Posted on 09/16/2009 1:19:07 PM PDT by Kfobbs
Five years ago the beginning of the end of Terri Schindler Schiavos life was transforming America into two battle camps, which fought bitterly over to preserve the life of who Terris father Robert Schindler told me he lovingly called his angel, Terri or to let government let her be starved to death.
Yet after five years should America just simply move on? Would you simply move on if it were your child who suddenly was incapacitated and went through Terri Schiavos experience? It is an interesting question because there are those in the media and even probably in your office, your neighborhood or even your family who have said, just let the poor woman rest in peace.
Well, I dont think America can do that because move on could have been said about just about any innocent person who was taken to a cross to crucify or to a tree to lynch or about an innocent young child who was taken from her home and murdered as was the case of 9 year-old Jessica Lunsford, the Florida child who was abducted and murdered in 2005. What if her neighbors had intervened? What if they had done something when they suspected there was danger present instead of just hoping someone else would or that nothing bad would happen?
If the American public had grown tired of the news and just simply moved on, then the citizens in at least 18 states would not have actively advocated passage of a Jessicas Law to protect other children. Do we not owe Terri Schindler Schiavo a similar advocacy on her behalf even though the act of taking her life was in full view of the public?
Has life really become so cheap in America that we would rather just be tired of confronting the truth about what happens to the innocent who are taken before their time?
There are some who claim that the Declaration of Independence or the U.S. Constitution are inappropriate places to establish a right to hydration or nutrition in other words food or water. There are others who claim that the Constitution is a living document and therefore should accommodate new rights, chief among those the right to life and therefore once born the right to live. In each case, they are human lives; Americans, examples of our own family members who may have been taken from their families, literally ripped from their loved ones arms and silenced for eternity. It happens daily.
I have spoken to varying religious leaders and followers of the Christian and Jewish faiths and in each instance I have found the embodiment of a rich tradition for respect for life and the essence of preserving it. So as we travel through the holy seasons for the Judeo-Christian faiths what must we be thinking as we sit in a church pew or synagogue of our own commitment to a Culture of Life?
Over the next several months should we simply choose to not remember because it is out of our immediate 72-hour window of what is important in our defined window, our bubble of life? Do we ask why didnt the first Christians just simply move on after Jesus was killed? Should Jesus have said to his disciples, Paul, Matthew, and Simon... "Today and for the next couple weeks, let's just wait and see what develops...because today...I'm just not feelin' it."
What about the Holocaust and its millions of victims? Are those of the Jewish faith who say, We must always remember! misguided and should instead be saying, It happened Lets just have closure. The answer is obviously no and no again. Life, and the Culture of Life that embodies it, are precious and cannot be offered away as yesterdays news.
In America there are a lot of solid well-intentioned people and families of faith who never truly heard the truth about how Terri lived nor the reality of how she died. What they do know and do fully understand is that there was a great deal of controversy about what Terri, a devout Catholic, wanted and whether a loving family a mother and father, a sister and brother who were willing with all of their heart and spirit to take Terri into their loving embrace, keep her secure and safe, and love her smiles, her glances, her life, because she was not dying, was not terminal, was not at the end of her life and was not a burden.
A few years ago I had an opportunity to speak in Washington D.C. alongside the Schindler family at the launch of their beneficial Terri Schindler Schiavo Foundation. Americans joined with the Schindlers in wanting desperately to move past any hate or any division or any anguish that conflicted millions of Americans in standing up for this just cause to protect life. What I felt then in hugging the family members was a deep respect and a new partnership in sharing a life mission and a ministry of life with them. Their family spirit as well as the Foundations is a commitment that is based on having compassion for Americans who are still going through what the Schindler family experienced for nearly 15 years.
I have to go back to the U.S. Constitution and the Declaration of Independence because if it is not stated as a basic right for every American to know with clarity that the final destination of their life travel is protected and cannot be interrupted through public or familial disputes, misunderstandings, cover-ups, etc then our life is expendable and is truly determined by whomever either shouts the loudest, has the deepest financial pockets, or is able to get to the courtroom first; and finally by the luck of the draw either your life is preserved or your life ends prematurely.
Let us show that America has not grown tired. It has grown stronger because millions of Americans still desire to bring clarity and certainty to their familys decisions. The Schindler family has not grown tired. They have grown stronger because Terris legacy is not enveloped in hateful brickbats being tossed back and forth but rather has become a legacy of insuring that the tens of thousands of families who may be facing the Schindlers former or similar medical dilemma are not left alone, shut out, isolated and forced into making life ending decisions that reflect medical expediency not moral integrity.
In the end we have to ask ourselves would we walk or pledge to support Terri Schiavos legacy and Terris Day in a national, or state, or city or neighborhood remembrance? I would hope that the answer would be yes; because to do so would allow us to never have to walk even one step in the Schindlers shoes because the price they have had to pay is too high. Visit: www.terrisfight.org at the Terris Day 2010 link. Join them in your state so that if something should ever happen to your spouse, child, or loved one, America will now be better-prepared and so will your family.
As long as this is an ongoing problem, it deserves attention. There should be no more Terrys. However, I have heard little about similar cases ever since Ms. Schiavo was offed.
Terri Schiavo was on the receiving end of a death panel.
How about a Terri’s Law to allow parent to intervene when an unfaithful husband wants to kill off his disabled wife so he can marry the woman he’s living with?
http://reasonmclucus.tripod.com/Terri_divorce.htm
waiting on FR’s own death squad to tell us to “move on already”... I ask the ladies on that panel, would you want your abusive estranged husband, who had already “moved on” to another woman to make that decision for you? Would you want to be starved and dehydrated to death in a way we don’t even allow for animals or prisoners? Would you want a corrupt court system to decide whether you live or die? Why is everyone on that side so afraid of the truth? They remind me of abortion defenders who refuse to call the unborn lives “babies”. Never forget, never let go, never get complacent.
Terri Schiavo was executed by the State of Florida.
She was not “dying without dignity”, she was not “terminally ill”, and according to the medical lawsuit her husband won, her life expectancy (and the money awarded to pay for her palliative care medical expenses) was expected to be another twenty years or more at the time of the settlement.
She was finally executed via court ordered starvation and dehydration, after several unsuccessfull previous attempts, in an unquestionably cruel and unusual punishment,
What was her crime?
She became a “burden” to her estranged husband(and his mistress) and at his direction “the government”, via the judicial system, long after the monetary settlement that was designated by the lawsuit to cover her anticipated future medical expenses was deemed better spent on lawyers intent upon affecting a new legal precedence of a “duty to die”.
Am I still extremely bitter over losing the fight against unconstitutional acts by government entities to leave poor Terri Schiavo alone?
Yes!
Glad to see a few million more people come late to the fight.
Forgive me if I don’t jump for joy that some people are awakening to the danger of government controll of health care.
Terri Schiavo is still dead.
Anyone who
I was around when it was happening... and made myself ill fighting for her life... and I would do it again...and again.. it was at that moment that I stopped respecting Jeb “Pontius” Bush... he COULD have stepped in, and chose not to...he chose to wash his hands and let her be murdered.
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