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When anti-abortionists first started hand-waving about a so-called “Culture of Death”, it sounded like so much lunatic gibbering. Fast forward a decade or so, and the gnawing feeling is that, in a great many, very important ways, they were right. The state-sanctioned suicide push has only thrown their argument into sharper clarity: when a society abandons the principle of the sanctity of all human life, it takes a skidding step into a very dark valley.
Things get even worse when that Culture of Death combines with a state-enforced culture of bureaucratic authoritarianism. We supposedly learned that lesson in the first half of the 20th century — but, here we are in the opening decades of the 21st, making the same mistakes all over again.
Canada is fast becoming the Killing Fields of the West’s new Culture of Death. A flood of cases have accused Canada’s health system of pressuring people to opt to be killed by the state (under the nauseating euphemism “Voluntary Assisted Dying”), rather than “burden” society with their continued Untermenschen existence.
Another shocking case from Canada highlights the brutal authoritarianism of the Covid regimes, who were so determined to “save lives” that they were prepared to kill.
Charges against two Toronto hospital security guards in the death of a patient will never be tested in front of a jury after a recent decision, blindsiding her sister, who has been fighting for justice in the case.
But the video, which was to be crucial evidence in the manslaughter and criminal negligence case in the death of Stephanie Warriner, shows the public what the jury will never see.
Video footage obtained by CTV News Toronto shows bits and pieces of the altercation between 43-year-old Stephanie Warriner, and security guards Amanda Rojas-Silva and Shane Hutley on May 11, 2020, at Toronto General Hospital.
The video only shows “bits and pieces” because the camera operator quickly turned the camera away at the crucial moment.
What we see is horrifying enough. A woman is sitting alone in a hospital corridor. Burly security staff surround her, apparently berating her. The woman stands and begins to walk away, brushing off one security guard’s arm. As the guards begin to slam her against a wall, the camera hurriedly turns away. The next view is of the guards wheeling her obviously lifeless body away in a wheelchair.
“Doesn’t matter how many times I see it (the video),” Denise Warriner said. “It’s gut-wrenching.”
Why did this happen?
Stephanie Warriner was at the hospital after contracting COVID-19.
Denise Warriner said her sister had tested negative for the virus. However, due to Stephanie’s underlying lung disease, known as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), she was still experiencing a cough and some difficulty breathing.
“She was definitely struggling with respiratory distress symptoms,” Denise said.
According to Denise Warriner, her sister went downstairs to the food court “and unfortunately on her way (back), where she was masked, she became without breath, and sat down and was evidently really struggling. And, she then brought her mask down to her chin.”
That’s when one of the security guards, Rojas-Silva, is seen in the video walking toward Stephanie Warriner.
According to court documents, Rojas-Silva was asking her to put her mask back on, which was off at the time.
That’s when, according to the documents, “Warriner rose to her feet with her mask on and swatted at the arm of Ms. Rojas-Silva with her right arm.”
What happened while the camera’s electronic gaze was averted? Whatever it was, it was deadly.
In those moments, the court documents say Rojas-Silva noticed Warriner appeared to have no pulse and was unresponsive, warranting a “Code Blue” to be called.
While Warriner could be revived at the time, she did not recover consciousness and died 16 days after the altercation.
The Culture of Death protects its own.
Rojas-Silva and Hutley were later charged with manslaughter and criminal negligence for causing death.
The Ontario Court of Justice had a preliminary hearing in 2021, but Hutley and Rojas-Silvas’ lawyers applied to Superior Court to throw out the decision to proceed – and won. This means no jury would ever see the surveillance footage in court.
According to Superior Court Justice Sean Dunphy, there was not enough “admissible evidence” for a committal.
CTV News
I guess, like all those anti-Apartheid activists in old South Africa, Stephanie Warriner just threw herself against the wall and committed suicide. Nothing to see, here.
So far, and almost certainly for good, the only person who’s faced any consequences for the death of Stephanie Warriner is the camera operator, who was sacked.