New at The Empire Journal
http://www.theempirejournal.com/04120503_florida_sen.htm
EXCLUSIVE
Florida Sen. King Has Financial Ties to Hospice, Centonze/Schiavo
By June Maxam and Ginger Berlin
Follow the money.
The fate of Terri Schindler-Schiavo was ironically decided over a meal of fried chicken and salad in a Tallahassee restaurant when nine Republicans of the Florida Senate met and resolved not to support legislation being introduced by Sen. Daniel Webster to help save the 41-year-old disabled woman from her death by court-ordered starvation and dehydration.
"New at The Empire Journal
http://www.theempirejournal.com/04120503_florida_sen.htm
EXCLUSIVE
Florida Sen. King Has Financial Ties to Hospice, Centonze/Schiavo
By June Maxam and Ginger Berlin
Follow the money.
The fate of Terri Schindler-Schiavo was ironically decided over a meal of fried chicken and salad in a Tallahassee restaurant when nine Republicans of the Florida Senate met and resolved not to support legislation being introduced by Sen. Daniel Webster to help save the 41-year-old disabled woman from her death by court-ordered starvation and dehydration."
I hope that Floridians will get the word out about these people JUST BEFORE THEIR NEXT ELECTION, by writing letters to editors and calling talk shows.
Judge Greer was reelected after treating Terri horribly, so apparently Floridians need to be reminded.
Terri Schiavo and the Tale of Two Husbands
By Ken Concannon
4/14/05
The starvation/dehydration death of Terri Schiavo, which dominated the news during Holy Week and right up until the death of Pope John Paul II, introduced into the public vernacular a term previously limited primarily to the medical profession and bioethicists "persistent vegetative state" (PVS).
PVS is a condition first coined in 1972 to describe patients who are not in a coma or considered to be brain dead, but nevertheless appear to have no cognitive brain function. In a study published in 1994 by the Multi-Society Task Force (MTSF) on PVS the MTSF concluded that patients in PVS show no evidence of awareness or thinking, and do not communicate. None of their actions appear purposeful, learned or voluntary. Most patients in PVS continue to breathe on their own, circulate blood normally, have periods of waking and sleeping, may move their limbs, smile, shed tears and respond to external stimuli. Some may grunt, groan or scream.
PVS can be caused by acute brain injury, chronic degenerative disease, or developmental malformations. The injury or disease often results in profound damage to, if not complete destruction of, the cerebral cortex the region of the brain believed to be responsible for all higher, cognitive functioning. Because of the cerebral cortex damage the MTSF in its report stated that PVS patients are "noncognitive, nonsentient, and incapable of conscious experience."
Although one would think that "noncognitive, nonsentient" patients "incapable of conscious experience" would be considered, for all practical purposes, already dead, the law does not use the PVS diagnosis as a definition of death. And for good reason. The medical profession, as in the case of Terri Schiavo, does not always agree on the diagnosis. And sometimes, as in the case of Kate Adamson, the vegetative diagnosis is inaccurate.
In 1995 33-year-old Adamson, a housewife and mother of two toddlers, suffered a double brainstem stroke that left her completely paralyzed. For almost 70 days she was totally unresponsive. Her doctors, assuming that her cognitive capabilities were gone, pulled a feeding tube that had been inserted earlier. They just ripped it out, the way Terri Schiavos feeding tube was ripped out, because the doctors believed the paralyzed Adamson was "nonsentient."
They were wrong. In an interview with Bill OReilly of televisions "The OReilly Factor" in November of 2003 Adamson, now recovered from her misdiagnosed "vegetative" state, described the feeding tube removal as "sheer torture." She also talked of the "hunger pains" during the eight days she was disconnected from her feeding tube.
Adamson now feeds herself, runs her family, is a motivational speaker, and has written a book, Kate's Journey: Triumph Over Adversity. Unlike Terri Schiavo, her feeding tube was reinstated, and she received aggressive rehabilitation.
