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Allowing to die [pro-killing "Catholic" editorial]
Commonweal ^ | 11/7/03

Posted on 11/21/2003 3:14:59 PM PST by madprof98

It is hard to imagine a more tragic or tortuous case than that of Terri Schiavo, the thirty-nine-year-old Florida woman whose husband and parents are battling over disconnecting her from the feeding tube that has kept her alive for thirteen years. Schiavo suffered brain damage after a heart attack in 1990, and according to most experts has been in a persistent vegetative state (PVS) ever since. Doctors who have examined her say her brain has been all but destroyed. She had not executed a living will, nor did she identify a surrogate to make decisions about treatment should she be unable to do so herself. Her husband claims that before her heart attack she had expressed the wish not to be kept alive in such a condition. Her parents, who are Catholic, believe she is conscious and capable of making a recovery, or at least of learning, if given therapy, how to swallow food again. They have used the Internet to help rally public support, placing videos of their daughter “interacting” with them on a Web site. The cause has been taken up vigorously by Evangelical Christians, by prolifers, and by some Catholic groups. Yet what her parents claim are the reactions of a conscious person, most doctors argue, are only the ordinary, and meaningless, gestures of a PVS patient.

The legal battle has gone on for years, with the courts repeatedly siding with Schiavo’s husband, despite accusations of nefarious motives made against him by Terri’s parents. (He now has a child with another woman, for example.) Last month the court gave permission to disconnect the feeding tube. Yet no sooner had the feeding tube been removed than the Florida legislature passed a law allowing Governor Jeb Bush to intervene in the case, overrule the courts, and reinsert the tube. Bush, a Catholic convert, may have had a number of motives for his actions, including the need to appease the demands of vocal Evangelicals in the crucial electoral state of Florida. He also appears to think that his decision is consonant with traditional Catholic thinking about end-of-life care. It isn’t.

The church has long emphasized the difference between allowing to die and killing: the need to provide ordinary, rather than extraordinary, means for keeping terminally ill patients alive. Those opposed to removing Schiavo’s feeding tube argue that to do so is to starve her to death, in fact to cause her death. That is not how the Catholic tradition has parsed this difficult moral dilemma. Rather, Catholic tradition recognizes that Schiavo’s underlying condition, her inability to ingest food and water, should be understood to be the cause of her death. To insist that Schiavo be kept alive indefinitely because technology enables us to do so is to embrace vitalism; it is to elevate mere physical existence over all other values. The questions Schiavo’s guardians must answer are, What benefit will she gain, and what burdens is she being subjected to, in being kept alive in her condition? Is the preservation of the life of someone in a permanent vegetative state actually a benefit to that person? Is it a just allocation of limited resources? Traditionally, Catholicism has answered no. Nothing in Schiavo’s case presents a persuasive reason for thinking that teaching is erroneous.

None of these statements is meant to suggest that the decision to take someone off artificial life support is ever easy or simple. Almost inevitably there will be conflicting diagnoses and much ambivalence. Nor are they meant to minimize the question of intent. In making end-of-life decisions, our intent must be to relieve patients of useless and burdensome treatments. Who should make these decisions? The family, not the legislature or the governor. In the case of a married adult, that usually means the spouse. Michael Schiavo’s standing as Terri’s legal guardian is widely recognized in law and medical practice. (Those who question his motives and the court’s decision must concede that there has been no rush to judgment here: Terri has been in this condition for more than a decade.) Most legal scholars expect the hastily passed Florida law to be ruled unconstitutional and the governor’s action to be reversed. It should be, for more than just the reasons stated above.

Medical ethicists view Bush’s actions as potentially disruptive of decades of hard-won precedent. Moreover, in our system, it is the legislature that writes the laws and the courts that decide individual cases. The extraordinary actions of Governor Bush and the Florida legislature are viewed with alarm by many constitutional scholars, who see the overturning of a court decision as an assault on the separation of powers. Politics must inform our lawmaking, but politics should be kept at arm’s length from the bench. The bill authorizing Bush to intervene shows why judges, not legislators, should make determinations in cases like this. The bill was largely the handiwork of Johnnie B. Byrd Jr., the Republican Speaker of the Florida House. Byrd is running for the Republican nomination to the U.S. Senate, and is eager to please the religious right, which has flooded the legislature with e-mails, phone calls, and petitions. Yet, more thoughtful Republicans had doubts about what they had done in intervening in such a private and delicate matter. “I have never had a worse day as a senator,” a Republican who voted reluctantly for the bill told the New York Times (October 24). “You could feel how rotten people felt having to vote on this.”

Not rotten enough.


TOPICS: Catholic; Religion & Politics
KEYWORDS: catholiclist; euthanasia; schiavo; schindler; terri; terrischiavo; terrisfight
Rather, Catholic tradition recognizes that Schiavo’s underlying condition, her inability to ingest food and water, should be understood to be the cause of her death.

This sounds to me like a perversion of Catholic teaching in the interest of the "ethicists" the Commonweal editors consider authoritative.

