So this could reasonably be interpreted to include death by suicide, or death of one's personality?
Well, that's the thing. Reasonably foreseeable still doesn't cover cases that aren't necessarily terminal or caused by the disease itself.
So this could reasonably be interpreted to include death by suicide, or death of one's personality?
The Globe & Mail reports that Jason Kenney is apparently leaning somewhat toward entering provincial politics to try to unite the PCs and Wildrose.
Disgusted with our government today. It won't cover things like Alzheimer's, or dementia, and mostly likely won't cover things like spinal stenosis, which is what Kay Carter was suffering from. That reduces someone to being completely dependent on caregivers for things like wiping themself and this legislation denies them the ability to opt out of that state and condemns them to suffer without a choice. I'm extremely saddened that the government is passing this unconstitutional legislation. Absolutely disgusting show by this government, this is what I'd expect out of the previous government, not one that shows foresight in so many other areas. They have consciously passed a piece of legislation which doesn't even cover the very case that had the previous law struck down, and now are willingly breaching the section 7 rights of those who fall outside the narrow range provided for by the new legislation.Well, that's the thing. Reasonably foreseeable still doesn't cover cases that aren't necessarily terminal or caused by the disease itself.
The legislation should allow for advance consent, or for the ability to seek assisted death upon a diagnosis.How could someone with Alzheimer or dementia consent anyway? At this rate, you might as well allow family members to decide. "Tired of taking care of your old mother? Request a lethal injection!"
The legislation should allow for advance consent, or for the ability to seek assisted death upon a diagnosis.
I'm not versed on the mechanics of the medical aspects, but I assume that if the person is competent they could either A. Decide on a calendar date ahead of time, or B. Define the condition which assisted death would be provided. This is why the ability to plan prior is important, because it gives people control over their lives. Someone may not want to completely lose their current self, or lose all of their memories, and may view that as an intolerable form of suffering. I would. The reasonable foreseeable leading to death requirement prevents any of that. The main point is that there has to be a better way than blanket saying "no" to these people, especially in cases of people who are clearly capable of giving consent especially at the onset of a diagnosis. As a society, we can do better than that, especially with something so fundamental to one's own autonomy.It would leave way too much to interpretation. At which point in the evolution of the disease do you pull the plug? What if the person is out of it mentally, but is not necessarely suffering/unhappy?
I agree that it should be allowed for long-term degenerative diseases though.
Disgusted with our government today. It won't cover things like Alzheimer's, or dementia, and mostly likely won't cover things like spinal stenosis, which is what Kay Carter was suffering from. That reduces someone to being completely dependent on caregivers for things like wiping themself and this legislation denies them the ability to opt out of that state and condemns them to suffer without a choice. I'm extremely saddened that the government is passing this unconstitutional legislation. Absolutely disgusting show by this government, this is what I'd expect out of the previous government, not one that shows foresight in so many other areas. They have consciously passed a piece of legislation which doesn't even cover the very case that had the previous law struck down, and now are willingly breaching the section 7 rights of those who fall outside the narrow range provided for by the new legislation.
The thing about the legislation is that the Liberals, without saying it, were keen on focusing this bill on 'terminal' cases only. I don't think it's necessarily out of bad faith on par with the previous government, but shows a belief that such restrictions are necessary. This is a complex issue to move forward on -- especially when the possibility of abuse exists.
What's important to note is that the Supreme Court cannot legislate -- that is Parliament's job. Aside from being the top court, they can only provide guidelines, frameworks, and legal opinions (ie. constitutionality). What is most likely is that the Supreme Court would not declare the bill to be unconstitutional -- Parliament has addressed the concerns reasonably and in good faith -- but rather state that there is a gap that is not addressed within the now-existing legislation.
I would expect a separate bill debating deteriorating but non-terminal cases would be put forward to Parliament sometime during the next Parliamentary sitting.
