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Terri is the dying martyr the Rebublican right can use
The Sunday Times ^ | March 27, 2005 | Andrew Sullivan

Posted on 03/29/2005 11:52:25 AM PST by Nonstatist

It was impossible to look without grief at the images of Terri Schiavo starving slowly to death in a Florida hospice. It has, alas, become impossible in America to look at such a tragic set of circumstances without hysteria.

Those of us who have long worried that unleashing religious fundamentalism into the bloodstream of American politics would lead to disaster can feel only that our fears have now come true.

Fifteen years ago Schiavo suffered a heart stoppage that was caused by her bulimia. Her brain was temporarily starved of oxygen and scans showed that her cerebral cortex had stopped functioning.

A scan shows that her brain has since shrunk massively. Her electroencephalogram reading was and is flat — she has no brain waves. She is not brain dead, but she has no ability to think, feel or communicate.

She can breathe on her own and random eye movements can give the impression of some kind of awareness. She has been kept alive by a feeding tube.

In the first years that she was in this horrifying state, her husband Michael did all he could to find treatment, going from hospital to hospital trying new therapies. Terri was sent to California to have experimental platinum electrodes implanted to get her brain going again. Michael slept next to her for five weeks. At the time he and Terri’s parents were united in doing all they could for what was left of his wife.

Eventually the husband acquiesced to near-universal medical opinion and came to terms with the fact that his wife would never revive. He said that when she was cognisant she had once told him that she did not want to be kept alive artificially for an indefinite period of time.

You can see why. The Miami Herald reported: “She suffered from bile stones and kidney stones, according to court papers, and had to have her gallbladder removed. She has ‘drop foot’, where her foot twists downward, and the ensuing pressure resulted in the amputation of her left little toe. She frequently developed urinary tract infections, diarrhoea and vaginitis. Several cysts were removed from her neck. Several times her feeding tube got infected.”

The sight of a human being in a state of disintegration became too much for Michael Schiavo to bear. He decided to let her die with dignity.

Her parents, for understandable reasons, differed and fought him in the Florida courts for many painful years. The parents, who had at first encouraged Michael to date other women, then used his second relationship (he subsequently dated another woman and had two children with her) as a weapon against him.

However, court after court acknowledged the overwhelming medical data and the fact that Terri’s legal guardian was her husband. Court case after court case moved Terri inexorably towards death.

Then members of the political religious right heard of what was going on, took up the case and cast it as an example of what the Pope has called the “culture of death”. They used Nazi analogies. They demonised Michael Schiavo. They saw an opportunity to highlight their principled defence of human life.

Their clout was such that they got the Florida legislature to pass a bill to protect Terri, a law subsequently overruled by the courts in Florida. Last weekend they got Congress in an emergency Sunday session to pass a law to delay the process of death, pending new federal court challenges. President George W Bush rushed back to Washington to sign the bill in the middle of the night. You want proof that the religious right runs the Republican party? Federal courts then examined the long course of the case and came to the conclusion that Florida’s courts had acted within the law. There was no legal case to intervene. The parents appealed to the US Supreme Court, which again refused to hear the case.

I don’t know what I would do in such a case. The nearest I have come was watching one of my best friends die of Aids while his family and friends refused to resuscitate him. It was what he wanted. I stood by, helpless. But I recognised that this kind of decision can be made only by the person herself or by the family or spouse or legally appointed guardian.

The idea that government should have the final say, that the government could be swayed by political lobbies, strikes me as grossly inappropriate. If limited government means anything it means leaving decisions like this as close to the individual as possible. If the American principle of federalism means anything it means that the local state’s courts are the only relevant instruments to deal with such a tragedy. But that is not what American Republicanism now thinks. It has a religious drive that puts theological certitude before prudential or legal reasoning and a growing contempt for an independent judiciary.

That is how Bill Bennett, a leading conservative activist, could write last Thursday in the conservative National Review, that Jeb Bush, the Florida governor, should simply overrule the courts, break the law and send armed guards to insert the feeding tube by force. This attack on the basis of constitutional liberty in the name of religion is usually called theocracy. Polling shows that large majorities do not think the federal government should get involved.

Bush himself, who said last week that “it is wise to always err on the side of life”, did not seem so concerned when he signed countless death warrants as governor of Texas, with the most cursory of legal reviews. He also signed a Texas law that gave next of kin discretion to remove life support from a terminally ill patient in the absence of a living will.

