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To: I still care
I think there were three witnesses that said Terri wanted to die. And their last names were Schiavo, Schiavo, and Schiavo.

Also these "witnesses" forgot she said it for SEVEN YEARS. Then, after they had collected the money intended for her rehabilitation, they suddenly remembered that she didn't want to be rehabilitated. Extraordinary coincidence.

17 posted on 04/08/2005 10:41:37 AM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: Cicero
Also these "witnesses" forgot she said it for SEVEN YEARS. Then, after they had collected the money intended for her rehabilitation, they suddenly remembered that she didn't want to be rehabilitated.

And if memory serves, the three Shaivo's claimed they heard Terri say simply that she wouldn't want to "live like that," in referring to an 80-something year old grandmom who had been kept alive with artificial respiration.

Obviously the Shaivo's, and Judge Greer, are so psychokinetic that they could go back in time 15 years to that luncheon (at the Buck Hotel, just outside Philadelphia) in order to read and decipher Terri's mind.

In reality, NO ONE wants to be an 84 year old dying grandmother on a respirator, which makes one wonder exactly what in the freaking world possessed Greer to side with the Shaivo's.

Methinks anyone who agreed with the execution of Terri Shindler Shaivo in reality has some sort of guilt at the way they think about one of their own disabled or elderly relatives -- and in fact simply wishes that someone or another would just die.

How else to explain the uncaring hate one must have in their heart in order to think that it's OK to starve some poor helpless disabled girl to death.

42 posted on 04/08/2005 11:28:50 AM PDT by Edit35
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