Both laws are new, so it's not like Quebec's law has had to really stand the test of time.Lawyers could spin it multiple ways. They could say that taking out the requirement of reasonable foreseeability of natural death would violate s. 7 because pressure would tacitely be put on people to end their life as to not be a burden. It's an argument just as valid as the hypothetical scenario in which a person would commit suicide early because she knows she won't be able to later on. God knows the SCC loves these hypothetical scenarios.
I agree with you somewhat (availability for long-term degenerative diseases causing suffering), but saying that you're disgusted because the government doesn't take it as far as you want to, which is extremely far, is a bit much. You also have to consider the people in the medical field who will be involved in those deaths.
Interestingly, the Quebec law that is already in place also contains this criteria ("be at the end of life") and there was zero outrage. And I'm not aware of any court challenges as of now.
Lawyers could spin it multiple ways. They could say that taking out the requirement of reasonable foreseeability of natural death would violate s. 7 because pressure would tacitely be put on people to end their life as to not be a burden. It's an argument just as valid as the hypothetical scenario in which a person would commit suicide early because she knows she won't be able to later on. God knows the SCC loves these hypothetical scenarios.
I agree with you somewhat (availability for long-term degenerative diseases causing suffering), but saying that you're disgusted because the government doesn't take it as far as you want to, which is extremely far, is a bit much. You also have to consider the people in the medical field who will be involved in those deaths.
Interestingly, the Quebec law that is already in place also countains this criteria ("be at the end of life") and there was zero outrage. And I'm not aware of any court challenges as of now.
ipolitics said:Cowan then read out two heart-wrenching emails from a batch he received from Canadians, one he received yesterday from a woman in Southwestern Ontario with a degenerative disease that will eventually lead to her death by asphyxiation.
In the email she said she will wait for the law to come into force, but then “starve and dehydrate” herself so her death becomes “reasonably foreseeable.”
John Aldag (Liberal)
Matt DeCourcey (Liberal)
Sherry Romanado (Liberal)
Ruby Sahota (Liberal)
Francis Scarpaleggia (Liberal)
Gérard Deltell (Conservative)
Jason Kenney (Conservative)
Scott Reid (Conservative)
Alexandre Boulerice (NDP)
Nathan Cullen (NDP)
Luc Thériault (Bloc Quebecois)
Elizabeth May (Green)
The party is looking at forgoing a traditional leadership convention in favour of a series of smaller-scale events over the course of a month.
The NDP executive is recommending a new leader be chosen some time between Oct. 1st and Oct. 31 of 2017, with rounds of voting through a preferential, ranked ballot taking place about once a week until a candidate hits the 50 per cent plus one mark to be declared the winner.
The Electoral Reform Committee list is out:
All rookie MPs on the Liberal side, vs a whole bunch of veterans on the opposition benches, including at least two who are probably making runs for their respective parties' leaderships (Kenney and Boulerice). It'll be interesting to see how it all plays out.
what fuckery is this? they will never agree on electoral reform with that many opposition MPs
we voted for a Liberal Majority to guarantee us 50 years of Liberal majorities by changing it to Ranked Ballots
what fuckery is this? they will never agree on electoral reform with that many opposition MPs
we voted for a Liberal Majority to guarantee us 50 years of Liberal majorities by changing it to Ranked Ballots
I was wondering when you would comment on this considering you were banned when they announced they were making the committee proportional to the vote share in the election
the Bloc MP shouldn't even be allowed there. The Bloc thrive on First Past The Post
The Bloc has been known to push for proportional systems in the past.
historically their strength has disproportionately benefited from FPTP
How large is "we" other than you, hack? I certainly didn't vote Liberal for those reasons.what fuckery is this? they will never agree on electoral reform with that many opposition MPs
we voted for a Liberal Majority to guarantee us 50 years of Liberal majorities by changing it to Ranked Ballots
How large is "we" other than you, hack? I certainly didn't vote Liberal for those reasons.
If I got my blood pressure up at every gutter post... I'd be long dead. Cool aslmao, it's Gutter, relax, he says stuff like this all the time
historically their strength has disproportionately benefited from FPTP
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_federal_election,_2004
12.39% popular vote = 54 seats in 2004
Minor correction: Francis Scarpaleggia is a veteran Liberal MP.All rookie MPs on the Liberal side, vs a whole bunch of veterans on the opposition benches, including at least two who are probably making runs for their respective parties' leaderships (Kenney and Boulerice).