Last week an eight-year-old boy died in Texas after his tube was removed because his parents could not afford treatment, but the religious right seemed uninterested. Culture of life? The Republicans are engaged in a fascinating debate about what they believe. The survival of what is left of Terri Schiavo is for some people a genuine matter of moral principle. That position should be respected. But it should also be subject to the rule of law.

For others, the Schiavo case is a first battle to win over the religious right primary voters who will determine the next Republican nominee. The Republican leadership is gambling that the intensity of their religious base will outweigh the more general public’s disdain for this exercise in government over-reach. The broader public, they calculate, will forget. The zealots will always remember.

If Schiavo dies they will have a martyr as well. They will use her death as a symbol in the campaigns to come.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: cultureofdeath; euthanasiasullivan; falsesympathy; ifonlywecouldzothim; insaneterribots; murderofthedisabled; schiavo; terrimania; theocracyparanoia; whackosullivan
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The anti-heteronormative Andrew Sullivan, this ostensibly "religious" fella, weighs in. The evil, evil "religious right" must aquiesce in the elimination of this child-like nobody, so that that Gay crusaders like Andy can do their self righteous "limited government" strut. What a phony hypocrite he is.
1 posted on 03/29/2005 11:52:26 AM PST by Nonstatist
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To: Nonstatist
The lefty libs that decry Terri are the worst hypocrites
40 Million + pre born babies since Roe V Wade...

That they demanded their right to murder...that ocean of innocent blood cries out for vengeance..

Not to mention the lost souls of the mothers they conned or pressured into allowing them to kill the children of 'their bodies themselves'.....
2 posted on 03/29/2005 11:59:13 AM PST by joesnuffy (The generation that survived the depression and won WW2 proved poverty does not cause crime)
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To: Nonstatist

I love how liberal can spin things like the story of Terri Schiavo where you actually start to understand and feel for Michael Schiavo! BARF!!!!!!!!!!


3 posted on 03/29/2005 12:00:06 PM PST by Halls
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To: Nonstatist
A Bill Bennett quote from National Review's section The corner "Finally, I find it odd that of a sudden Sullivan cites large majorities. He wasn’t concerned about them when he celebrated Gavin Newsom as a model of civil disobedience in our time for his flouting the law and large majorities by ordering gay marriages be recorded in San Francisco."
4 posted on 03/29/2005 12:00:12 PM PST by Lecie
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To: Nonstatist

This article is more full of holes than a swiss cheese.


After he got the insurance money in 1993, Michael wouldn't pay for a dentist, allow any gyn care for Terri, permit Dr Gambone in the hospice to treat Terri's chronic urinary tract infection (5 years), allow a chest X-Ray to check for pneumonia when she got the flu and coughed for 4 months, or even allow the hospice to fix Terri's wheel chair that was sitting in the corner of her room when her feeding tube was removed.

He's got a lot of 'splaining to do when he meets Terri and HER JUDGE someday in the hereafter.


5 posted on 03/29/2005 12:02:24 PM PST by silverleaf (Fasten your seat belts- it's going to be a BUMPY ride.)
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To: Nonstatist

Well, gee, if they don't want a martyr why not put that tube back in?

It was Democrat Senators that blocked the ability of Congress to demand a de novo review. To block the ability of Congress to order that tube back in. Instead they had to settle with the suggestion of both. If the Democrat Senators would have agreed that tube would be back in they wouldn't potentially have a dying "martyr" for the "religious right" on their hands.

Not to mistake some Dem Senators were helpful, Conrad for example. But certain others blocked the better Bill. People like Barbara Boxer. What happens as a result is on their heads because people of conscience (not all Chritsinas BTW) don't particularly like the idea of a Judiciary sentencing an innocent woman to her Death.


6 posted on 03/29/2005 12:03:03 PM PST by Soul Seeker
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To: Lecie

If opposing the starvation-murder of an innocent person makes me a fundie, then a fundie I am.

Since starvation is so humane and blissful, I can expect that there will be a movement to execute our (extremely) guilty prisoners this way as well.

I forgot, the left only supports life for those who don't deserve it.


