The article, Assisted
suicide, euthanasia become issues in Schiavo case was listed
in the "recent
articles" section of terrisfight.org. [Note: The
original content
of terrisfight.org was removed from the internet approximately three months
after Terri Schindler Schiavo was forcibly dehydrated
to death. Visit the archived site here.
At some point 40 medical affidavits were added to the renovated
site.]
Assisted
suicide, euthanasia become issues in Schiavo case
Jan 16, 2004
By Joni B. Hannigan
[Commentary is
in blue.]
CLEARWATER,
Fla. (BP)--Right-to-die and right-to-life proponents continue to
square off in the widely publicized case of Terri Schiavo, a
40-year-old disabled woman whose husband is seeking the removal
of her feeding and hydration tubes. [Michael
is seeking Terri's death, not simply the removal of her
gastric tube. The writer is giving the impression that Terri has
more than one tube. According to terrisfight.org, Terri has a
gastric tube:
Terri
receives food and water by way of a gastric feeding tube.
(Quote source: Terri's
life changes)
The gastric
tube is the vehicle Terri's medical caregivers chose to provide
her with nutrition and hydration. And no, removing the gastric
tube does not necessarily equal death in Terri's case. (Since
Terri does not fit the legal description of a person in a
persistent vegetative state this should not even be an issue.)
Removal of Terri's feeding tube will not necessarily result in
her death unless she is also illegally denied food and
water by mouth or maliciously sedated in order to prevent her
from being responsive enough to swallow soft food.
Terri was
placed on a gastric tube for the convenience of the nursing
staff, not because she cannot swallow. In her normal state
(minus the manipulative sedation of euthanasia proponents) she
can swallow.
Michael,
with the aid of Florida Circuit Court Judge Greer, is trying to
commit euthanasia, which is irrefutably illegal. Euthanasia is
"the intentional killing by act or omission of a dependent
human being for his or her alleged benefit." That is why
Michael often uses the phrase, "This is Terri's wish."
This is conditioning so the public will think that Terri has
chosen a voluntary euthanasia. A voluntary euthanasia is
"when the person who is killed has requested to be
killed." This is clearly prohibited in the
Florida
statues.
They are
trying to commit euthanasia By omission. This is
"intentionally causing death by not providing necessary and
ordinary (usual and customary) care or food and water. This is
clearly prohibited in the
Florida
statutes. (Definitions source: Euthanasia
Definitions)]
Denver-based
End of Life Choices -- formerly known as the Hemlock Society --
launched a $60,000 campaign in December throughout Florida,
where the Schiavo case is in the courts, to raise public
awareness of living wills and other instruments for
decision-making regarding medical and therapeutic care,
according to an Associated Press report.
"Today's headlines are full of the pain of unspoken
wishes," said one of the ads, which were purchased in major
newspapers in Miami, Orlando, Tampa and Tallahassee. "Save
your loved ones the anguish of making a difficult decision when
you are unable to speak for yourself."
As Southern Baptists throughout the country prepare for Sanctity
of Human Life Sunday, Jan. 18, the discussion about living wills
has prompted concerns related to assisted suicide and
euthanasia. At issue is how easily the lines might become
blurred between helping find comfort for someone who is ready to
die and causing someone's death outright. [Living
wills were designed by euthanasia proponents. Why does this
author not mention this important fact and explain that
the pro living answer to living wills are will to live
documents?
TERRI'S DILEMMA
Terri Schiavo is a brain-damaged woman who collapsed in 1990 due
to unusual circumstances that caused her heart to stop beating.
She is now in what some doctors term a "persistent
vegetative state." [Terri did not
suffer cardiac arrest. Her heart did not stop beating. This
myth was dispelled at least as far back as
October
27, 2003
but terrisfight.org linked to this article that promotes this
myth that helps Michael's cause. Medical records and expert
medical testimony indicates that Terri was strangled, but that
information is not mentioned in this article.] (See:Terri
Schiavo Cognitively Able)
This
author does not mention the
bone
scan and Michael Schiavo's extremely suspicious actions over
a period of years which gives much insight into the reason Terri
Schiavo collapsed. Also see: Petition
to Remove Guardian (Michael Schiavo)
The question is whether it is in Terri's best interest to
continue to provide her sustenance through feeding and hydration
tubes. [It is not in Terri's best
interest to be sustained through a feeding tube. It is in
Terri's best interests to receive therapy and receive her food
by mouth. Both of these are denied her by a lawbreaking
estranged husband in collusion with Judge Greer.] A
Florida circuit court judge ordered the tubes removed on Oct.15
after Terri's husband and legal guardian, Michael Schiavo,
convinced the court that Terri had expressed a wish to not live
on life support. Terri, however, left no advance directive.
Meanwhile, Terri's parents, Bob and Mary Schindler, believe her
condition could improve with therapy. [Terri
is guaranteed the right
to receive therapy under Florida law. This fact is critical
for the public to be aware of but is not mentioned in any terrisfight.org
endorsed articles that I have seen.]
In Florida, people in a "persistent vegetative state"
are considered terminally ill and basic nutrition is considered
"artificial life support." [The
author should have said that "assisted nutrition"
is considered "artificial life support."]
The case received heightened international attention several
days after the judge's order, when the Florida legislature
empowered Gov. Jeb Bush to issue an executive order, which was
called "Terri's Law," to provide for the reinsertion
of Terri's feeding tube. It was predicted Terri would die of
starvation and dehydration within seven to 10 days if her only
source of nutrition and hydration were not reestablished.
