs running amok, saying from the river to the sea, which is a call to genocide, and nobody's doing a darn thing about it.
So maybe, maybe we could deal with the laws that we already have.
Also, the whole, like, they're trespassing.
You have a mob of anti-Semites trespassing at the university, and your solution is more hate speech laws.
Could we kindly enforce the ones that we have before we do anything else?
That would be great.
Sorry, I'll just keep reading.
Natalie goes on to ask.
Do you after all a fundamental part of freedom is the freedom to hate, perhaps education, or redirecting our tax dollars from these indoctrination camps towards bettering people's lives so they can become productive citizens?
All seems the government wants to do is fund drugs and make us all hate each other.
Enforcing Existing Laws00:08:47
It's very sad.
You know what?
I want that on a t-shirt.
All government wants to do is fund drugs and make us all hate each other.
Truer words were never spoken, young lady.
It's very sad.
I can't make it to any of your documentary screens, but thank you for standing up for the helpless in our country.
Blessings, Natalie.
Natalie, you raise an interesting point.
I don't care what these people say.
I don't believe the things that they believe, but I do believe they have a right to be idiots in the public square.
I don't want to pay for any of it.
You know what I mean?
I don't want to pay for it.
But so many of these groups now are receiving public dollars in one way or another.
I think once you cut off the funding to these little hate mobs, they just dry up and go away and they have to go get a job at Starbucks.
And maybe that's the solution is that they can protest whatever they want.
Don't do it on private property.
Go to the public square all day long.
I don't care.
And public dollars should not be going to these people.
And then all of a sudden, protesting does not become the lucrative career it is for some of these people.
And, you know, there won't be demand funded, so the supply will dry up.
All righty.
Next one.
Linda Moorehouse.
Dear Sheila, you're doing a great job.
I'm in Nova Scotia.
When somebody elderly and either sick or depressed enters any of the hospitals, they're being quietly asked if they want MAID service by a sympathetic attending nurse.
Something is quite wrong here.
Nobody should be asked anything like that at the time.
Most have a do not resuscitate on their health records.
Of course, if an elderly is sick, they are in misery.
And these kind talking doctors and nurses giving them undivided attention in that moment of asking, some are pushy.
I'm seeing stories about this all over the internet in different areas.
Please tell your listeners, if you have a sick relative, go with them to the hospital and get the sick person and the relative to stand firm.
Blank, tell these ghouls that MAID is not in the program.
You'll hear a lot of this.
I mean, there are stories in our documentary too that elderly people come to the hospital with a completely treatable issue and they just say, why don't we send you to palliative care?
And once you get to palliative care, guess what they do?
We have a lady in our documentary who had a kidney problem, like a kidney infection.
They sent her to palliative care.
Thank goodness she was in a family of prickly COVID skeptics and they were having none of the white coat syndrome that the rest of the country had.
They knew that doctors don't get things right.
They knew that from COVID and they fought back.
So that was great.
Pamela writes, Dear Sheila Gunn, I've enjoyed Rebel News for several years now.
The important topics that have opened the eyes of many Canadians, the MAID program is one of the most important to me.
I'm concerned about people with no family who are being manipulated into believing that this is an option.
Our society needs to create an environment where people can reach out to a support system that will give them hope.
How can we stop the MAID program and give actual care for people who need it?
Thank you, Pamela.
Hopefully, you get a chance to watch our documentary because we talk about exactly that, that Canadians should be able to get the care that they need, but also that this is solved by us.
We don't need the government involved.
The despair that is driving people to access MAID can be found through, can be ended by us being close to them.
Well, Pamela, hopefully, you get a chance to watch our documentary.
And like I said off the top, one of the great things about our documentary, although it is a dark subject matter, and I'm not even sure that you will like the documentary.
It's not made for you to like it.
It's made for you to see the raw truth from the people who are experiencing it and then find a way to make the change in your community on your own.
Because politics is downstream of culture and we've got a culture of death in this country.
And so if we want the politics to change, we have to change the culture.
And that comes to us.
And it is really as little as telling the people who are despairing in our lives that they matter to us and then they have purpose to us.
That's how we change this.
One person at a time.
Do not put your faith in princes because they will fail.
Just ask Jason Kenny.
Next one, last one from a critic who hasn't seen the documentary.
So I wonder how she knows how this is the way she describes.
From Kim, who says, the anti-MAID propaganda needs to stop.
This is nothing more than a holy roller crusade that makes real conservatives look like idiots.
If you don't want help dying when you want to, fine.
But leave the rest of us normal citizens alone.
