Posted on 03/14/2006 11:28:51 AM PST by KevinNuPac
In the caught-on-tape manhandling, Martin appeared to do little to resist when a group of guards kneed, punched, wrestled and pressure-pointed him. The guards tried to revive the rubber-legged boy by shoving ammonia capsules in his face -- a practice that another boy from the boot camp said was common.
Yes, that would be smelling salts or equivalent -- available in many a first-aid kit. The reporter's phrase, "ammonia-wielding," sounded like somebody got a bottle of household cleaner and held it under the boy's nose.
I figured the guards got frustrated when he didn't revive -- perhaps clapped a hand over his mouth and jammed the smelling salts under his nose to get a bigger dose. But ammonia is poisonous and can only be given in small doses. It works to irritate the throat and lungs so that the recipient reacts by breathing harder and gulping for air -- and that is the resuscitation. If he breathes hard but can only gulp more poisonous ammonia fumes (remember, they're holding his mouth shut), it kills him.
That is a fascinating way to look at the deeper roots behind the word juggling games of the dark side. I had never considered that perspective but it all falls into place.
SB 1280, the Starvation and Dehydration of Persons with Disabilities Prevention Act, authored by Senator Bill Morrow (R-Carlsbad) would have established a presumption that every person legally incapable of making healthcare decisions would direct his/her healthcare providers to err on the side of life, continuing to provide nutrition and hydration unless clear and convincing evidence proves that the patient desires otherwise.
Despite Morrow's explanation of the pains of dehydration, a process which can take up to three weeks, the committee voted to defeat the measure, arguing that the clear and convincing evidence standard was too strict and could never be met.
California Senate Committee Votes Against Disabled and Dying
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Terri on the road to recovery before the second stage began.
I bite my tongue.
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WASHINGTON, May 10, 2006 (LifeSiteNews.com) - U.S. President George W. Bush has endorsed his brother, Florida Governor Jeb Bush, as a potential future U.S. president.
Jeb would make a "great president" of the United States, the U.S. President said, according to An AP report. The president admitted he did not know whether his brother had any intention of running for the Oval Office: "It's up to Jeb to make a decision to run," he told reporters at a roundtable interview with several Florida newspapers.
"I have no idea what he's going to do," Bush added. "I've asked him that question myself. I truly don't think he knows." The president emphasized that Jeb's "political future is very bright - if he chooses to have a political future. But he is an independent-minded guy. His priority is his family."
The Florida Governor has been featured in numerous LifeSiteNews.com stories as a defender of human life and family values. Jeb Bush is also a devout Catholic, and has joined the Catholic fraternal organization the Knights of Columbus which is known for its strong pro-life and pro-family stands.
He was a key reason why Terri Schiavo was able to live as long as she did, before the courts eventually ruled against "Terri's Law" - a law initiated by Gov. Bush to prevent the starvation of Terri Schiavo when her estranged husband attempted the manoeuvre in 2003. (http://www.lifesite.net/ldn/2004/may/04050601.html)
In 2004, the Governor attempted to have the unborn child of a severely disabled woman be appointed a court guardian. (http://www.lifesite.net/ldn/2004/jan/04011202.html)
The Florida Governor was successful in implementing parental notification laws in the state, after nearly two decades of wrangling between the courts, the legislature, voters and governors. The law, which requires physicians to inform parents before their minor daughter is scheduled for an abortion, was signed into law by Bush last May. (http://www.lifesite.net/ldn/2005/may/05052701.html)
The Governor lamented the loss of life of an unborn child when a 13-year-old in his state was given permission by a judge to have an abortion. (http://www.lifesite.net/ldn/2005/may/05050405.html)
Last year, the younger of the Bush brothers unveiled a counselling plan for women considering abortion to help them consider alternatives such as adoption. (http://www.lifesite.net/ldn/2005/mar/05030202.html)
The Governor has been on the cutting edge of pro-life initiatives. When a pro-life film by a Hollywood filmmaker was yet to be released, a copy had already been requested by Jeb Bush. The film, A Distant Thurnder, is a courtroom thriller which exposes the horror of partial-birth abortion. (http://www.lifesite.net/ldn/2005/oct/05101105.html)
On the pro-family front, Jeb Bush has been no less active. The governor applauded the US Supreme Court last year for rejecting an appeal of the state's ban on adoption by homosexuals. Florida is the only state with a complete ban against same-sex adoption. (http://www.lifesite.net/ldn/2005/jan/05011004.html)
US President Endorses Catholic, Pro-Life Brother Jeb for President
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TAMPA - When the Florida Senate rejected two constitutional amendments on education in the closing days of the recent legislative session, it didn't just hand Gov. Jeb Bush a stunning setback.
