Posted on 02/18/2005 12:53:30 PM PST by NYer
Raymond Arroyo will be discussing Terri Schiavo's situation with her father, Bob Schindler tonight at 8pm.
EWTN is available through most cable and satellite dish network providers. Or, go to the above link, click on Television, Live TV - English, to watch this program via the internet.
Dag nab it! I watched the wrong show! Now I'll have to catch the replay!
I'm glad they got enough time to mention that LAW ENFORCEMENT HAS FAILED TO INVESTIGATE THE INITIAL INCIDENT, the ongoing neglect and the holding of Terri in one room (which is called being caged). It's all against Terri's Civil Rights. Next week, it may be time to email the USDOJ again. Their email address is: ASKDOJ@usdoj.gov
Thanks for the recap. There was nothing on the Paula Zahn show with the Schindlers. Either I got the wrong air date, or something else happened.
They probably chose ewtn because there were no commercials and they didn't have to hear the hino's ghoul pipe with his LIES AND PROPAGANDA.
The one caller asked whether he was committing bigamy. He certainly does have a common-law marriage with the other woman.
I wonder what the law is on common-law marriage. I never thought about charging him with bigamy.
so why do you care so strongly what other people do on threads you don't have to visit?
I was just figuring that one (or both) was taped and the other one was live.
That'd be Jesus. Look Him up. Dont hate. It's not His fault your life is jacked up.
Look what just showed up in a California newspaper: Doctor-assisted suicide on agenda State Dems plan bill based on Oregon's law By Steve Geissinger, SACRAMENTO BUREAU Inside Bay Area
SACRAMENTO The divisive and emotional clash over doctor-assisted suicide swept from Oregon into California on Friday, with lawmakers from the Bay Area and Southern California rallying support at the Capitol for a similar law here but also plowing into building resistance. Their planned legislation, first brought to public light by The Daily Review last November, would make California only the second state in the nation to legalize physician-aided death.
"If I become terminally ill and doctors are unable to save me, I want the freedom to leave this world on my own terms," said Assemblyman Lloyd Levine, the Van Nuys Democrat who is co-authoring a bill based on Oregon's voter-approved law.
"As Californians approach the twilight of their lives," he said, "they deserve to have control over their health care."
Assemblywoman Patty Berg, a Eureka Democrat and co-author of the bill whose district extends south to the Bay Area, said that "there have to be alternatives to the way some people spend their final days."
Steve Mason, the 64-year-old poet laureate of the Vietnam Veterans of America, was among a string of bill supporters that included representatives of some hospice and senior groups to speak during a four-hour informational hearing. Mason, an Oregon resident, told lawmakers he is suffering from terminal lung cancer and has begun the process of using that state's Death with Dignity Act of 1997. Nearly 200 terminally ill patients have chosen physician-assisted death in Oregon since the law went into effect.
Members of the California Assembly Aging and Long-term Care and Judiciary committees, meeting jointly, also heard from a parade of opponents, which include the Catholic Church and the California Medical Association.
Church teaching "respects life from conception through natural death," Tod Tamberg, a spokesman for Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahoney, said in an interview.
While recognizing that "extraordinary means are not necessary to preserve life," said Tamberg, "the taking of life under other circumstances is rejected by our faith." Lawmakers said the informational hearing on the measure has triggered a rare debate of conscience in the normally partisan Capitol.
Votes to come in the next few months, after the bill is formally introduced, likely will be determined more by religious convictions, moral beliefs and family stories than by political affiliations, they said.
Oregon's law does not allow euthanasia, when a physician or somebody else administers deadly medication. Instead, it allows adults with fewer than six months to live to receive life-ending drugs from a doctor and take them themselves.
First, they must be determined to be mentally competent, see two physicians, make written and oral requests for the medicine and wait through a cooling-off time. Only the patient can make the decision, not a family member or guardian.
The federal government still is pursuing legal challenges to Oregon's law.
