Posted on 03/22/2005 11:35:32 PM PST by plewis1250
Remember that the courts are an institution of government. Those institutions reflect our government, and the theory of representative government is that the government reflects the people who establish it.
I was pessimistic from the beginning that the courts would save Terri Schiavo, an innocent woman being put to death for no justifiable reason, but simply on the word of another whose motives are questionable. The courts of this land are as steeped in the culture of death that reigns in this country as any other institution. There will be those just and fair-minded people who will stand against the tide of death, but at this time they are in the minority. I think the majority are either pro-death, or simply too intellectually lazy to examine with a measured and compassionate eye what is happening around them.
I agree.
You have a wonderful way of expressing yourself and getting the point across!
And then Schiavo's attorney comes in and says "no, the findings were completely correct, as we'll show in the new hearing, Your Honor". And then you're back to square one, because the mere existence of the dispute is not, in and of itself, grounds for the injunction - you have to show that your case is so compelling that you're substantially likely to prevail later on, in order to get that injunction. But if they had that, they likely wouldn't have been in this position in the first place.
The law just kind of sucks here - the problem is, IMO, the law, not the judges. And it's the law that needs changing, not the judges, which is something that we don't generally accept that judges are permitted to do.
The sad part is there is no remedy.
Makes me sad actually.
And they got it - well, will get it anyway. What they needed was an injunction to keep her alive for that review, else the thing is moot. Save some scorn for Congress, along with the Florida legislature here - Congress could have mandated an injunction in the bill they passed, but they didn't. They could have effectively ordered the judge to enjoin the removal of the feeding tube, but they didn't. Their failure to do so left it up to the judge's discretion as to whether or not to grant an injunction, and he applied the same basic standard that judges always apply in such cases - the Schindlers fell short, which was, IMO, pretty much inevitable. And I don't believe for a minute that the Congressfolks who voted for this thing didn't know that - the only other alternative is that they're idiots. Given the legislative debate, it seems pretty clear to me that there was not enough support to pass a bill that mandated relief, but if the will had been there, they could have done it, and Terri Schiavo would have had that feeding tube put back in two days ago.
They could have changed all this, and they didn't, and I for one refuse to absolve them via their usual route of blaming it all on the courts. The moral failures on this issue, if any, exist squarely within the Florida legislature and the Congress of the United States. The judges here did exactly what we supposedly want them to do - follow the law as written. And now legislators want to escape responsibility by blaming the courts for not inventing new laws. I don't think so.
Greer is a "RINO". Not a Republican.
In the end, if we accept these judges' analysis, Congress did nothing effective.
Definitely, keep praying.
Bingo. We have a winner - they didn't do anything effective. They could have, and didn't.
Mr. FRIST. I share the understanding of the Senator from Michigan, as does the junior Senator from Florida who is the chief sponsor of this bill. Nothing in the current bill or its legislative history mandates a stay. I would assume, however, the Federal court would grant a stay based on the facts of this case because Mrs. Schiavo would need to be alive in order for the court to make its determination. Nevertheless, this bill does not change current law under which a stay is discretionary.Mr. Frist was outsmarted again by a Democrat. He explicitly states that a stay is discretionary, not mandatory, under this federal law.
[T]he point at which life becomes "worthless," and the point at which the means necessary to preserve it become "extraordinary" or "inappropriate," are neither set forth in the Constitution nor known to the nine Justices of this Court any better than they are known to nine people picked at random from the Kansas City telephone directoryScalia tells it like it is.
While your analysis was good, it, like mine, neglected the well-written dissent. The key is the All Writs Act and deference to Congress: http://www.nationalreview.com/mccarthy/mccarthy200503231015.asp
I am glad to hear you say that.
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