It also raised questions about the future direction of the Florida Republican Party.
In the two votes, maverick Republicans joined Democrats to chip away at pieces of Bush's education reforms, the signal achievement of his political career.
GOP Votes Suggest Centrist Future
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WHEN U.S. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, a heart surgeon, declared that in his medical opinion Terri Schiavo was not brain dead though he had never examined her the world scoffed. Under a bill to be voted on in the House today, it is conceivable that patients could have their life support removed after such a long-distance diagnosis.
One provision of House Bill 656 would allow a patient to be declared "near death" or "permanently unconscious" by "two physicians or a physician and an ARNP." Nowhere does it say that the physician or advanced registered nurse practitioner (ARNP) has to be one who has attended or treated the patient.
The bill also allows the attending ARNP alone to determine whether the patient "lacks the capacity to make health care decisions."
If this bill were to become law, a husband could legally pull the plug on his wife without a doctor who has examined her ever being involved in the decision.
The bill contains dubious definitions of "near death" and "permanently unconscious," and it gives a tremendous and unwarranted amount of power to ARNPs. ARNPs are nurses with graduate degrees in certain nursing specialties. They are highly trained. But they are not medical doctors. And yet this bill treats them as such.
This bill has been a mess ever since it was introduced. Its supporters claim that it merely clarifies when life-sustaining treatment can be withdrawn. But it does far more than clarify. It makes it easier to deny such treatment. It even manages to cut the attending physician from the process.
This is a terrible bill. The House should kill it and try again next year.
Inviting death: Pull the plug on resuscitation bill
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North Country Gazette
TALLAHASSEE---Within hours after Hillsborough County medical examiner Dr. Vernard Adams issued his findings that a 14-year-old boy who was beaten at a Bay County boot camp had died by suffocation at the hands of sheriff's officials who had shoved ammonia capsules up the boy's nose, Gov. Jeb Bush wrote the Bay County Sheriff and urged him to fire the camp's former supervisor.
The juvenile boot camp in Panama City where Martin Lee Anderson died on Jan. 5 has been closed. ''I believe it is essential that you identify and take appropriate disciplinary actions for each individual who may have had knowledge or responsibility for authorizing guards to force youths to inhale ammonia in order to obtain compliance,'' Bush wrote Friday to Bay County Sheriff Frank McKeithen.
Gov. Bush Seeks Ouster Of Boot Camp Supervisor
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But I don't want you to think Skinner got off scot-free. Oh, no. Not by a long shot. She was convicted of filing a false police report. The judge ordered her to pay for the cost of the police investigation a $750 fine.
Had Skinner shot her baby three or four hours later when she had been delivered, she would no doubt be facing life imprisonment. But because she shot her daughter while she was still within her even on the scheduled day of her birth she doesn't serve a day in jail.
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What particularly strikes me in The Lost Tools of Learning is the need to learn rhetoric. Sayers said young people were helpless before the onslaught of words, words, words in 1947. Things are so much worse now! That's about all the "press" and public schools do nowadays -- twist words in order to twist minds.
If our children do not have clear words, how will they find The Word?
The nation's murder statistics would take quite a turn for the worse if we started counting dead babies.
I'll believe this stuff when Terri Schiavo endorses Jeb, in writing.
Yikes! Don't encourage them!
Florida has really tough battery and murder laws, doesn't it? They can put an official letter of reprimand in your file! They can suspend you with or without pay! You might even get fired!
Jeb Bush should be fired for allowing a disabled Floridian to be dehydrated and starved to death. He is the worst of the worst of the Republicans. They all make me sick. How they turned on Terri the minute they thought the polls were going south. I will never get over it.
Absolutely awful English.
Actually, it isn't English at all. It's bureaucratese, and what it says in a spectacular outburst of buzzwords is "cover this up."
Seems like they are protecting the sheriffs who killed the young man. Until they arrest them, book them and arraign them, I believe this is another Florida coverup of a crime by the state.
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