Despite the failure of two previous efforts in California, the bill's authors expect to get their majority-vote measure through the Democrat-dominated Legislature. They also figure Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, a social moderate, will seriously consider it. The governor so far has made no public statements about the proposal. In 1992 California voters rejected Proposition 161, which would have allowed euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide. In 1999 former Assemblywoman Dion Aroner, D-Berke-ley, tried unsuccessfully to pass a law allowing doctors to prescribe medicine that would speed the death of terminally ill patients.
Supporters of the new bill said polls show public opinion has shifted heavily in their favor during the past few years.
Berg, who chairs the committee on aging in the lower house, said that "right now, many patients go without food or water for weeks to hasten their deaths. I think there needs to be an alternative to that."
But among the foes of physician-assisted suicide is the powerful California Medical Association.
Politics should not mix with the doctor-patient relationship, especially when it could hinder the physician's ability to administer painkilling medication, CMA spokesman Peter Warren said in an interview.
"It's a no-win situation for the doctor and patient," he said. "When you're dealing with a painful and terminal disease, the line between life and death is not a straight line."
Meanwhile, the primary figure of the 1990s movement to gain the legalization of doctor-assisted suicide, Jack Kevorkian, 76, is serving a 10- to 25-year sentence in Michigan. The doctor, who says he assisted in the suicide of more than 130 people, was found guilty of second-degree murder.
Contact Sacramento Bureau Chief Steve Geissinger at sgeissinger@dailyreviewonline.com.
Exactly which fish do you think we should be paying attention to? Just the ones that you choose? 'Cause, gosh, the same Holy Spirit that you've asked to help direct us has put me right where I am with Terri's fight. Her right-to-life is just as important a part of freedom that our countrymen and forefathers have paid for with their own blood as any other part (of freedom).
Goodnight prayer for Terri!
By: Wesley J. Smith
Human Life Review
February 25, 2004
For more than ten years, conscious and unconscious cognitively disabled people who use feeding tubes have been legally dehydrated to death in the United States. This intentional life-ending actclamping feeding tubes and denying all sustenancehas become so ubiquitous that, generally, little attention is paid.
This public indifference was shattered by the Terri Schiavo litigation, an epic legal, political, and media struggle that pitted Terris parents, Bob and Mary Schindler, against her quasi-estranged husband, Michael Schiavo. At stake was whether Terri would live, as fervently desired by her parents, or die by dehydration as demanded by her husband. (I shall explain below why I consider Michael to be estranged from Terri.)
The Schiavo case is not the first food and fluids case, but it is certainly the most notorious. Widespread revulsion over Terris court-ordered dehydration sparked a grass-roots political campaign that culminated in the Florida legislatures rushed passage of Terris Law, which empowered the governor to intervene and prevent some categories of cognitively disabled people from being dehydrated. As soon as the bill became law, Governor Jeb Bush dramatically halted Terris dehydration in its sixth day, setting off an international uproar. (As this is written the constitutionality of Terris lawand hence the fate of Terri Schiavois being litigated.)
At this point we must distinguish between two different circumstances in which nourishment is withheld from incapacitated patients:
First, not forcing food and water upon dying patients who reject nourishment. This often occurs in the end stages of cancer. Indeed, it is recognized as medically inappropriate to force-feed patients whose bodies are shutting down during the natural dying process. In these cases, the patients die from their disease, not dehydration. This is not the situation that this article addresses.
Second, withholding tube-supplied food and water from cognitively disabled persons like Terri who are not otherwise dying. In such cases, nourishment is withheld not for medical reasons but because someone believes that the patients life is not worth living in such an impaired state, or that he or she would rather be dead than live with a profound cognitive disability. Death in these situations is caused by dehydration.
If the owner of a horse or cow caused the animal to die by withholding food and water, he or she would probably go to jail, and rightly so. If a condemned murderer were executed by being shut in a room without food and water until he died, the American Civil Liberties Union would never stop suing, and rightly so. (Ironically, the ACLU has jumped into the Schiavo caseon Michaels side, to have Terris Law declared unconstitutional.) But dehydrate a person with significant brain injury who requires a feeding tube, and it is considered medically ethical, the right to refuse unwanted medical treatment and an adjunct of the legally non-existent right to die.
