To: zot
The decision in this case should have been simple. Her husband wants her to die. Her parents want her to live. Nobody knows what she wants. Regardless of how disabled she is, it hurts no one to give her to her parents and let them take care of her. Actually, it hurts a lot of people. All of them very justly.
There's a lot of corruption in this case. If Terri lives, it will almost certainly be exposed. Only if she dies is there any hope of keeping it covered up, or at least 'contained'.
317 posted on
03/21/2005 7:08:45 PM PST by
supercat
("Though her life has been sold for corrupt men's gold, she refuses to give up the ghost.")
To: supercat
Actually, it hurts a lot of people. All of them very justly. There's a lot of corruption in this case. If Terri lives, it will almost certainly be exposed. Only if she dies is there any hope of keeping it covered up, or at least 'contained'.
Excellent point. And I think the focal point of this corruption is the one who ordered her killed.
319 posted on
03/21/2005 7:26:38 PM PST by
zot
(GWB -- four more years!)
To: supercat
I still do not understand why people so believe in a man who was in Terry's life a brief time when compared to her family and childhood friends who say Terry was a practicing Catholic, was very close to her parents, and NEVER mentioned she would want to die in a situation like this.
To: supercat
Mikey can keep it contained upon succeeding in offing Terri, only if he refrains from suing his opponents for libeling/slandering him. Otherwise the facts have to be opened up.
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