After Canada voted to allow doctors to murder patients struggling with emotional problems, the life expectancy rate of Canada has dropped for the third year in a row. In 2019, life expectancy was 82.3 years. That figure is now down to 81.3 years, meaning a whole year of life, on average, was lost thanks, in large part to legalizing “assisted suicide,” which is an Orwellian term meaning “euthanasia.”
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Canada’s life expectancy rate has dropped three years in a row from the average Canadian dying at the age of 82.3 years in 2019 to 81.3 years in 2022.
Much of the news coverage blaimed the shorter life span on Covid 19 deaths and the Canadian Press reported that:
An increase in deaths among younger people last year was attributable in part to deaths under investigation by a coroner or medical examiner, which typically include suicides, homicides and drug toxicity deaths.
Further to that the Canadian Press reported:
New Brunswick saw the biggest decline in life expectancy among provinces, dropping more than a year to 79.8 years from 80.9 in 2021, the report said. Saskatchewan’s life expectancy has fallen the most over the past three years combined, dropping a full two years to 78.5 in 2022 from 80.5 in 2019. Prince Edward Island was not included in the yearly data breakdowns by province.