A Potentially Painful Death
Advocates for dehydrating the neurologically disabled assert that it is a painless end. But there are substantial reasons for doubt. St. Louis neurologist Dr. William Burke told me:
A conscious person would feel it [dehydration] just as you or I would. They will go into seizures. Their skin cracks, their tongue cracks, their lips crack. They may have nosebleeds because of the drying of the mucus membranes, and heaving and vomiting might ensue because of the drying out of the stomach lining. They feel the pangs of hunger and thirst. Imagine going one day without a glass of water! Death by dehydration takes ten to fourteen days. It is an extremely agonizing death.
Minnesota neurologist Dr. Ronald Cranford, an avid supporter of dehydration, who has often appeared as an expert witness in litigation over withholding food and water, testified in the Robert Wendland case about the effect of dehydration on cognitively disabled patients:
"After seven to nine days [from commencing dehydration] they begin to lose all fluids in the body, a lot of fluids in the body. And their blood pressure starts to go down. When their blood pressure goes down, their heart rate goes up . . . . Their respiration may increase and then . . . the blood is shunted to the central part of the body from the periphery of the body. So, that usually two to three days prior to death, sometimes four days, the hands and the feet become extremely cold. They become mottled. That is you look at the hands and they have a bluish appearance. And the mouth dries a great deal, and the eyes dry a great deal and other parts of the body become mottled. And that is because the blood is now so low in the system its shunted to the heart and other visceral organs and away from the periphery of the body. . . ."
Since the people to whom this is done generally cant communicate, we mostly dont know what they actually experience. But in at least one case we do: that of a young woman who had her tube feeding stopped for eight days and lived to tell the tale.
At age 33, Kate Adamson collapsed from a devastating stroke. She was diagnosed as likely to develop a persistent vegetative state (PVS) but was actually locked inthat is, she was completely awake and aware but unable to communicate. Even after the doctors realized that Adamson was entirely conscious, they urged her husband to let her go. He refused, and indeed, when she developed a bowel obstruction, he authorized surgery. However, to clean the bowel enough to permit surgery, her nourishment was stopped. When, eventually, she recovered her ability to communicate, she wrote Kates Journey: Triumph over Adversity. Appearing on The OReilly Factor, Adamson described the experience of being denied nourishment.
When the feeding tube was turned off for eight days, I thought I was going insane. I was screaming out in my mind, Dont you know I need to eat? And even up until that point, I had been having a bagful of Ensure as my nourishment that was going through the feeding tube. At that point, it sounded pretty good. I just wanted something. The fact that I had nothing, the hunger pains overrode every thought I had.
In preparation for an article in the Daily Standard, I asked Adamson to provide more details about what she experienced while being deprived of tube-supplied nourishment. As an illustration, she told me that she was administered inadequate anesthesia during her bowel-obstruction surgery. Yet, as painful as that was, it was not as bad as the suffering caused by being denied nourishment:
The agony of going without food was a constant pain that lasted not several hours like my operation did, but several days. You have to endure the physical pain and on top of that you have to endure the emotional pain. Your whole body cries out, Feed me. I am alive and a person, dont let me die, for Gods sake! Somebody feed me.
Moreover, although Adamson was not deliberately dehydratedshe was constantly on an IV saline solutionshe still had horrible thirst:
I craved anything to drink. Anything. I obsessively visualized drinking from a huge bottle of orange Gatorade. And I hate orange Gatorade. I did receive lemon flavored mouth swabs to alleviate dryness but they did nothing to slake my desperate thirst.
