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A Horrible Easter Anniversary: The Killing of Terri Schiavo
lifenews ^ | Debi Vinnedge

Posted on 03/25/2013 5:13:32 PM PDT by Morgana

As Holy Week begins and we reflect on the passion of Jesus Christ, it is especially appropriate to remember another person who eight years ago at this time was subjected to a tortuous, brutal and heinous death – one whose anniversary falls this year on Easter Sunday: Terri Schindler-Schiavo.

And just as the Church now ushers in our new Pope Francis, I am reminded how two days after Terri’s death we also lost our Holy Father. As Pope John Paul II lay dying at the Vatican his aides would later tell the Schindlers that when he learned of Terri’s death, it was “the final blow to his broken heart.”

For most pro-lifers following Terri’s case of “legal” murder by her estranged husband Michael and his right-to-die advocate attorney George Felos, the verdict was a haunting reminder of the “lawful” murder of millions of our innocent preborn. In fact, many began calling it the Roe v. Wade of euthanasia.

But in Roe v. Wade few remember that it was actually a legal precedent in Griswold v. Connecticut (1965) that set the stage for current abortion laws. In Griswold, the Supreme Court ruled that the denial of contraceptives was unconstitutional under an alleged “right of privacy.” Who would have thought that Griswold, combined with a later alarming Florida legal precedent, would predetermine Terri’s fate?

In 1986, Estelle Browning, an 86-year-old woman, suffered a stroke that left her severely brain-damaged. Unable to swallow, a feeding tube was inserted by attending physicians. Browning, however, had a written advance directive, stating she didn’t want artificial sustenance if she became terminally ill. In 1987, the court denied her cousin’s petition to remove the tube, basing its decision on Florida’s Life-Prolonging Procedures Act, which allowed patients to refuse medical treatment only under specific circumstances. Browning, the judge ruled, did not qualify.

After Browning’s natural death in 1990 the Second District Court of Appeals overturned this decision based on the “right to privacy,” and the Florida Supreme Court upheld the ruling. According to Justice Rosemary Barkett, who wrote for the 6-1 majority, “The right to privacy and freedom from intrusion into one’s own body is rooted in our nation’s philosophical and political heritage.”

In absence of written directives, the evidence of a patient’s wishes could also be determined solely by the guardian, which is called “substituted judgment.” This “judgment” is supposedly not what the guardian wishes, but what the patient (allegedly) desires. The only necessary qualifier would be “clear and convincing evidence” as simple as an oral statement, claiming that the person would not want to live. Once this is satisfied, the Court ruled, the State can not override the so-called “right to privacy.”

Ten years later, this “clear and convincing evidence” became the entire focus of Terri Schiavo’s case. However, the testimonies given from both the Schiavo and Schindler witnesses were contradicting hearsay, leaving Judge George Greer as the sole and final arbitrator of whom he chose to believe.

Media reports claimed that at least 19 other judges had reviewed the case, but in reality not one other judge heard any testimony whatsoever. The Courts simply rubber-stamped a legal decision, not an evidentiary one. In their view, Greer had acted in accord with the letter of the law, despite that the “clear and convincing” evidence was simple hearsay. The appellate courts only had to ensure that the law was followed—not that the evidence was credible—because hearsay is subject to opinion, not legalese.

During Terri’s final weeks, as the State Department of Children and Families attempted to take Terri into protective custody, attorney George Felos reminded Judge Greer of a startling fact: Even if Michael himself suddenly decided not to remove Terri’s feeding tube, it still had to be done, because the court had determined by “clear and convincing evidence” that this was Terri’s wish.

More appalling was Greer’s reaction to the Schindlers requests for swallowing tests for Terri as he angrily thundered, “I don’t want anybody putting anything into that girl’s mouth!” Horrifically, this statement would later be used to deny Terri the right to receive Holy Communion. However, food and water given orally is not considered medical care even by Florida’s weak definition.

In addition, sustenance provided artificially or naturally cannot be denied to a disabled person under the Americans with Disabilities Act. It states: “Nothing in the Act or this part authorizes the representative or guardian of an individual with a disability to decline food, water, medical treatment, or medical services for that individual.”

