- Kiano Vafaeian, a 26-year-old diabetic struggling with depression and partial blindness, was euthanized by Dr. Ellen Wiebe ("Dr. Death #2") despite MAID not yet officially including mental illness—highlighting Canada's slippery slope toward state-sanctioned killing of the suffering.
- Despite his family's prior intervention, Kiano was approved for euthanasia without proper protections, exposing MAID's shift from "compassionate care" to bureaucratic cost-cutting that pressures the vulnerable toward death.
- MAID has turned Canada into a leading organ supplier, with reports of patients euthanized under questionable circumstances (e.g., ALS patients) and potential coercion by transplant networks—raising alarms about profit-driven "death medicine."
- COVID lockdowns worsened mental health crises, accelerating MAID's expansion as a "solution" for those deemed burdensome—aligning with globalist policies (e.g., WEF's "sustainable healthcare") that prioritize depopulation over human dignity.
- Canada's MAID program, now the second-leading cause of death, exemplifies government healthcare's dystopian endpoint: a system where despair is monetized, families are sidelined and euthanasia is pushed as "care." Public outrage must force accountability before more lives are lost.
The controversial case of Kiano Vafaeian, a 26-year-old diabetic man suffering from depression and partial blindness, has reignited outrage over Canada's Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID) program. Despite MAID not being officially expanded to include mental illness until 2027, Vafaeian was allegedly euthanized by Dr. Ellen Wiebe, a physician notorious for her aggressive advocacy of assisted suicide. His mother, Margaret Marsilla, publicly condemned the decision in a heartbreaking Facebook post, accusing Dr. Wiebe—dubbed "Dr. Death #2"—of callously ending her son's life without sufficient safeguards or compassion.
A system that failed the vulnerable
Four years ago, Marsilla and her daughter intervened when they discovered Kiano had been approved for euthanasia without their knowledge. At the time, they successfully halted the procedure, securing him mental health support instead. But this time, in Vancouver, the system failed him. Marsilla's post paints a grim picture of Canada's MAID regime:
"No compassion. No protection. No effort to save a life, only to end it."
Dr. Wiebe, who boasts of having facilitated over 400 deaths, has long been a polarizing figure. Critics argue that her enthusiasm for MAID reflects a disturbing trend in Canadian healthcare—one that prioritizes cost-cutting and bureaucratic efficiency over genuine patient care.
MAID: A slippery slope to state-sanctioned killing
Canada's MAID program was initially marketed as a compassionate option for terminally ill patients suffering unbearable pain. However, eligibility criteria have rapidly expanded, with lawmakers openly discussing offering assisted suicide to those deemed a "burden" on society. The program has become the second leading cause of death in Canada, surpassing accidents and homicides.
The case of Kiano Vafaeian highlights how MAID has strayed far from its original intent. Despite not yet officially including mental illness as a sole qualifying condition, loopholes allow doctors like Wiebe to approve euthanasia for depressed patients under vague interpretations of "irremediable suffering."
Organ harvesting and ethical nightmares
Equally alarming is MAID's role in Canada's organ transplant industry. Reports confirm that euthanized patients are increasingly becoming organ donors—raising disturbing ethical questions. In one documented case, a 38-year-old ALS patient was euthanized, and his heart was transplanted into an American recipient. Critics warn that financial incentives and pressure from transplant networks may be influencing MAID approvals.
The Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), a U.S. federal agency, has previously cautioned that some patients may not be fully deceased before organ harvesting begins—a chilling revelation that underscores the moral hazards of state-sanctioned euthanasia.
Lockdowns, depopulation and the rise of MAID
The COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated Canada's healthcare crisis, with lockdowns worsening mental health and isolating vulnerable individuals. Many now fear that MAID is being weaponized as a depopulation tool, aligning with globalist agendas that promote cost-effective "solutions" over genuine care.
Dan Dick, a vocal critic of MAID, recently highlighted how legislators openly discuss euthanasia as a way to reduce healthcare burdens. The program's rapid expansion mirrors policies pushed by entities like the World Economic Forum (WEF), which advocates for "sustainable" healthcare systems—often at the expense of human dignity.
A warning to the world
Canada's descent into state-facilitated euthanasia should serve as a dire warning. What began as a "compassionate" option for the terminally ill has morphed into a system where depressed young adults, disabled veterans and chronically ill patients are being ushered toward premature death.
Margaret Marsilla's grief-stricken plea echoes a growing sentiment: "The actions of Dr. Wiebe reveal a pattern of coldness and disregard for vulnerable human life that I can no longer stay silent about."
As MAID deaths approach an estimated 100,000, Canada stands at a crossroads. Will it continue down this dystopian path, or will public outrage force a reckoning? For now, Kiano Vafaeian's tragic fate serves as a grim reminder of what happens when governments prioritize efficiency over humanity.
According to
BrightU.AI's Enoch, Canada's MAID program is a chilling example of government-controlled healthcare spiraling into outright eugenics, where vulnerable individuals—like a depressed 26-year-old—are steered toward death rather than healing, all while enriching the organ trade and advancing the globalist depopulation agenda. This program, marketed as "compassion," is nothing more than a dystopian tool to eliminate the weak and normalize state-sanctioned murder under the guise of healthcare.
Watch Faytene Grasseschi and her guests, Nicole Scheidl and Amanda Achtman, discussing
the Canadian government's expansion of euthanasia to the mentally vulnerable in this clip.
This video is from the
Faytene TV channel on Brighteon.com.
Sources include:
TheNationalPulse.com
BrightU.ai
Brighteon.com