Doctors who withhold nourishment and hydration with the purpose of causing death may prescribe morphine or other narcotics to alleviate the pain. But who knows whether this is sufficient? For example, when Cranford was asked during his Wendland testimony what level of morphine would have to be given to prevent the patient from suffering, he testified that the dose would be arbitrary because you dont know how much hes suffering, you dont know how much aware he is. . . . Youre guessing at the dose. He added that he would probably put Robert Wendland back into a coma to ensure that he did not feel pain!
The Human Non-Person
Why do we tolerate such an apparently cruel method of life termination? First, it is an unfortunate by-product of the legal right to refuse unwanted medical treatment. Tube feeding is deemed medical treatmentrather than humane care that cannot be withdrawnbecause a modest surgical procedure is required to insert the tube. Thus, even though there can only be one resultdeathtube-supplied nourishment can be withdrawn like any other medical procedure. (Many people believe erroneously that there is a legal difference between extraordinary care, such as a respirator, which can be withheld, and ordinary care, such as tube feeding, which must be provided. The law recognizes no such distinction.)
Second, when a patient is incapacitated, decisions to accept or refuse medical treatment must be made by surrogates. This means that someone other than the patient will decide whether a cognitively disabled patient lives, or dies by dehydration.
The great Christian bioethics pioneer Paul Ramsey, author of the seminal book The Patient as a Person, worried presciently that surrogate decision making could endanger the lives of people who were seen as devalued. Thus, while Ramsey believed that people should be allowed to refuse treatment for themselves on a subjective quality-of-life basis, he urged that decisions made on behalf of others be strictly based on medical needs. Otherwise, he wrote, we could be shifting the focus from whether treatments are beneficial to patients to whether patients lives are beneficial to them.
If bioethics had adhered to the sanctity/equality of life ethic advocated by Ramsey, we would today have far fewer worries about the way cognitively disabled and frail elderly people are cared for in our nations hospitals and nursing homes. Unfortunately, the academic philosophers who now dominate bioethics shifted the predominant ideology of the field sharply away from the Ramsey approach and toward the quality of life ethic. This measures the moral value of human lives subjectively based on levels of cognitive capacity. Thus, most bioethicists today distinguish between persons and so-called human non-persons, people denigrated on the basis of their low level of cognitive functioning.
These invidious distinctions matter very much in the medical setting. Being categorized as a non-person is dangerous to life and limb, since most bioethicists assert that only persons are entitled to human rights. In the full expression of personhood theory, non-persons are killable, subject to the harvesting of their body parts, and candidates for non-therapeutic medical experiments.
A Tale of Three Patients
Space does not permit a full exposition of personhood theory and how it interacted with the growing importance of personal autonomy in medical decision-making to produce legislation and court decisions permitting the withdrawal of tube-supplied food and water from cognitively disabled people. Suffice it to say that while many observers continue to oppose, on moral grounds, removing tube-supplied food and water, the hard truth is that patients with serious cognitive incapacitiesthe conscious as well as the unconsciousare now routinely dehydrated to death in all fifty states.
Still, all is not yet lost. If close family members object to dehydrating a cognitively disabled person and are committed enough in their desire to save their loved ones life to take the matter to court, dehydrations can be significantly delayed and sometimes even prevented. If the patient is unquestionably conscious, they may even win.
Three such litigations have made national headlines in recent years: the cases of Michael Martin (Michigan), Robert Wendland (California), and Terri Schiavo (Florida). All three involved bitter disputes between a spouse who wanted the disabled patient to die by dehydration versus parents/siblings who fought to maintain tube-supplied food and water. (Martin and Wendland were both uncontrovertibly conscious; while a judge ruled that Schiavo was PVS, the medical testimony was hotly disputed.)
Michael Martin: Martin suffered a severe brain injury in an auto accident. However, he recovered consciousness and improved to the point that he could apparently enjoy music and cartoons in the nursing home in which he was placed. Michaels wife, Mary, wanted him to die by dehydration. But this plan was opposed by his mother, Pat Major, and sister, Leeta Martin, resulting in a protracted legal fight.
