Posted on 11/19/2015 5:56:05 PM PST by NKP_Vet
Speaking to reporters at a Florida Republican Party conference recently, Dr. Ben Carson, a retired neurosurgeon and candidate for the Republican nomination for President responded to a reporterâs question on whether he believed my sister Terri Schiavo deserved Congressâs intervention to stop her court-ordered 13-day death by starvation and dehydration. Dr. Carsonâs response? âI think it was much ado about nothing.â
Not only was his remark offensive to my family, but his words served to marginalize hundreds of thousands of medically vulnerable persons in jeopardy of being killed in the same barbaric manner that Terri was killed by starvation and dehydration.
But Dr. Carson didnât stop there.
Perhaps just as disturbing were his comments regarding how he would have treated those who experienced brain injuries similar to Terriâs: âWe face those kinds of issues all the time and while I donât believe in euthanasia, you have to recognize that people that are in that condition do have a series of medical problems that occur that will take them out,â explaining that âyour job [as a doctor] is to keep them comfortable throughout that process and not to treat everything that comes up.â
In 1990, at the age of 26 years old, Terri experienced a still unexplained collapse while home alone with Michael Schiavo, who subsequently became her guardian. It was just a few years later when he lost interest in caring for Terri (he was living with his fiancé and stood to inherit Terriâs million-dollar medical trust) unilaterally deciding to ânot treatâ Terriâs UT infection. If Schiavo was permitted to withhold antibiotics to treat Terriâs infection, she would have died a painful death by sepsis. Nevertheless, Dr. Carsonâs comments suggest his approach would have been similar to Michael Schiavoâs. Indeed, Michael Schiavoâs decision not to treat a simple infection that would have surely âtaken Terri outâ.
Sadly, many of our candidates, as well as the vast majority of the general public, donât realize the true nature of what is at stake when irresponsible comments like this are made towards Terri and all of the vulnerable persons she represents, let alone the larger issue.
Dr. Carson seems to have realized this in attempting to walk back his controversial comments in an email to LifeNews.com: âI regret that my recent comments about Terri Schiavo have been taken out of context and misinterpreted. ⦠When the patient is not terminal, as Terri Schiavo was not, the treatment plan should be determined on the basis of the consensus between the family and the healthcare providers.â
I have deep respect for the accomplishments and commitment Dr. Carson has shown for life. But our family remains deeply troubled that in seeking to clarifying his remarks, he has not unequivocally condemned what happened to my sister. In fact, his suggestion that simple âconsensusâ among family members and healthcare providers could justify what happened to my sister is problematic. If I had agreed with Michael Schiavo to starve and dehydrate my sister to death, would that have made it right?
Contrary to what the general public believes, Terriâs situation was not about someoneâs âright to die,â nor was it an âend-of-lifeâ issue as was so often reported. Terri was a healthy young woman with a brain injury. She was not dying, she did not suffer from any âkillerâ disease. She was neither on machines nor âbrain deadâ. To the contrary, Terri was alert and interacted with her friends and family, before Michael Schiavo subsequently abandoned his wedding vows, warehousing Terri in nursing homes, eventually petitioning the court for permission to deliberately starve and dehydrate his wife to death.
My sisterâs case was arguably one of the most egregious violations of an American citizenâs basic human rights in our nationâs history. The way it stands now, heinous criminals on death row and domesticated animalsâand often wild animalsâhave more protection and are treated with more dignity than people like Terri. Congress saw this and intervened to protect her.
But the bigger picture is that Dr. Carsonâs comments play into the hands of all those who believe human life has become an economic issue. As both a Christian and a world-renowned neurological surgeon, Dr. Carson should clearly voice support for Congress and what their efforts represented. Indeed, a deadly mentality has infiltrated our current curriculum taught in our medical schools, responsible in part for the breakdown of our health care system, and the growing assisted suicide movement. Not to mention the propaganda spewing from many in our mainstream media. Every word takes its toll.
Consequently, families have to fight, just as our family did for Terri, to get their loved ones the proper care and treatment they require. My fear is that Dr. Carsonâs comments will be used to validate an already influential movement that works tirelessly to make it easier to eliminate brain injured persons from our health care system.
Without life, all other rights are meaningless. We cannot compromise on this issue, especially when it comes to the man or woman we elect to the presidency. We must have elected representatives who will fight for the dignity and value of all persons.
I welcome the opportunity to speak with Dr. Carson to share with him some of the thousands of stories of the marginalized brain injured and medically vulnerable that the Terri Schiavo Life & Hope Network assists.
It should be easy enough for Carson to clarify his views on someone who was murdered in her bed.
Carson cost himself my vote for good.
This and Carson’s being in favor of state hood for Puerto Rico have removed him from ALL personal consideration for being my choice.
Because Ben Carson SUPPORTS it. Now vote for him no matter what. He’s Republican.
Hes going to defeat ISIS by speaking very slowly to them until they fall asleep, then killing them with a hammer.
Ben Carson is a whacko bird. Who knows why he thinks the pyramids are for grain storage? Who knows why he thinks anything? He needs to go home.
Bwahahaha!
Ping
Here we go again...
This is what this election is about, Terri Schiavo, ISIS and Terri, top 2 issues.
The brother was not convinced that the husband played no part in his sister’s injury. Unexplained injury.
I thought that was interesting, along with the million dollar medical fund.
what? another hit piece on carson. how dare you! tsk tsk tsk :).
interesting read. so clarridge and carson engaging in the old he said she said? i’m not up on clarridge. is clarridge the real deal or a has been?
I remember this clearly. I remember the sick people who said how wonderful it is to be starved to death. It was “Euphoric” and peaceful while he body craved food and water. I had to go a full week without eating or drinking after surgery. It was horrible. I don’t find anything euphoric and peaceful about starving someone to death.
Walk back, “I think it was much ado about nothing”?
No way. I’ve had it with this guy.
http://dan.hersam.com/tools/smart-quotes.html
Sharing a site where we can paste text in and convert to a format that eliminates all those silly artifacts. It works great,
Another reason not to vote for Carson.
This story is getting out and quite affected the Carson poll numbers. Seventh Day Adventists have their own controversial views that quite vary from normal Protestants and their different takes on this and that.
For a candidate, he must have been, well I don’t know what he must have been..., I just know what he said broke my heart, and came off as utterly heartless and quite belying that ethereal and esthetic persona of his, one of peace and positivity, and that heady superior intellect, punctuated and delivered in that lulling voice of an oriental sage, or a flower child. I never knew which.
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