But because the Federal Court refused to hear simultaneous lawsuits brought by 26 disability groups decrying these and other violations, Greer’s ruling stood unchallenged. Not only had Terri’s nurses testified that they had fed Terri gelatin and pudding in the past, but Terri also easily swallowed the average one-liter output of saliva healthy people consume daily. That Greer would not allow oral feeding, swallowing tests or therapy simply codified his own intent to mandate Terri’s execution.

The second determination for ordering Terri’s feeding tube removal was the claim that she was in an irreversible persistent vegetative state (PVS) with no hope for recovery. Two of Michael’s and one state-appointed neurologist testified that Terri was in a PVS, completely contradicting 16 other medical professionals who attested she was not.

Judge Greer later admitted he didn’t bother reading any of those statements because he simply didn’t find them credible. Never mind that one of Michael’s witnesses, Dr. Ronald Cranford is an advocate for “End-of-Life Choices,” a group promoting euthanasia. Or that the court appointed witness, Cleveland neurologist Peter Bambikidis, a colleague of Felos, spent only 30 minutes examining Terri. In truth, Greer’s mind was set.

During subsequent hearings in early 2005, 33 others – including 14 physicians (6 who are neurologists) submitted testimony declaring Terri had been misdiagnosed, while none were submitted by Felos to contradict their findings. Again, Judge Greer refused to consider the growing and glaring evidence. Consider what neurologist Dr. James Gabel, M.D., M.S., F.A.H.A, reported:

“Terri Schiavo is not in a persistent vegetative state. The parts of Terri Schiavo’s brain which would allow her to perceive pain, her thalami, were clearly intact and visible on her CT scan images shown by her own husband, Michael Schiavo, on national television. The parts of Terri Schiavo’s brain, which would allow her to swallow on her own, were also intact, and, in fact, she did not suffer from medically significant dysphagia (swallowing difficulty). If she had, she would have been dead long ago from a condition known as aspiration pneumonia, an infection in the lungs which is the result of inhaling one’s own saliva.”

In short, Terri was not dying. She was not suffering or receiving any type of life support. She was simply disabled and unable to feed herself.

Terri could have been fed orally and by law she should have been. Granted, she might have needed swallowing therapy to stimulate the muscles in her throat that had not been used for many years, but this would have been a relatively short and simple treatment. Yet Judge Greer refused to even consider it, incredibly noting that “Terri might aspirate food into her lungs and die a cruel and painful death.”

The day before the scheduled removal of Terri’s feeding tube on March 18, 2005, the Senate Health Committee and the House Government Reform Committee issued congressional subpoenas requiring both Michael and Terri to appear before Congress for a March 28 hearing. That morning, while Hospice was being served with Congressional letters instructing them not to remove Terri’s feeding tube, Attorney Barbara Weller and Terri’s sister Suzanne were happily explaining the upcoming trip to an elated Terri. But unbeknownst to them, the opposition was quickly moving to seek Greer’s intervention. As the 2:00 PM deadline approached, Greer made an unprecedented ruling to ignore the Federal subpoenas and ordered Hospice to proceed with the tube removal according to the court mandate.

This would be the first instance of Congress’ utter failure to legally preserve Terri’s life. It is a federal crime to obstruct or prevent such witnesses from appearing and while members of Congress appeared outraged and threatened to charge Greer with Contempt of Congress, they did nothing to enforce the subpoena, nor did they punish Greer for his judicial misconduct.

In the final week before Terri’s death, Congress passed legislation that was immediately signed into law by President Bush requiring the Federal Court to do a “de-novo” review of the entire case. Yet once more, they did nothing to enforce the very legislation they passed.

Clearly, Judge Greer violated several Federal Laws and stretched the interpretation of Florida statutes as well. But in the end, it would be the appalling court precedent of Estelle Browning’s case that allowed him to do so. In truth, one relatively insignificant district judge usurped the authority of the State Legislature, the State Executive office, Congress and the President of the United States. He succeeded in condemning an innocent woman to death for no other “crime” than that of being disabled.

Eight years ago this might have been simply viewed as “the perfect storm”. Timing is everything, they say. But frighteningly enough with Obama-care looming, it is now an inevitable “climate change” – a mere glimpse of the government-mandated “futile care policies” descending upon us.