More rumblings about Kenney: http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/jason-kenney-political-future-1.3646180
I'm not exactly sure what he's thinking at this point. Does he not remember what happened the last time a federal MP tried to come to Albertan politics?
More rumblings about Kenney: http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/jason-kenney-political-future-1.3646180
I'm not exactly sure what he's thinking at this point. Does he not remember what happened the last time a federal MP tried to come to Albertan politics?
I hope he doesn't try to run for the PC leadership He may kill his political career and it's very unlikely he would be successful in getting the Alberta PC's back into power.
Kenney probably has much deeper ties with the Alberta far-right than Prentice ever did, though, which would make much more acceptable to Wildrose types in his bid to unite the right.
I'm not so up on Alberta politics. Would uniting their right wing parties, with a lean towards the far right, be a successful strategy in terms of actually uniting them and in terms of being capable of winning an election?
Wildrose seem like a bunch of nutbars, I can't see them ever having enough appeal to win anything, even if they absorbed a weaker party.
I hope he doesn't try to run for the PC leadership He may kill his political career and it's very unlikely he would be successful in getting the Alberta PC's back into power.
If I remember correctly, the PCAA has ruled out any discussions on consolidations and mergers between the two parties, no?
Kinda like Peter MacKay....
But eh, I don't think it'll happen this cycle. The reality is that doing so would leave a lot of middle-ground voters in the cold, too, and just force a bunch of them to move over to the NDP. The AB Libs could maybe hope to pull into that space if they weren't so completely routed and left flapping in the wind.
But eh, I don't think it'll happen this cycle. The reality is that doing so would leave a lot of middle-ground voters in the cold, too, and just force a bunch of them to move over to the NDP. The AB Libs could maybe hope to pull into that space if they weren't so completely routed and left flapping in the wind.
There's a lot of grassroots animosity between the two parties that I don't really feel like was quite present in Reform/PC by the time they managed to get together. The rural base of the WRP still feels very betrayed by things that happened in very recent memory (basically everything to do with Redford and the Danielle Smith aisle-crossing) and I think they have aspirations of grinding the PCs out without having to sacrifice anything.
So if either capitulates, it'll be the PCs, but... I mean their funding is already dried up (thanks to eliminating corporate donations and being abandoned by oil execs) and they're still protesting. They don't really have much to offer the WRP except their vaguely moderate position, which the WRP doesn't want.
Disgusted with our government today. It won't cover things like Alzheimer's, or dementia, and mostly likely won't cover things like spinal stenosis, which is what Kay Carter was suffering from. That reduces someone to being completely dependent on caregivers for things like wiping themself and this legislation denies them the ability to opt out of that state and condemns them to suffer without a choice. I'm extremely saddened that the government is passing this unconstitutional legislation. Absolutely disgusting show by this government, this is what I'd expect out of the previous government, not one that shows foresight in so many other areas. They have consciously passed a piece of legislation which doesn't even cover the very case that had the previous law struck down, and now are willingly breaching the section 7 rights of those who fall outside the narrow range provided for by the new legislation.
Ok, I wish they had just gone ahead with ORPP instead. The CPP changes will lead to a ~30% increase in benefits phased in over the next 9 years, while ORPP was going to be a much larger increase starting much sooner. It would have done way more to close the gap.What, not a post on CPP reform? Passing strange.
it would help to know what CPP is... i never heard of it. I am serious lolWhat, not a post on CPP reform? Passing strange.
it would help to know what CPP is... i never heard of it. I am serious lol
so... what is CPP?
Ok, I wish they had just gone ahead with ORPP instead. The CPP changes will lead to a ~30% increase in benefits phased in over the next 9 years, while ORPP was going to be a much larger increase starting much sooner. It would have done way more to close the gap.
At least they're raising the income cap on CPP (in 2025...)