1 posted on 11/21/2003 3:14:59 PM PST by madprof98
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To: madprof98
Catholic teaching, as I understand it, FORBIDS the withholding of food and water. That's where the line is drawn. The rest of the machinery can be unplugged to allow a natural death, but you do not starve or dehydrate the patient.
2 posted on 11/21/2003 9:46:48 PM PST by Jeff Chandler (I'm a racist, you're a racist, we're all racists, hey!)
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To: madprof98; Hermann the Cherusker; Romulus; allend; wideawake; sitetest
This sounds to me like a perversion of Catholic teaching...

Oh yeah, big time.

3 posted on 11/22/2003 6:31:33 AM PST by FormerLib
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To: FormerLib; Hermann the Cherusker
Dear FormerLib,

"This sounds to me like a perversion of Catholic teaching..."

I don't think one can deny someone food and water, even using a feeding tube. Hermann may be able to clarify.

Of course, it isn't readily apparent that she cannot ingest food and water normally - the alleged husband refuses to permit folks from even trying.

What is most upsetting to me is that this case has been deliberately and fraudulently presented as a "right to die" case by the murdering purveyors of the culture of death. As some may know, my mother died recently. At the very end, as her lungs stopped getting oxygen into the blood, and she began to go into multiple organ failure, we were obliged to give a "Do Not Resuscitate" order.

It was clear, crystal clear, that repeated attempts to revive my mother would be futile.

But she died on the day that all this Terri Schiavo stuff really broke into the news in a big way. My father saw and heard all this. In his mind, he equated the two situations, that of Ms. Schiavo, and of my mother. And he was left feeling guilt for his actions. For his misapprehended feelings of guilt, I blame the bastards Michael Schiavo, and its reptilian attorney, Felos.

I bitterly resent the likes of Michael Schiavo and its verminous attorney, Felos, from likening the blatant murder of Terri to real cases where the use of further technology just prolongs someone's dying. I pray for their filthy souls, that they might not have to endure what is most likely justly theirs: eternal damnation.


sitetest
4 posted on 11/22/2003 6:47:16 AM PST by sitetest
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To: sitetest; FormerLib
Quite simply, its not that its merely sinful to refuse food and drink to Terri, but we have a positive duty and obligation to feed the hungry and give drink to the thirsty, her being a most straightforward and compelling case. See St. Matthew 25.35, 37, 42, 44. Note the fate of those who refuse food and drink to those in need.

The purposeful starvation of someone being fed by a feeding tube is morally indistinguishable from starving an infant that cannot feed itself, or refusing help to someone stricken by famine, or casting out a starving homeless person.
5 posted on 11/22/2003 1:08:13 PM PST by Hermann the Cherusker
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To: Hermann the Cherusker; GatorGirl; maryz; *Catholic_list; afraidfortherepublic; Antoninus; ...
If I am no longer able to feed myself, starving me to death is MURDER.
6 posted on 11/22/2003 3:50:51 PM PST by narses ("The do-it-yourself Mass is ended. Go in peace" Francis Cardinal Arinze of Nigeria)
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To: sitetest
But she died on the day that all this Terri Schiavo stuff really broke into the news in a big way. My father saw and heard all this. In his mind, he equated the two situations, that of Ms. Schiavo, and of my mother. And he was left feeling guilt for his actions. For his misapprehended feelings of guilt, I blame the bastards Michael Schiavo, and its reptilian attorney, Felos.

I'm so sorry. God bless your father. It's always so difficult for a surviving spouse from a long term marriage, but men seem to have an especially tough time transitioning into widowhood.

I'll remember your parents in my prayers.

7 posted on 11/22/2003 4:23:31 PM PST by old and tired
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To: Hermann the Cherusker; sitetest
The purposeful starvation of someone being fed by a feeding tube is morally indistinguishable from starving an infant that cannot feed itself, or refusing help to someone stricken by famine, or casting out a starving homeless person.

Good luck ever getting an American liberal to admit to that. Right on the money, though.

8 posted on 11/22/2003 4:37:27 PM PST by FormerLib
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To: Jeff Chandler
Catholic teaching, as I understand it, FORBIDS the withholding of food and water. That's where the line is drawn.

Yes. The principle behind the teaching is generally this. Treatment that can reasonably be expected to improve the patient's condition must be given. Treatment that does not offer a reasonable chance of improving the patient's condition ("extraordinary care") is optional.

Clearly, offering the patient food and water falls into the first category, and this is the Church's position.

My wife and I had a debate about this recently. Her cousins recently deprived their father of food and water for two weeks, until he died. He had been suffering from Alzheimers for about a year and was rapidly deteriorating. They said that he refused to eat. But he should have been given a feeding tube, as far as I'm concerned. I mentioned this to my wife and she said that a priest had told the family that it was "OK."

9 posted on 11/23/2003 3:25:57 AM PST by Aquinasfan (Isaiah 22:22, Rev 3:7, Mat 16:19)
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