Mary claimed that Michael had repeatedly told her that he would not want to live if he were a vegetable. This testimony held great sway with the trial judge.Despite assertions from two doctors that Michael expressed a desire to live by answering yes and no questions on a therapeutic device, Michaels feeding tube was ordered removed. This decision was affirmed by the Court of Appeals but overturned by the Michigan Supreme Court on the basis that Mary had not presented clear and convincing evidencethe highest level of proof that can be required in a civil casethat Michael would not want to live in his current condition.
Robert Wendland: After Wendlands rollover auto accident, he was unconscious for 16 months with no expectation of recovery. But then, unexpectedly, he awakened. Soon, with therapy, he had learned to maneuver a wheelchair down a hospital corridor and could often perform simple tasks on request such as removing and replacing pegs in a board. At one point, he apparently learned to answer yes and no questions using a therapeutic device, in which the following discourse occurred:
Therapist: Is your name Michael?
Wendland: No.
Therapist: Is your name Robert?
Wendland: Yes.
Therapist: Do you want to die?
Wendland: No answer.
When Roberts feeding tube became dislodged in July 1995, his wife, Rose, decided it should not be replaced, a decision unanimously affirmed by the Lodi Memorial Hospital Ethics Committee and the San Joaquin County Ombudsman. But an anonymous nurse was so appalled by the plan that she blew the whistle to one of Roberts sisters, leading Roberts mother, Florence Wendland, and a sister to sue to prevent the dehydration.
The bitter litigation lasted for nearly six years. The trial judge, clearly sympathetic to Roses cause (he claimed from the bench to be making the wrong decision for the right reason), ruled against the dehydration because she had not presented clear and convincing evidence that Robert would not want to live with a profound cognitive disabitlity. This was reversed by the Court of Appeals, which ruled shockingly, among other matters, that there is not a presumption for continued existence in California law. The California Supreme Court eventually came down in favor of preserving Roberts life, deciding that when a patient is consciousexcluding people diagnosed with PVSand the surrogate is a court-appointed conservator, constitutional issues require clear and convincing evidence to be presented that the patient would not want to live or that dehydration would be in the patients best interests. The ruling applied only to tube feeding and not other forms of life-sustaining medical treatment. (Unfortunately, Robert did not benefit from the ruling. He died of pneumonia shortly before the case was decided.)
Terri Schiavo: In 1990, when she was twenty-six, Terri Schiavo collapsed from unknown causes. Terris resulting cognitive disability left her less reactive than either Michael Martin or Robert Wendland, but its extent and potential for amelioration remains a matter of dispute. Several doctors testified that she is nonresponsivein other words, PVSa diagnosis strongly contested by other doctors, medical therapists, and her parents. Videos of Terri seem to indicate that she does sometimes interact with her environment, although those who claim she is not responsive contend that smiling at her mother and opening her eyes upon request were mere reflex actions.
In the first year or so after Terri became disabled, her husband, Michael, sought medical help for her, for example, bringing her to California for an experimental surgical procedure, which, however, provided no apparent benefit. Then in 1991 the health insurance money ran out and all rehabilitative therapy stopped. Then, thanks to a medical-malpractice verdict, Terri received $750,000, which was placed in a trust fund. During the trial, Michael promised the jury that he would use the money to care for Terri the rest of his life and provide her with appropriate medical testing and rehabilitation. He also informed the jury that Terri was expected to have a normal lifespan.
Once the money was in the bank, however, Michael did not provide Terri with any rehabilitation or therapy. He did not allow medical testing. He had a do-not-resuscitate order placed on her chart, so that doctors would not intervene if she had a cardiac arrest. And he denied Terri antibiotics when she suffered a bladder infection, leading to the Schindlers first lawsuit against him.