The whole thing looks and sounds like something out of the extreme left playbook.
Kim Morton.
Well, Kim, you know what looks and sounds like something out of the extreme left playbook?
Complaining that something is propaganda when I know for a fact you haven't watched it.
Okay?
That's what lefties do.
They don't dig down.
They don't even watch the thing they're being critical of and then send an email about it.
Kim, email me directly.
Sheila at RebelNews.com.
I will send you a link to the documentary because I want you to watch it.
Because you don't know what is in this documentary.
You have not heard the stories of the people who have lived it and the things that have happened to them.
Now you can call me a propagandist all the time.
I don't care.
I've got tough skin.
But I don't want you calling these nice people who told me about the worst thing that ever happened to them a bunch of liars.
Because that's what you're saying when you say that.
About a thing that you never watched.
If you cannot understand what the problem with MAID is, then I don't know how to explain it to you in any other way.
MAID was sold to all of us as something that would help people whose deaths were imminent, like within days of dying, and who were simultaneously in extreme suffering.
That's how it started.
That's not where it is anymore.
For example, did you know that autism can qualify you for MAID?
Because autism is a biological neurological disorder and not a mental illness.
So if you have a biological neurological disorder that is irremediable, as in it won't heal because autism won't, well, that puts you on track to for MAID.
Did you know that?
I bet you didn't.
Did you know that the pain from a delayed knee surgery, so you know, takes you 14 months to get a knee surgery in Alberta, that unwarranted pain and suffering might qualify you for MAID.
Quicker than you can get the knee surgery, by the way.
Isn't that outrageous?
Now they want to move it to mature minors and the mentally ill.
There was a slippery slope.
Everybody else just ignored it.
And us holy rollers were the ones warning you about the rest of it.
And we're the ones also working to save lives.
So, I don't know, you can call me a holy roller if you want.
There are a lot of completely non-religious people in this documentary who said themselves, we were pro-made in the first instance.
In fact, we talked to somebody in the documentary, and this is how I know you didn't watch it.
We talked to somebody in the documentary who is still pro-made in the first instance when it is for someone whose death is foreseeable and they are in great agony.
We included her in the documentary.
And she remains okay with MAID as long as that's what it's used for and not for what it has grown into now.
A solution to government wait times, cleaning up the eccentric and the lonely and the homeless and the drug addicted instead of treating them like valuable human beings or as us holy rollers say in the image of the divine.
Addressing Feedback Positively00:02:44
All right, I've got to get back in.
I've got to wrap up this documentary.
Thank you everybody for tuning in.
I had a lot of positive feedback there, but I thought I would take the time to address the one that wasn't positive.
And anyways, Kim, that offer stands.
You want to see that documentary?
I'll make it happen for you.
And if you walk away from that documentary with the same opinion that you have now, well, then you're just one of those unreachable people who is less open-minded than you think you are.
But I'd be happy to make that work for you.
Again, that's Sheila at RebelNews.com.
I've got a private link for you so that you can watch it.
I've got to get back into the documentary so that Kian isn't there when the lights come up just waiting for somebody to run in and talk.
So that has to be me.
Friends, thank you for helping me with this week's show.
I know it is not as tidy or as professional as sometimes it is when I'm at home.
And it is important to me, though, for those of you who support the show, regular viewers, people who take the time to watch the show, but also people who spend the money to watch the show behind the paywall.
I appreciate you so much.
I know that Justin Trudeau is picking your pocket in new and creative ways.
So you don't have a lot of money left.
None of us do.
But you choose to spend that extra eight bucks a month to help us and to help us have a sustainable business model, whatever that means in the times of Trudeau.
And so I owe it to you to bring you a show when you're waiting for one.
So that's what I did today.
And I got to get out of this RV because like I said before, it smells like steak cooked four hours ago and possibly Doritos and maybe some spilled iced tea.
Maybe that's why I'm here.
I'm here to clean the place up, I guess.
Go and make sure we get our damage deposit.
That's it.
I don't know where I will see you next week, but I promise, as always, I'll bring you a show.
If you've got viewer feedback on the viewer feedback, my email, as always, is Sheila at RebelNews.com.
Put gun show letters in the subject line if you've got a gun show letter for me.
And that's it.
And as always, thanks to everybody who works behind the scenes to put the show together, whatever it is looking like when I send it to them.
Thank you, by the way, to Tamari Ugolini, who has really stepped up to take on some of my responsibilities at the company, of which I have many, while I'm touring this documentary.
But I think this is really important work, life-changing, life-affirming work, and one of the most important things that I've ever done at Rebel News.