It took me hours to search for new info (no luck), read through the FR posts - muck through the offense of Schiavo, who now has the ACLU on his side (see #2053), and Felos, who the press keeps quoting without telling the world that Felos is a famous right-to-kill advocate who's built a career around exploiting Terri and others he pretends to care about, even appearing on Oprah and writing a book.
The ACLJ (American Center for Law and Justice) has been following Terri's case, with updates at their website: http://www.aclj.org Now that the ACLU has joined the enemy, perhaps we can recruit Jay Sekulow for Terri and for life: ACLJ.org: Legal Helpline: 1-800-296-4529 Please keep contacting friendly and unfriendly individuals involved in Terri's case. Info at #2121. Craig Waters at the FSC told the press that he's receiving nothing like the number of phone calls he received during election 2000. Let's help him out.
Craig Waters, (850) 414-7641, s/c 994-7641, watersc@flcourts.org |
|
'Save Terri' calls are pouring in
DEMOCRAT STAFF WRITER Thousands of people from around the country have been calling and e-mailing state offices in Tallahassee, urging officials to save Terri Schiavo. And somehow, many of those messages have found their way to Craig Waters. Waters, the Florida Supreme Court's spokesman, said he's personally taken dozens of calls, including one from a woman from Calgary, Canada, who offered to save the 39-year-old Schiavo, who has been in a Pinellas Park hospice. "She wanted to take (Schiavo) back to Canada to care for her," Waters said. "I told her I had no authority for that kind of request." Schiavo suffered brain damage in 1990 after her heart stopped because of a suspected potassium imbalance. Since then, doctors have kept her alive with food and water tubes. Her parents and other family members have been engaged in a legal struggle with her husband, Michael, who said Terri did not want to be kept alive artificially. After Michael Schiavo finally won a legal decision to have his wife taken off her feeding tubes, the Legislature on Tuesday approved a special bill giving Gov. Jeb Bush the power to order the feeding tubes reactivated. Terri began receiving liquids intravenously later that day. "I had one woman, from somewhere out West, cry almost the whole time I was on the phone with her," Waters said. "She was very concerned that, as she put it, this woman's life was being ended against her will." The Supreme Court, which so far has not addressed the Schiavo case, has received more than 100 calls about it to its various offices, Waters said. "They're very emotional about the subject," he said. Bush spokeswoman Alia Faraj said the Governor's Office had gotten 165,411 e-mails about Schiavo since Aug. 27 and "thousands of phone calls." Faraj said the office normally gets about 5,000 e-mails a week on average. "We don't have the lines to handle that many calls," she said, adding she didn't know the nature of particular messages but that "people are generally in support of saving Schiavo." Representatives for House Speaker Johnnie Byrd, R-Plant City, and Senate President Jim King, R-Jacksonville, did not know how many calls were received on the Schiavo controversy but said many had expressed their thanks. Waters recalled a time when phone calls about a controversial issue were even more frequent. "This is nothing like the 2000 election cases," Waters said. "My phone became unusable. I'd pick it up to make a call and there would already be someone on the line." Contact reporter James L. Rosica at (850) 599-2304 or jlrosica@tallahassee.com. |
I have long wanted to see what Christine looked like as her case was very painful for me personally to read about...she was a young very disturbed girl who lost her mother at age 4 and became an angry teenager, according to what I have read.
Note that her father states openly that his decision was based on what he would have wanted in the same situation, not on what he felt Christine would have wanted. It is so easy for these "family" members to make decisions of death for others, isn't it?
I have long wanted to see what Christine looked like as her case was very painful for me personally to read about...she was a young very disturbed girl who lost her mother at age 4 and became an angry teenager, according to what I have read.
Note that her father states openly that his decision was based on what he would have wanted in the same situation, not on what he felt Christine would have wanted. It is so easy for these "family" members to make decisions of death for others, isn't it?
100??? That's it??? They should have gotten thousands by now!!! We need to get busy!!