In 1998, Michael petitioned the court to allow him to have Terris feeding tube removed. Terris parents fought the request. When the smoke cleared, Judge George Greer of the Sixth Judicial Circuit, Clearwater, Florida, had found that Terri is PVS and that Michael had presented clear and convincing evidence that she would want to die. Judge Greer also refused to permit Terri to receive rehabilitation before her tube was removed, despite credible medical testimony that she might be able to relearn to take nourishment and water by mouth. The Florida Court of Appeals affirmed Judge Greers ruling. Terris dehydration began on October 15, 2003.
That would normally have been that. But Terris case has been anything but normal. Disability-rights activists, Christian conservatives, public-policy advocates (myself included), talk-radio hosts, and Internet bloggers launched an intense grass-roots political campaign to pressure Governor Bush to intervene. In an unprecedented outpouring, people from all over the country responded, sending Bush and other Florida politicians tens of thousands of e-mails, letters, and phone messages, culminating in Terris Law.
Common Themes
Having closely observed many food-and-fluids cases over the last ten years, I have noticed several patterns and themes that, I believe, tell us quite a lot about the state of our culture and, if you will, our national soul.
Personhood theory has successfully dehumanized the cognitively impaired: None of us should have to earn our personhood. Indeed, the foundational philosophy of our country, so eloquently expressed in Thomas Jeffersons self-evident truths, holds that we all are equally possessed of inalienable rights, the first of which is the right to life. And while it is certainly true that the United States has too often failed to live up to the soaring ideals of our founding, at least we have struggled mightily and at great cost to overcome the vestiges of our unequal past and make the blessings of liberty available to all.
But with the coming of personhood theory, new categories of people are now the victims of discrimination and exploitation. This is epitomized by the popular use of the profoundly dehumanizing pejorative vegetable to describe cognitively disabled people. Once their moral worth has been reduced to that of a cucumber, it becomes easier to justify their killing.
These attitudes are especially dangerous in the medical setting. The medical profession has even picked up the common slur and given it a clinical soundpersistent vegetative state (PVS). Patients diagnosed as being permanently unconsciousPVScan almost never be saved from dehydration once the primary caregiver decides to stop tube-supplied sustenance, even if close family members object. Moreover, there is serious advocacy at the highest levels of the medical intelligentsia for allowing doctors to refuse wanted treatment for such people on the basis of quality-of-life determinations. Some even urge that doctors be allowed to kill them for their organs.
The law, which should be especially vigilant in defending those who cant defend themselves, instead generally reflects the dominant view in bioethics that relative value can be placed on human lives. In this milieu, the greater a patients capacities the more legal protection he or she receives. Thus, Robert Wendland and Michael Martin were spared dehydration despite expert bioethics testimony that they should be allowed to die precisely because they exhibited just enough cognition to make the high courts uncomfortable with terminating their lives. Had they been less responsive, it is unlikely that they would have been spared.
Proof of this concern can be found in the California Supreme Courts Wendland decision, which established a two-tiered system of constitutional rightsone for the conscious and another for the unconsciousby explicitly excluding patients diagnosed with PVS from its protective terms. This led to the surreal ruling that Californians lose some of their constitutional rights if diagnosed with PVS, but then regain them if they unexpectedly awaken. Thus, despite its good news for conscious disabled people, Wendland is actually a very dangerous decision because it implicitly applies personhood theory toand thus discriminates againsta specific class of born human beings.
Casual statements can become a dehydration warrant: Those who wish to dehydrate the cognitively disabled invariably claim that they are doing it for the patientthat they are doing what the patient said he or she would want done in the event of serious illness or incapacitation. Yet, because the benefit of the doubt in law and culture now tacks overwhelmingly in favor of death in these cases, it is shocking how often the most casual statements have been treated as if they had been carefully deliberated upon advanced medical information.
It has even gotten to the point that courts may hold disabled people to past statements that they would want to die over present indications that they want to liveas the trial judge in Michael Martins case did.
The worst of these cases of which I am aware is the tragic dehydration of Marjorie Nighbert. Marjorie was a successful businesswoman until a stroke left her disabled. She was unable to swallow safely, but not terminally ill. She was moved from Alabama to a nursing home in Florida where she would receive rehabilitation to help her relearn how to chew and swallow without danger of aspiration. A feeding tube was inserted to ensure that she was properly nourished during her recovery.
