COVID-19/Euthanasia

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Main.png COVID-19/Euthanasia
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Interest of• Bryan Ardis
• Wayne Smith
During the COVID-19 deep event, a number of governments implemented policies that drastically increased death numbers.

During the COVID-19 deep event, a number of governments, either through incompetence or on purpose, implemented policies that drastically increased death numbers.

Involuntary euthanasia and COVID-19

Do Not Resuscitate orders

Full article: Do not resuscitate orders

During the COVID-19 deep event the British government started a large-scale campaign to pressure chronically ill people, including some people with autism, sight loss or epilepsy[1][2], to sign or accept Do Not Resuscitate orders (DNR). Some people had the order signed on their behalf in secret, and in June 2020, it was revealed that “blanket” DNRs had been applied to nursing homes by GPs all around the country.[3]

The use of DNRs was, allegedly, to protect the health system from the influx of Covid patients and to try and keep ICU beds open.

The significance of the DNRs might not have been realized by most it was applied to, since it what they might have imagined as a merciful pulling the plug when unconscious, in fact applied to much wider health services, including ruling out attempts at cardiopulmonary resuscitation,[4] and not giving nutrition and drink, leaving patients to die of dehydration[citation needed].

The “Undercover Nurse” reported that the hospital she worked at in New York had widespread abuse of the DNR system[5], and Rosemary Frei wrote an article breaking down the way deaths were “created” in Canadian care homes[6].

Belgium was deliberately negligent of many seniors and withheld service “When Covid 19 hit, many elderly were left to die,”[7], ““Paramedics had been instructed by their referral hospital not to take patients over a certain age, often 75 but sometimes as low as 65,” Médecins Sans Frontières said in a July 2020 report.[8]

Midazolam

In March 2020, the UK government obtained large quantities of midazolam through diverting shipments intended for France. Midazolam is used as a sedative and anaesthetic to cause drowsiness, relieve anxiety, and in some cases cause total loss of consciousness, but the drug can slow or stop breathing completely,[9] so it is curious why it was chosen a key drug and “first-line sedative” to treat COVID-19 patients.[10]

The large order,two years’ worth of stock to UK wholesalers, was allegedly done as a “precaution” in preparation for potential NHS shortages of the drug due to COVID-19. In April 2020, a staggering 38,582 prescriptions were made, compared about 15,000 prescriptions per months over the previous five years.[11].

Ventilators

Euthanasia has also been hinted at by whistleblowers specifically through the use of ventilators on patients who never needed them. The use of ventilators was pushed in guidelines from the NHS, CDC, ECDC and WHO as soon as the pandemic started. As Kit Knightly points out, "it’s very probable that this did a lot more harm than good, killing huge numbers of patients who may otherwise have survived (though obviously it cannot be proven – at this stage – that this was deliberate)."[2]