The Governor cannot 'pardon' Terri because she is NOT a criminal. There is no legal recourse for him to do so.
And this is not a question of 'sycophant' behavior (you still haven't looked it up, have you? You are misusing the word in your accusations), it is a question of obeying the rule of law, and supporting leadership that honors that law.
If the law is wrong (which it clearly is), then the law needs to be changed.
This is a tragic situation, but the moral mess we are in goes back much farther than this individual case. We need to get at the root of the problem, which is both spiritual and legal, and reform this country and return it to its moral roots. Jeb Bush's circumventing the law is NOT going to solve this crisis.
I am praying that the sacrifice and loss of the Schindler family (if God does not miraculously intervene), will result in a raised awareness in the American people of how firm a grip the culture of death now has on our courts, and the medical profession. Good can come of this horror, if we work to make it so, and pray as we have never prayed before.
ego milao ellenika, syko phantos einei "show a fig"
servile and flattering behavior towards a superior
it appears quite apropos to me irt the bush apologetics
the position that is disingenous is the constant verbiage spewed out on anyone that would dare question what they have done or are doing?
One of the fundamental necessities in a representative government such as ours is to make certain that the men to whom the people delegate their power shall serve the people by whom they are elected, and not the special interests... Theodore Roosevelt, speech at Osawatomie, Kansas
guess that leaves Terri out