Marjorie had once told her brother Maynard that she didnt want a feeding tube if she were terminally ill. Despite the fact that she was not dying, Maynard believed that she had meant that she would rather die by dehydration than live the rest of her life using a feeding tube. Accordingly, he ordered all of Marjories nourishment stopped.
As she was slowly dehydrating to death, Marjorie began to beg the staff for food and water. Distraught nurses and staff members, not knowing what else to do, surreptitiously snuck her small amounts. One stafferwho was later fired for the deedblew the whistle, leading to a hurried court investigation and a temporary restraining order requiring that Marjorie receive nourishment.
Circuit Court Judge Jere Tolton appointed attorney William F. Stone to represent Marjorie and gave him twenty-four hours to determine whether she was competent to rescind the general power of attorney she had given to Maynard before her stroke. After the rushed investigation, Stone was forced to report that Marjorie was not competent at that time. (She had, after all, been intentionally malnourished for several weeks.) Stone particularly noted that he had been unable to determine whether she had been competent at the time the dehydration commenced.
With Stones report in hand, Judge Tolton ruled that the dehydration should be completed! Before an appalled Stone could appeal, Marjorie died on April 6, 1995.
Conflicts of interest dont matter in dehydration cases: Court-appointed guardians and conservators owe their wards the highest loyalty. As fiduciaries, they are duty-bound to serve their wards interesteven above their own. Needless to say, among other matters, this means that a guardian cannot personally benefit from financial decisions made while managing a wards money.
Life is more important than money. Surely, then, the legal prohibition preventing guardians from making monetary decisions when they have conflicts of interest should apply doubly when the guardians would personally benefit from their wards deaths. Unfortunately, in the food-and-fluids cases, judges have been generally indifferent to these considerations. Even in the face of clear conflicts of interest, judges have seldom been willing to transfer guardianships from those who seek court authority to dehydrate patients to parents or siblings who want their disabled loved ones to live.
In the Michael Martin litigation, Mary admitted that she had had romantic involvements after her husbands injury. According to the terms of Michaels pension benefits, she would receive substantial benefits if he died but not if they divorced. Yet the trial judge cared not a whit about this blatant conflict of interest when he acquiesced to Marys request and ordered Michael dehydrated. Even though the Michigan Supreme Court later saved Michaels life, it did not address the conflict-of-interest aspect of the case.
Michael Schiavos financial and personal conflicts of interest make Mary Martins look penny-ante. In April of 1998, when he first asked to dehydrate Terri, she had more than $700,000 in her trust account, all of which Michael would have inherited had she died at that time. Indeed, this financial conflict of interest was one of the reasons that Terris guardian ad litem recommended that she not be dehydrated. (Michael claims there is now only about $50,000 left in Terris trust fund.)
Michaels personal conflicts of interest are even more pronounced than his financial ones. Not only did he date regularly after Terri became disabled, but he fell in love and entered a committed relationship with a woman with whom he has lived since about 1996, siring two children by her. By starting a new family, Michael effectively estranged himself from Terri. Yet, none of this mattered to Judge Greer, who treated Michael as a loyal and committed husband rather than as a man who had moved on with his life and could benefit personally and financially from his wifes death.
Re-humanizing Cognitively Disabled People
Utilitarian bioethicist Peter Singer has written that the food-and-fluids cases are a wrecking ball shattering the sanctity/equality-of-human-life ethic as the first principle of our culture. As much as I hate to admit it, he has a point. Still, to paraphrase Mark Twain, reports about the demise of our traditional human values are greatly exaggerated. The remarkable public outpouring in support of Terri Schiavos life proves that at least among the general public, the sanctity-of-life ethic retains much of its vitality.
