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To: Ohioan from Florida; Goodgirlinred; Miss Behave; cyn; Abby4116; Alissa; AlwaysFree; amdgmary; ...
Senator Rick Santorum stands as an example of how Terri's Legacy is a factor in defining the right versus the left. The left, the dems, now are consistently holding up the issue of whether a candidate supported efforts to keep Terri alive. To the left, it seems, not agreeing with efforts to kill Terri is egregious, tantamount to ..(It is hard to come up with a comparison to once egregious sin because the terms are now acceptable behavior to the left) To the left more and more, support of someone like Terri is a sin most unforgiveable. Makes it easy for fence riders to choose.

Santorum has repeatedly drawn heat as the voice of the extreme right on controversial social issues such as abortion and gay marriage -- during an interview he infamously compared gay sex to "man-on-dog" sex -- and championing Terri Schiavo's right to remain on life support.

In 11th hour, Santorum pulling out all stops

8mm


665 posted on 09/19/2006 3:45:59 AM PDT by 8mmMauser (Jezu ufam Tobie...Jesus I trust in Thee)
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To: All
The Texas Futile Care Law

Is it care which is futile for a patient or is it care for a patient whose life is futile?

A parallel can be drawn to the definition of Futile care much as Clinton obfuscated the meaning of the simple term, "is". Futile care may be construed as the provision of useless medication, i.e. acne cream for someone with severe burns. Or it can be construed as care for someone whose life is futile. To the well meaning, the first interpretation may be acceptable and to the bioethicists the second interpretation is a useful tool to justify the snuffing of a victim. The following is discussed in ProLifeBlogs...

......................

We've covered several distressing cases involving the infamous Texas Futile Care Law that grants hospitals "the immoral power over life and death and forces beleaguered families into an 11th-hour scramble to save their loved ones." Howard Witt, a Chicago Tribune senior correspondent, has written an excellent article (HT: BlogsforTerri) covering the case of Kalilah Roberson-Reese:

HOUSTON -- If it had been up to her doctors, the Houston hospital where she was treated and the laws of the state of Texas, Kalilah Roberson-Reese would be dead by now.

Instead, the severely brain-damaged 29-year-old woman is being cared for in a Lubbock nursing home, where she's become a focal point in a growing struggle over a controversial Texas law that permits hospitals to withdraw life support from patients whose conditions they deem hopeless -- even if family members object.

As Witt explains, and as we've observed on several occasions, under the state's ridiculous Futile Care Law, a hospital seeking to discontinue treatment can pull the plug on a patient after giving the family 10 days to find an alternate facility. (Note that 10 days is completely inadequate and few are able to meet this deadline)
"This law allows doctors and hospitals to abandon patients and provides them safe harbor and immunity to do it," said Jerri Ward, an Austin attorney who has filed several lawsuits to prevent doctors from ending treatment. "The Hippocratic oath has morphed from treating illness and saving people's lives to allowing doctors to make subjective quality-of-life decisions about ... who should die."
Jerri Ward has been instrumental in helping families find alternate facilities and working with hospitals, often obtaining more time for the family. We certainly hope the future brings changes to both the law and the mindset that has brought about the present circumstances enabling the unilateral withdrawal of treatment against the wishes of the patient and family.

Wesley Smith has more: dying isn't dead: It is living. If doctors and bioethics committees are given the right to refuse wanted life-sustaining treatment--including tube-supplied sustenance--based on their judgments about the quality of a patient's life, then the most fundamental purpose of medicine has been subverted.

Escaping the Texas Futile Care Law

8mm

666 posted on 09/19/2006 4:17:01 AM PDT by 8mmMauser (Jezu ufam Tobie...Jesus I trust in Thee)
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To: 8mmMauser; floriduh voter
I was just looking for US History for one of my kids and look what I found.

A Right to Die

It's not what we need to study right now but I can only guess that it will be slanted. So much of the curriculum now days is very liberally slanted.

670 posted on 09/19/2006 5:59:31 AM PDT by tutstar (Baptist ping list-freepmail to get on or off)
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To: 8mmMauser

hope you're having fun and a bttt for Rick Santorum. He's doing well in his campaign.


732 posted on 09/22/2006 5:13:25 PM PDT by floriduh voter (www.conservative-spirit.org or Join Terri's Legacy List Contact: 8mmmauser)
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