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Watch: Canadian Shows Her Copy of Deadly Piece of Paper Socialized Health Care Delivers to Some Patients

A young woman in Canada recently shared her frustration over an alarming medical delay, highlighting concerns about the inefficiencies of socialized health care.

The woman, whose candid and expletive-filled video about Canada's lengthy wait times went viral on social media, revealed she might have a brain tumor. However, she won’t receive confirmation until next year.

“Today on ‘How Fed is Canadian Health Care:’ I need an MRI to see if I have a fing brain tumor,” she stated in her post. “Go ahead — guess when it is? Go ahead, guess. It’s in 2026.”

She repeated the shocking delay, struggling to grasp the reality: “My MRI — to see if I have a brain tumor — is in 2026. It’s March 2025 right now.”

She explained that the situation was even worse than it initially seemed.

“If you thought this was bad, it’s actually worse than you thought,” she said.

“Because the appointment where we decided that I need this MRI was in December of last year. So it’s not like it’s 10 months from now. It’s 13 months. It’s a 13-month wait to see if I have a brain tumor.”

Doctors suspect she may have a brain tumor due to an existing tumor in her spine, making the delay all the more troubling.

“I just thought this was a mistake,” she continued. “But no, I called, and the clinic was like, yeah, the doctor actually requested that you have it earlier, but this is the next spot we have.”

Summing up the grim reality of health care in her country, she remarked:

“Canada: where health care is free, but only if you can afford to wait.”

WARNING: This video contains vulgar language and may be offensive to some viewers.

Reports of Canada's struggling health care system have increasingly surfaced, much like concerns over illegal immigration and fentanyl in the U.S.

Lengthy wait times have long plagued Canada’s system, but another growing concern is the expansion of assisted suicide. This practice now accounts for 5 percent of all deaths in the country.

In essence, socialized medicine forces people to choose between two grim fates: suffering due to a lack of basic medical access or opting for euthanasia, as if they were abandoned pets.

Massive, secularized governments drowning in debt—and showing little regard for the inherent value of human life—were never meant to oversee health care.

That responsibility primarily belongs to families and, secondarily, to the free market.

While the American system may be costly and sometimes inefficient, at least it provides timely access to critical medical services—rather than forcing patients to endure unbearable waiting periods that can ultimately be a death sentence.

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