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Let's rejoice over Clifford Olson's pending demise

Canadians should rejoice that a lowlife criminal monster, Clifford Olson, is reportedly days away from kicking the bucket with terminal cancer. I have no compassion for this demented animal.

Editor: Let’s rejoice at Clifford Olson’s fate.

Canadians should rejoice that a lowlife criminal monster, Clifford Olson, is reportedly days away from kicking the bucket with terminal cancer. I have no compassion for this demented animal.

Should anyone feel sadness over the loss of a costly bottom feeder serial child killer who should have been executed long ago? No. This person has made a mockery of our inept Mounties, played the courts for fools and sucked taxpayers out of millions during his 30 years of incarceration. It is a fitting end for this despicable hated human being.

There are many more like Olson in jail, including Paul Bernardo, Robert Pickton and Russell Williams, who need to be turfed. People like these undesireables are taking us to the cleaners, with the high costs to keep them alive in jail.

We need to expunge the leech parasites of society with scientific accuracy of DNA evidence, instead of allowing killers to breathe life and spit in our faces until they expire.

We live in a weak bleeding heart society, and where has it got us? There is a never-ending revolving door syndrome of hardened criminals, high recividism, billions spent on the costs of courts, and abuses in the justice system, including our costly penal institutions.

Meanwhile law-abiding citizens go without dental care, medicine, three square meals, etc. Prisoners get daily visits, including conjugal ones. These cold-blooded killers should be executed, to allow the victims fast justice and closure for families.

These predators should not have the ability to torture society while in living in jail. Bring out the party balloons, as Olson does not even deserve a coffin or decent burial. We the taxpayers will surely pay even in the end.

All federal government parties in the past several decades have allowed demons in our jails, like Olson, the luxury of collecting pensions as they looked the other way. If anyone is offended by my comments, then they are ignorant of the endless nightmares Olson has caused to so many.

I do not think many would shed a tear for the passing of this slime. This story is not about insulting good people suffering a malicious disease, cancer. It is about celebrating the end to a horrific human life, a man who deserves no mercy.

Having worked in law enforcement long ago in Vancouver, I briefly dealt with Clifford Olson. He is vehemently detested within the profession, and many are elated with his forecasted death.

Kerwin Maude,

Pitt Meadows