Posted on 02/06/2004 5:03:35 PM PST by nickcarraway
Clearwater, FL (LifeNews.com) -- In a statement on Friday, the family of Terri Schiavo says it is concerned about a statement that appears in a Florida newspaper's editorial. George Felos, the assisted suicide advocate who is the attorney for Terri's estranged husband Michael, is quoted as admitting that "tens of thousands" of disabled persons like Terri have faced death over the years.
The editorial in the Lakeland Herald newspaper argues that the Schindlers are intruding into the privacy rights of Terri and Michael by attempting to save their daughter's life. Felos is quoted saying the Florida legislature has no right to intervene in the case and help Terri.
"Because of the notoriety of the Schiavo case, which ''is one isolated case out of tens of thousands over the years, I think the legislature is politically motivated to look like they are doing something," Felos says.
The admission that perhaps "tens of thousands" of people over the years have faced death in the same way as Terri has her family alarmed.
"People should be very frightened of how matter-of-factly Mr. Felos assertion is," Terri's brother Bobby Schindler, Jr., said in response. "He openly admits that we are once again killing the those deemed less worthy."
Felos has always been known to be an advocates of assisted suicide and euthanasia.
Detractors say Felos has become the next Geoffrey Feiger, the defender of the notorious death doctor Jack Kevorkian, because he has taken on 10 cases similar to Terri's in the last decade.
The case of Estelle Browning sealed his reputation as the lawyer people want when they want someone to die.
Browning didn't want to be kept alive by artificial means should she ever become incapacitated. She drafted a living will saying so and a year later suffered a stroke. According to the St. Petersburg Times, however, her nursing home refused to stop feeding her because she was not officially brain-dead.
Doris Herbert, Browning's cousin and former roommate, asked Felos to take the case.
Felos is the author of "Litigation as Spiritual Practice," a book in which he claims he soul speaks to incapacitated patients.
He insisted on visiting Browning. Obsessed with the occult practice of yoga, Felos said his "spiritual side" allowed him to speak to Browning and he claims her soul told him, "Why am I still here?"
Browning later died of natural causes in 1989 with the legal case still unresolved.
However, the legal battle made an impact on the law as the Florida Supreme Court eventually ruled that a living will can require care providers to withhold nutrition from patients like Browning or Terri Schiavo, even though they may not be likely to die any time soon.
Felos won't admit whether or not he has the same "spiritual" connection with Terri's soul. However, he told the St. Petersburg newspaper that he must make sure Terri's feeding tube is removed.
It's necessary "to accomplish what I believe are Terri's wishes."
Nancy Valko, a representative of Nurses for Life who actively monitors end-of-life care issues, says for Felos, the Lakeland Herald newspaper, and many assisted suicide advocates, life is viewed in terms of dollars and cents.
Valko points out that the editorial contains a "dire warning that continuing to feed people like Terri Schiavo 'could oblige the taxpayers to spend large amounts of money to keep 'alive' patients who have virtually no hope of recovery.'"
"Unfortunately as with most issues, it finally comes down to money," Valko says.
Related web sites:
Lakeland Herald editorial -
http://www.theledger.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20040206/NEWS/402060311/1036
Terri Schiavo's family - http://www.terrisfight.org
Lawmakers Intrude Into Family Privacy
The Ledger
Imagine watching a loved one dwell in a permanent unconscious state, hooked up to feeding tubes and other lifesupport machines. Lingering in the shadowy realm, halfway between life and the hereafter, for months or perhaps even years.
It is the literal definition of a life sentence for the terminally comatose. It is also cruel-and-unusual punishment for having committed the "offense" of neglecting to leave a living will that clearly spells out one's desires in regard to end-of-life treatment.
And of course, the parent, wife, husband or guardian of a patient who has no reasonable hope of ever regaining consciousness would be similarly sentenced to long years of pain, emotional anguish and perhaps even financial ruin.
All because members of the Florida Legislature cannot resist the urge to play God, especially in an election year.
This all began, of course, as an extraordinary intervention by Gov. Jeb Bush and the Florida Legislature to keep Terri Schiavo, a Pinellas County woman in a "permanent vegetative state" for many years, alive indefinitely. This despite a series of court rulings that found that her husband had the right to disconnect her from life support.
The special law passed on Schiavo's behalf is almost certain to be overturned by the courts. But lawmakers, eager to score points with the religious right, already are working on a broader measure that is much more frightening in its implications.
Legislation considered by a House committee this week would presume that comatose patients who failed to explicitly put their end-of-life treatment intentions in writing wish to be kept alive indefinitely through the use of feeding tubes and other extraordinary measures. That legal presumption would hold despite the wishes of a comatose patient's family members and loved ones.
Reportedly, the only thing that kept the measure from getting preliminary approval this week was a concern over whether such a law would force parents of brain-dead children -- who are too young to legally make their own end-of-life decisions -- to maintain them on life support indefinitely.
As Chris Nuland of the Florida Chapter of the American College of Physicians told the House Judiciary Committee on Tuesday, the bill "would eliminate the ability of a family, even when there's no dissent, to withdraw life support."
This bill has the potential to put enormous additional stress on already grief-stricken survivors of terminally ill patients. And taking end-of-life decisions out of the hands of families and giving it to the state also could oblige the taxpayers to spend large amounts of money to keep "alive" patients who have virtually no hope of recovery.
Ideological and political motivations aside, this legislation is simply an unjustifiable intrusion of government into decisions that are better left to families. Florida case law already has established the right of family members to have a patient removed from life support on the basis of previous "oral declarations" when no living will exists.
"The fact is that we have a system in Florida that has worked well for the past 12 years," George Felos, attorney for Michael Schiavo, told reporters this week. "Because of the notoriety of the Schiavo case, which is one isolated case out of tens of thousands over the years, I think the Legislature is politically motivated to look like they are doing something. But I think it makes bad policy and it is not good sense."
This legislation will very likely make its way through the House, if only because House Speaker Johnnie Byrd, R-Plant City, is running for the U.S. Senate and is in hot pursuit of the religious-right vote. The good news is that Senate President Jim King, R-Jacksonville, has expressed skepticism about the whole notion of legislators playing God. We hope King and other responsible members of the Florida Senate will resolve to block this ill-conceived legislation.
In the meantime, all Floridians would be well-advised to fill out a living will, if only as a matter of self defense against meddling politicians. The alternative is to risk a life sentence to medical limbo, suspended indefinitely between this world and the next.
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Felos is full of demons.
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