Victoria's Secret Model Normalizes Euthanasia In TikTok Video With Her Dying Grandma

Haika Mrema | May 23, 2023
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Since when did we decide that we could play God? Because it seems, at least according to this, that that's exactly where we've landed.

In a video posted to social media, Victoria Secret’s first plus-sized model Ali Tate Cutler documented her terminally-ill grandmother’s decision to be euthanized under Canada’s Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD).  

“My grandmother has chosen euthanasia for her terminal diagnosis so this is the last time I can take her out to dinner,” Cutler said in a video with over 12 million views on communist-owned TikTok. 

Even the most immoral of circumstances are now diminished into a social media post for views and attention. From abortion to assisted death, our society continues to devalue the invaluable gift of life as a means of escaping inconveniences and tribulations – all of which are natural parts of the human experience. 

In a video titled, “Life advice from my Dying Grandmother,” Cutler and her grandmother candidly discuss the topic of euthanasia. 

@alitatecutler Replying to @Matthew This was the hardest and most beautiful conversation ive ever had. Healing for both parties. I had resistance to Euthanasia before this, but after being with her and hearing her, I no longer do. ❤️ #euthanasia #finalfarewell #ondying ♬ multiverse - Maya Manuela

“What are your thoughts as you move closer to the date?” Cutler begins.

“It is like the light at the end of the tunnel,” her grandmother responds. 

The pair then discusses what precautions were taken to ensure her grandmother was doing it for the “right reasons.” 

“Your diagnosis, if it is fatal. How many more months you have. They give you time to consider; they keep stressing the fact that you can always change your mind,” Cutler’s grandmother explains. 

“What is the actual day like?” Cutler continues. 

“Like they said, an appointment, an initial injection putting you to sleep, and the big pain is a prick in the hand to provide for the little valves,” the grandmother says. “And then once you are in a deep sleep, there are two other injections you get. At that point you don’t know, so it’s painless.” 

Cutler asks her grandmother how she feels, to which her grandmother replies that she is “looking forward to putting it in, being dependent, no control.” 

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“As the day approaches, is this something you think about everyday?” Culter asks. 

“No. When I’ll be ready, I’ll know. I’ve always made my own decisions for myself in living, I trust I will in death,” her grandmother replies.  

Finally, Cutler's grandmother advised everyone to “Laugh, have fun, and enjoy your loved ones as much as you can..If you have love in your life, hold on to it because it is so precious.”

Cutler concludes by saying, “We need to respect and not have judgment for anyone's decisions they make about their own life. Especially when they are not hurting anyone else.” 

Substituting objectivity for subjectivity with empty phrases like “as long as it’s not hurting anyone”  is the beginning of a slippery slope that can only lead to the disorder and demoralization of our society. We are watching the normalization of suicide through cushy language and sympathetic videos - and the more high-profile names like Cutler push the practice as typical, the more suicide will be accepted. 

May God help us, as He is ultimately the only one with authority over our lifespan and that is the way it ought to be. 

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