Without question, such laws, the courts, and tyrannical authority must be stopped. For if our society becomes one that judges on the basis of a “quality of life” ethic, that society will selfishly seek any means to rid itself of any imperfections or burdens—at any cost. In the words of Clemens Von Galen, the Bishop of Munster, Germany, who fought fiercely against Hitler’s euthanasia policies in 1939, “Once we admit the right to kill unproductive persons, then none of us can be sure of our own life.”

No better time than this week to reflect – Terri – we will never forget!


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: bioethics; moralabsolutes; prolife; schiavo; terrischiavo
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To: Morgana

Jeb (Killer) Bush actually had state troopers on the way to rescue her and turned them back for some perverse reason. Hey, all the post mortems about the election be damned, I can tell you I heard the air hissing out of the Republicans’ balloon upon the killing of Terri Schiavo. Terri is when the Republicans doomed themselves. I have frequently told family members, if any of you is ever badly injured in Florida or Washington state, get out immediately, they are death states.


21 posted on 03/25/2013 6:25:38 PM PDT by yldstrk (My heroes have always been cowboys)
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To: dsrtsage
It is far greater act of compassion, to end absolute unendurable torture like that, assuming the person is conscious of their surroundings.

Terri Schindler was killed through starvation and dehydration. This is one of the most painful and unpleasant ways to die. At Auschwitz, the Nazis killed inmates in this manner to deter escapes. Is it an act of compassion to kill a conscious person in this way?

22 posted on 03/25/2013 6:28:22 PM PDT by Fiji Hill (Io Triumphe!)
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To: Fiji Hill
If Jeb Bush gets the GOP nomination for president in 2016, I will probably write in Terri Schindler in November.

your attitude is exactly why we get this four years of Obama

23 posted on 03/25/2013 6:28:57 PM PDT by terycarl
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To: dsrtsage

here is the answer: you would want to die in that situation, Terri didn’t want to die. Someone forced her death.


24 posted on 03/25/2013 6:30:18 PM PDT by yldstrk (My heroes have always been cowboys)
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To: terycarl

you can’t be serious, you would vote for a devil who would let a helpless woman starve to death in the fattest country in the world? You need to start using whatever brains God gave you


25 posted on 03/25/2013 6:33:56 PM PDT by yldstrk (My heroes have always been cowboys)
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To: Morgana

What a poignant article. There have only been a few days in 8 years that I have not thought of Terri and the cruel torture that she was put through in her final days. My heart has been permanently scarred because of the savages in our country. We live in a country of barbarians, and they are proud to proclaim themselves as such, under the guise of compassion.


26 posted on 03/25/2013 6:35:34 PM PDT by FamiliarFace
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To: Morgana

Thanks for posting. R.I.P. Terri.

Milestones - Schiavo, Kelo, Waco


27 posted on 03/25/2013 6:45:34 PM PDT by PGalt
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To: terycarl
your attitude is exactly why we get this four years of Obama

I'm sorry, but I take character into account when I vote for a candidate, and Jeb Bush is wanting in this department. I always vote, and I almost always vote Republican, but I am not a party hack and have voted third party in a few elections in which the GOP nominee failed to measure up.

28 posted on 03/25/2013 6:52:39 PM PDT by Fiji Hill (Io Triumphe!)
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To: Fiji Hill

“Terri Schindler was killed through starvation and dehydration. This is one of the most painful and unpleasant ways to die”

I am not arguing that the methodology used to do this was absolutely wrong and horrific. I never understood the way the the anti death penalty people who work so hard to get rid of drug concoctions that kill in minutes because they are “inhumane, and maybe painful”, were silent during this. Yes I was horrified that they went about this using starvation and dehydration, and that should have never ever been allowed. My main point though, was that the decision to do it in first place would have been a welcome relief to me (and I think anybody)...imagine yourself completely bandaged head to toe so that you could not move, speak, or communicate in any way. After just a few days you would be going batty, now imagine multiple years in that state. Yes, absolutely, they should have used a method that was quick, and painless, and in that part of the story, that was beyond a tragedy.


29 posted on 03/25/2013 6:54:02 PM PDT by dsrtsage (One half of all people have below average IQ. In the US the number is 54%)
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To: dsrtsage; Slings and Arrows; Chode; Tax-chick; little jeremiah; GeronL; JoeProBono; Jim Robinson; ..
“imagine yourself completely bandaged head to toe so that you could not move, speak, or communicate in any way. After just a few days you would be going batty, now imagine multiple years in that state. Yes, absolutely, they should have used a method that was quick, and painless, and in that part of the story, that was beyond a tragedy.”