7 posted on 03/29/2005 12:03:13 PM PST by Sterm26 (Recount Pennsylvania!)
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To: Nonstatist

Funny he fails to mention the money. If Michael had got the tube removed after the settlement he would have inherited most of the 700,000 put in trust to treat Terri. Now, because of the parent's war on him, that is down to maybe 50,000 with about 400,000 of that having gone to Felos, his serpentine lawyer.


8 posted on 03/29/2005 12:04:42 PM PST by RobbyS (JMJ)
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To: Nonstatist
Aids is a terminal illness. Terri wasn't terminal.

Who wants to bet that Sullivan would want the federal courts to intervene if Michael had lost in state court? As many of those arguing both federalism and the eternal right of a spouse-plus-girlfriend-plus-their-two-kids to make these life-or-death decisions, he is probably using the one argument only in an attempt to end the argument as the winner, not on true federalist principles. Plus, since when is the right to life just a state issue? And if it is, then why again isn't abortion a state issue?

Sullivan thought sodomy was a federal issue. Why is sodomy more important than the life of a disabled woman?

His theocracy argument is so ridiculous that it is funny.

9 posted on 03/29/2005 12:06:42 PM PST by The Ghost of FReepers Past (Legislatures are so outdated. If you want real political victory, take your issue to court.)
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To: RobbyS
Felos, his serpentine lawyer

Comparing Felos to a serpent is very unfair . . . to snakes.

10 posted on 03/29/2005 12:07:13 PM PST by Numbers Guy
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To: Halls
I have heard that the reason for her bulimia was because "Michael The Great" said he would leave her if she did not lose some weight.
11 posted on 03/29/2005 12:07:25 PM PST by Piquaboy (22 year veteran of the Army, Air Force and Navy, Pray for all our military .)
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To: Nonstatist
Fifteen years ago Schiavo suffered a heart stoppage that was ASSUMED TO BE caused by her bulimia.
12 posted on 03/29/2005 12:08:46 PM PST by atomicpossum (Replies should be as pedantic as possible. I love that so much.)
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To: Nonstatist

Andrew Sullivan should be careful -- he may find that his homosexual buddies are high on the list of euthanasia prospects. Catch AIDS and have your feeding and watering stopped before the hospital bills mount up!


13 posted on 03/29/2005 12:09:40 PM PST by expatpat
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To: Nonstatist
The idea that government should have the final say, that the government could be swayed by political lobbies, strikes me as grossly inappropriate.

Me, too, Andy, but I think we're both looking in different directions...

14 posted on 03/29/2005 12:10:00 PM PST by atomicpossum (Replies should be as pedantic as possible. I love that so much.)
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To: Nonstatist
The zealots will always remember.

This sounds like a genteel form of holocaust denial: who forgets a court-appointed forced starvation? Does anyone want that constituency?
15 posted on 03/29/2005 12:11:05 PM PST by farmer18th ("The fool says in his heart there is no God.")
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To: Nonstatist

Yet more anti-religious hate speech from Mr. Sullivan.


16 posted on 03/29/2005 12:11:40 PM PST by Unam Sanctam
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To: Nonstatist

What, an Andy Sullivan column with no references to homosexuality? Is this possible?


17 posted on 03/29/2005 12:14:07 PM PST by Antoninus (In hoc signo, vinces †)
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To: Nonstatist

This is not only a religious issue. I lean small-l libertarian-right. If Terri had had a living will, I would support her right to die as she wished.

To me, this is an issue of big government power destroying individual liberty.


18 posted on 03/29/2005 12:14:29 PM PST by ellery (Concentrated power has always been the enemy of liberty. - Ronald Reagan)
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To: joesnuffy
Culture of Death vs Culture of Life.......the only way they can dress up that pony is to call it a "right", which is exactly what the pro-abortion forces did. With abortion they convinced a nation that this was just fetal tissue, not a baby. Now they are saying a brain damaged woman is in a permanent vegetative state. They are counting on Americans not even questioning them.
19 posted on 03/29/2005 12:15:02 PM PST by tioga
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To: Nonstatist
Andrew Sullivan need to take his head out of his his boyfriend's butt.
20 posted on 03/29/2005 12:15:13 PM PST by JohnnyZ (“When you’re hungry, you eat; when you’re a frog, you leap; if you’re scared, get a dog.”)
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