This may show us a way out of our societal miasma. In my more optimistic moments, I see Terris sweet smile rallying us to reject the views of those who would force us each to earn our personhood by possessing sufficient cognitive capacities and to move instead toward a revitalized society in which every one of us is loved unconditionally as the fully equal and unequivocally human brother or sister that each of us really is. We can do this in the medical setting if we abide by the wisdom of Paul Ramsey and treat every patient as a person. The first step toward achieving this end is for us all to acknowledge: There is no such thing as a human vegetable.
49-year old Marcia Gray had been comatose since January of 1986. She and her family had expressed a wish that extraordinary measures not be implemented to extend her life. District Court Judge Francis Boyle ruled that the state-run General Hospital must remove her feeding tube or transfer her to an institution that would carry out this wish. The General Hospital subsequently contacted 274 nursing homes and hospitals in the New England area, but none were willing to accept the patient for the sole purpose of executing her.
At this point, Rhode Island governor Edward DiPrete intervened and ordered the hospital to disconnect her feeding tube. This order was not appealable. On October 17, 1988, District Court Judge Francis Boyle ruled that Marcia Gray could be starved and dehydrated to death. On November 16, she was transferred to South County Hospital. Dr. Robert L. Conrad of the hospital was so eager to kill Gray that he removed her feeding tube in the ambulance on the trip to South County!
Marcia Gray took 15 long, agonizing days to die, during which time she lost fifty pounds. She had to be heavily sedated to suppress her severe seizures.
This case and the subsequent actions by the State are foreboding harbingers of things to come. If hospitals adhere to some kind of respect for life, they will be overridden by the State. Additionally, if General Hospital had not been able to find another institution willing to murder Gray, the hospital's personnel would have been forced to kill her over their moral and religious objections or face long jail terms for contempt of court.
The Director of the Rhode Island State Department of Mental Health and Hospitals, Thomas D. Romeo, said in an October 28, 1988 Providence Journal interview that this series of State actions would reawaken the old image of state hospitals as the dumping ground for patients, a "boneyard" where they are sent to die.
John Breguet, general counsel for the Rhode Island Department of Mental Health, Retardation, and Hospitals, voiced the fears of many when he said,"Once we establish as a societal philosophy that society has a right to terminate some life that society thinks is not worth living, it is not that far to go to the profoundly retarded, those with severe mental problems, or those with serious physical handicaps."
Of profound significance was the fact that Judge Boyle relied heavily on the 1973 abortion decision Roe v. Wade to affirm the principle "that a person has the right ... to control fundamental decisions involving his or her own body." Thus, the direct link between abortion and euthanasia is, at last, directly and irrevocably drawn for all to see.
Any pro-life activist who encounters a person disclaiming any connection between abortion and euthanasia should describe this court case to them.
Gary Splin is working on that bill. IT MAY BE USEFUL TO FOLLOWUP ON THE STATUS OF SAME. His number is 407-297-2071. (it should be a definition that covers every situation, not just alimony and then Terri would be free from the bondage of HINO).
Laci Peterson supporters should take up the cause in California of fighting against EUTHANASIA in California. They love Terri and I'm thinking don't want these type of forced exists in California. IT'S BARBARIC and the legislature doesn't really matter because the JUDGES will break the law if it will help the death lobbies get their grip on MAJOR STATES. I see this pattern, FLORIDA, TEXAS, CALIFORNIA - they are trying to pick off 3 big states right now.
off, please ping your list to 32 - DEHYDRATION NATION (great stuff). Fv
>That'd be Jesus.<
Dang, correct me if it wasn't Jesus who said something like, "what you do to the least of them (helpless people like Terri Schiavo), you do to me"?
You support murder in Jesus' name?
Wow.
That is a fantastic article. It really highlights the need for us to start turning this culture of death-worship around.
It is really frightening that the logical end-point of all this "right to die" stuff is that, eventually, only people who are actively contributing to "society" will have an unequivocal right to life. All others--children, the elderly, the handicapped--will have no rights.
Thanks for posting it.
ping
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.