Canada Admits ‘Non-Voluntary’ Euthanasia Could Save Trillions — Depopulation Agenda ‘No Longer Hidden’

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A chilling new study is fueling fears that Canada’s rapidly expanding euthanasia system is evolving into something far darker than assisted dying — a state-driven model where “non-voluntary” or effectively forced euthanasia could become economically incentivized.

Researchers now project that Canada’s Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) regime could save the government as much as CAD $1.273 trillion by 2047, with the largest financial gains emerging under scenarios involving “non-voluntary” euthanasia.

Critics warn the findings expose what many feared from the beginning: once governments realize massive cost savings can be achieved through assisted death, vulnerable citizens risk being viewed less as human beings deserving care — and more as financial liabilities consuming public resources.

A man enters a euthanasia pod amid fears Western governments are conditioning society to accept medically managed depopulation

What was originally sold to the public as a tightly controlled and compassionate option for the terminally ill has rapidly transformed into one of the most permissive euthanasia systems in the world.


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And according to the data, the broader the program becomes — especially among vulnerable populations — the greater the economic reward for the state.

The Numbers Behind The Expansion

A 2017 analysis already estimated that MAiD could reduce Canadian healthcare spending by between $34.7 million and $138.8 million annually.

But a far more disturbing 2025 study by researchers Uzair Jamil and Joshua M. Pearce suggests those figures may only represent the beginning.

The study — titled Government Economics of Expanding Canada’s Medical Assistance in Dying to Vulnerable Populations and the Ethical Implications of Allowing the State to Control Death — examined the financial impact of expanding euthanasia access across multiple vulnerable groups.

Researchers modeled scenarios involving:

  • mentally ill individuals
  • homeless populations
  • retired elderly citizens
  • indigenous communities
  • broader MAiD recipients

The conclusions were staggering. According to the analysis, projected government savings could exceed CAD $1.273 trillion by 2047.

Most alarming of all, “non-voluntary” euthanasia scenarios consistently generated significantly larger projected economic benefits than voluntary participation.

For retired elderly populations alone, projected government savings exceeded CAD $1.2 trillion under non-voluntary scenarios. Critics say the implications are impossible to ignore.

Because once the state discovers that death dramatically reduces healthcare costs, pension obligations, housing burdens, and long-term care expenses, the incentive structure changes completely.

The terrifying question becomes: What happens when keeping citizens alive becomes more expensive than ending their lives?

From “Compassion” To Economic Efficiency

Opponents of Canada’s euthanasia regime have long warned that MAiD would never remain limited to terminal illness. Since legalization, eligibility requirements have repeatedly expanded.

The system has increasingly opened the door to Canadians suffering from chronic illness, disability, mental illness, psychological distress, and social instability.

Critics argue that Canada is constructing a framework where hopelessness becomes medicalized — and death becomes bureaucratically streamlined.

Some opponents now warn that vulnerable individuals may face indirect pressure toward euthanasia in a healthcare system where prolonged care is expensive, but assisted death is fast, state-funded, and increasingly normalized.

Now the financial projections appear to reveal why the expansion never stops. Every new category added to the euthanasia system potentially represents billions in future government savings.

To critics, that creates a dangerous conflict of interest unlike anything previously seen in modern healthcare.

Disturbing Reports Intensify Concerns

The study arrives amid mounting controversy surrounding Canada’s euthanasia practices.

Investigations by major Canadian media outlets have documented troubling cases involving MAiD assessments and procedures.

One report described a physician allegedly conducting a patient assessment outside a Tim Hortons restaurant before transporting the individual to a facility where euthanasia was later carried out that same day.

Another report detailed cases in which patients reportedly resumed breathing after being declared dead while still under the effects of paralysis-inducing drugs used during euthanasia procedures.

Critics argue these incidents suggest the safeguards once promised by authorities may already be breaking down.

But opponents say the deeper concern extends far beyond isolated procedural failures.

They warn Canada may be entering dangerous territory where financial incentives increasingly intersect with life-and-death policy decisions.

The “Slippery Slope” No Longer Looks Theoretical

For years, establishment voices dismissed concerns about a euthanasia “slippery slope” as paranoia and conspiracy theory. But critics now point to Canada as evidence that every expansion creates momentum for the next.

First terminal illness. Then chronic suffering. Then mental illness. Then economically vulnerable populations.

Now researchers are openly calculating the enormous fiscal savings governments could achieve through broader euthanasia access — especially under non-voluntary scenarios.

To critics, the pattern no longer appears random. It appears systematic. And in the eyes of many opponents, increasingly deliberate.

Because in an era of aging populations, collapsing healthcare systems, rising national debt, and economic instability, critics fear governments may begin treating euthanasia not merely as healthcare policy — but as population management.

The concern is no longer whether assisted death saves money. The concern is whether saving money will ultimately become the reason governments expand death itself.


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Baxter Dmitry
About Baxter Dmitry 8117 Articles
Baxter Dmitry is a writer at The People's Voice. He covers politics, business and entertainment. Speaking truth to power since he learned to talk, Baxter has travelled in over 80 countries and won arguments in every single one. Live without fear.