The life-saving difference between Kate and Terri, was Kates husband, Steven Klugman. Unlike Michael Schiavo, Klugman didnt believe his wife was in a vegetative state, and when the doctors disconnected her, Klugman, a lawyer, yelled, screamed, and threatened to sue them. In his own words: "I threatened to sue the whole world, and I told them that their best course was to try to save her, and maybe they wouldn't get sued."
Unlike Terris husband, Kates husband fought for her life. And that was the crucial difference.
When Kate Adamson appeared on "The OReilly Factor" two years ago, she appeared as an advocate for Terri Schiavos life. Last month she again witnessed on behalf of saving the disabled Florida woman, this time testifying before the Florida House Judiciary Committee. She began her testimony with this statement:
"They wanted me to die. They did. They told my husband it would be better for him to let me go. It would be better for the children to let me go. They said it would be better for me.
"I was unable to move just lying there. Couldnt speak. Couldnt even blink my eyes But I was alive! I could hear - every - word - they - were - saying. Shall we unplug her? Remove life support? We could just let her go. She will be out of her misery and we can go home. And they were saying all this within five - feet - of - my - bed. Were they inconsiderate? Calloused? No. They considered me comatose unconscious a vegetable -- carrots dont have feelings."
Adamsons efforts on behalf of Terri Schiavo proved unsuccessful. While Michael Schiavos lawyer, euthanasia activist George Felos, described to the media the peace and tranquility of Terris death process, Father Frank Pavone and members of the Schindler family gathered at Terris bedside. In a recent email from Priests for Life, Father Pavone described Terris "death process" as "quite horrifying. She was dehydrating to death, and looked it. Her face had an expression of dread and sorrow. In my 16 years as a priest, I never saw anything like it before."
Though they shared similar disabilities, Kates and Terris lives, thanks to their husbands, went in different directions. Terri Schiavo is now a martyr to the culture of death. Kate Adamson speaks eloquently as a witness to the culture of life, as evidenced by her closing remarks before the Florida House Judiciary Committee:
"They have already come for me and I am still here," she said. "Now, mind you no one meant me any harm. Yet the good wishes of the foolish and the evil can bring death.
"The measure of a society is how they treat the least of us. What we do to the helpless marks our souls forever. What we allow to happen to the disabled labels us forever. You have heard me. Could you, as a panel, kill me?"
http://www.catholicherald.com/articles/05articles/2husbands.htm
Great article, scoop.
I admire your persistence and thoroughness with this matter. I hope that "someone" will decide to do the right thing and pursue/authorize a criminal investigation. All it takes is a phone call or stroke of the pen.
Interesting that Jodi and Michael may well have met BEFORE Terri's collapse in 1990.
Jim King's chicken dinner deciding Terri's fate at TEJ.
Another fine job, Scoop! My hats off to ya!
Just awesome digging, Scoop!! Mind if I put the first couple of pages on the front page of this site .. unless someone already has?
Meant to ping to post #1102 hours ago, but had to go to a meeting and then couldn't find my place when I returned. Valuable information in TEJ's latest!
Terri ping! If anyone would like to be added to or removed from my Terri ping list, please let me know by FReepmail!
Sick.
Sick, too, that the FL ACLU gave a banquet and an award to Gerald Kogan, the former chief justice of the Florida State Supreme Court, based partly on Kogan's support of euthanasia.
1999 Nelson Poynter Banquet a Moving Tribute
Lida Rodriguez-Taseff, Secretary of the ACLU of Florida and an attorney at Akerman Senterfitt, delivered a moving tribute to Nelson Poynter Award recipient Justice Kogan. She applauded his tremendous courage and empathy in his powerful dissent in the McIver v. Krischer right-to-die case as well as his public stance against the death penalty, which she said should serve as a model for attorneys and civil libertarians everywhere.In his acceptance speech, Justice Kogan praised the work of the ACLU and stressed the obligation attorneys and others have in upholding the principles of the Bill of Rights.