If that ever happened, then would someone hook me up permanently to Free Republic so I may watch you guys be yourselves and just have a good laugh daily!!

30 posted on 03/25/2013 7:02:14 PM PDT by Morgana (Always a bit of truth in dark humor.)
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To: dsrtsage

What moral relativism!

Who are you to judge someone’s quality of life? That’s no different than the eugenicists at the Nazimdeath camps. What’s more is your depiction of Terri’s situation isn’t even close to reality. Get your facts straight.


31 posted on 03/25/2013 7:05:37 PM PDT by surroundedbyblue (Why am I both pro-life & pro-gun? Because both positions defend the innocent and protect the weak.)
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To: dsrtsage
I agree with you. I can't imagine a worse "life." Not one I would want to endure...or would want to put family through. There are a lot of things worse than death.

It's easy to have strong opinions about things that have no affect on ones own life.

32 posted on 03/25/2013 7:06:35 PM PDT by lonestar (It takes a village of idiots to elect a village idiot.)
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To: dsrtsage; Admin Moderator; little jeremiah; wagglebee

So lets get this straight: Your problem is with the methodology, not the fact that an American citizen, not guilty or convicted of any crime, was executed by the state? So death by lethal injection would’ve been A-ok with you?

Ok gotcha. By the way, you’re on the wrong forum. FreeRepublic is pro-life.


33 posted on 03/25/2013 7:18:01 PM PDT by surroundedbyblue (Why am I both pro-life & pro-gun? Because both positions defend the innocent and protect the weak.)
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To: surroundedbyblue

” FreeRepublic is pro-life.”

DAMN RIGHT


34 posted on 03/25/2013 7:28:48 PM PDT by Morgana (Always a bit of truth in dark humor.)
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To: surroundedbyblue

I would not sentence anybody of (almost) any crime imaginable to decades of complete immobility, with the impossibility of communication with anything. There is a reason solitary confinement works. Can’t move, can’t talk, can’t feed yourself, can’t clean yourself, can’t speak, write, paint, create, go to a movie, out to eat, the ocean, turn on the lights, or turn them off, have 0.0% control over anything, anytime, just stuck on the same bed looking at the same walls day after day after day for decades while watching the family members shuffle in and cry, and completely unable to tell a single soul about it.

I would not sentence any person to that.


35 posted on 03/25/2013 7:37:20 PM PDT by dsrtsage (One half of all people have below average IQ. In the US the number is 54%)
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To: dsrtsage

What sanctimonious crap. Are you now the author of life? Is the state? Because that’s what your argument is.

I hope for your sake that someone doesn’t deem your life unworthy of living someday. Regardless of what you say now, you may not feel the same if & when that day ever comes. Pro-death trolls like you just enable the politicians who will someday hasten your demise. Get a clue.


36 posted on 03/25/2013 7:40:20 PM PDT by surroundedbyblue (Why am I both pro-life & pro-gun? Because both positions defend the innocent and protect the weak.)
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To: Dante3
The killing of Terri Schiavo is something I will never forget.

Me neither. It is a stain on this country not unlike the millions of abortions since the evil Roe v Wade decision.

Of all people, even the Rev Jackson was very outspoken about the Terri Schaivo case.

37 posted on 03/25/2013 7:45:51 PM PDT by Marathoner (What are we waiting for? Where are the Articles of Impeachment!)
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To: dsrtsage; Morgana
Jean-Dominique Bauby begs to differ.
38 posted on 03/25/2013 8:03:02 PM PDT by Slings and Arrows (You can't have IngSoc without an Emmanuel Goldstein.)
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To: dsrtsage

So you think helpless people who cannot speak for themselves should be executed.

Just so it’s clear to eveyrone what you are saying.


39 posted on 03/25/2013 8:06:58 PM PDT by little jeremiah (Courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point. CSLewis)
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To: terycarl
Terycarl, here's an FR thread about your type of candidate:

Karl Rove Hinting at a 2016 Run for the GOP Nomination?

40 posted on 03/25/2013 8:14:40 PM PDT by Fiji Hill (Io Triumphe!)
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