[It is a myth that Governor Bush did not have the
authority to intervene until he was "given the
authority" by the Florida legislature. He has always had the
authority to intervene:
Florida
Gov. Jeb Bush has always had the authority and the legal
obligation to use his executive powers to halt the death of
Terri-Schindler-Schiavo and to launch a criminal investigation
into the case, according to attorneys queried by the
governor's legal office yesterday.
(Quote
source: Lawyers:
Bush can step in for Schiavo)
Corral Ridge
Ministries (also linked to from terrisfight.org) is going along
with the program and promoting the same misinformation on their
website: "The Florida legislature stepped in six days after
Terri’s feeding tube was removed to pass a measure that gave
Governor Jeb Bush authority to order her tube reinserted."
(Quote source: Corral
Ridge Ministries: January Impact)
Michael Schiavo, according to court records and according to the
Schindlers, has not sought aggressive therapy for Terri in
nearly a decade. After winning a malpractice settlement in 1992,
Michael placed a "do not resuscitate" order on Terri
and then began a long-term relationship with another woman more
than eight years ago, with whom he has fathered two children.
[The
truth is that Michael has not permitted Terri to have any
therapy in over a decade.(1)
Saying that
he has not sought aggressive therapy gives the impression that
he has sought some therapy for Terri. Why would the
people in charge of terrisfight.org permit an article about
Terri's situation that contains misinformation and even disinformation
such as this?]
Michael Schiavo's attorney, George Felos, author of a book
titled, "Litigation as Spiritual Practice,"
successfully argued for the "right to die" before the
Florida Supreme Court more than a decade ago. His philosophies
conflict with those of the Schindlers, who are devout Catholics
and proponents of the right to life. Felos is currently
representing Michael Schiavo in a lawsuit contending that Gov.
Bush's actions were unconstitutional.
Pat Anderson, attorney for the Schindlers, told the Florida
Baptist Witness in an interview that End-of-Life Choices (the
former Hemlock Society) is using Terri's situation
inappropriately.
"They want to take advantage of Terri's situation to prey
on the fears of older Floridians," Anderson said.
"Terri's case is not about living wills," she noted. [That
is correct. But euthanasia proponents, who originated the idea
of living wills, are capitalizing on it. It is up to real
anti-euthanasia, pro-life individuals and organizations to
counteract their agenda and expose "living wills" for
the euthanasia tools that they are.]
Because Terri did not have an advance directive or living will
on file, it's been only the court's determination on the word of
Terri's husband that has caused the problem, Anderson said. [Yes,
and Terri's cohabiting-with-another-woman husband
"remembered" that Terri said she would "would
never want to live like that" only after he was
awarded the huge settlement which was earmarked for Terri's
therapy. The court, in defiance of the law, permitted Michael to
deny Terri therapy and instead, use the funds to seek her
death.]
End-of-Life Choices, on its website, clearly advocates providing
"options in dying for terminally ill, mentally competent
persons," and it promotes "the right of these
individuals to hasten their death under careful
safeguards."
In Terri's case, however, she is not able to demonstrate mental
competence and there has been considerable controversy over
whether she is in a persistent vegetative state. The
organization nevertheless insisted on a link between the two in
a news release by its chief executive officer, David Brand.
[Terri's
inability to demonstrate mental competence is because she has
been deprived of her legal right to gain it via rehabilitation.
The reason there is considerable controversy over whether Terri
is in a persistent vegetative state is because a dozen doctors
testified that she is not in such a state and only a handful
testified that she is! Judge Greer chose the testimony
that furthered the euthanasia agenda in clear defiance of
Florida law which defines a persistent vegetative state:
"Persistent
vegetative state" means a permanent and irreversible
condition of unconsciousness in which there is:
(a) The
absence of voluntary action or cognitive behavior of any
kind.
(b) An
inability to communicate or interact purposefully with the
environment.]
"It
is our hope that tragic situations such as the Terri Schiavo
case can be avoided in the future by encouraging people to speak
out about end-of-life choices," Brand said.
Anderson told the Associated Press that the organization is bent
on promoting its agenda, even at the expense of causing
confusion.
"Floridians need to know that this is the Hemlock Society
with a new name, and they are trying to hide their
pro-euthanasia agenda," Anderson told the AP. "They
are using Terri Schiavo to promote euthanasia."
As an attorney, Anderson said she is weary of living wills
because there is too much involved to outline what should happen
in each and every situation. She also said living wills can be
treated as "death warrants" by which medical personnel
might refuse to render care in a complicated situation. This
is an excellent point. Due to vague language used in such legal
documents, living wills can be used as death warrants in
uncomplicated cases as well:
Since
an attending physician who may be unfamiliar with the signer's
wishes and values has the power and authority to carry out the
signer's directive, certain terms contained in the document
may be interpreted by the physician in a manner that was not
intended by the signer.
(Quote
source: International
Task Force: Advanced Directives)
C. Ben Mitchell, associate professor of bioethics &
contemporary culture at Trinity International University in
Deerfield, Ill., and a leading Southern Baptist ethicist, told
the Florida Baptist Witness he believes living wills are
necessary only when patients and their families might disagree
about end of life care. Otherwise, next of kin should make those
decisions.
"Living wills are not dying declarations," Mitchell
said. "Living wills should not be used as a means to kill
patients, but as a way to respect their wishes. [Living
wills are used as a means to kill patients, and this
should have been stated.]
"The Schiavo case should remind us of the importance of
having conversations about end of life treatment with our
physicians and family members," Mitchell said.
"Medicine should not prolong the dying process, but neither
should dying patients have to fear that their lives will be
shortened by overzealous family members who have financial
conflicts of interest."
Anderson said there is room for fuzzy decisions and blurred
lines. "Unfortunately, fidelity, like modesty, is a passe
virtue," she said in reference to Michael Schiavo's
cohabitation with another woman. "Adultery and abandonment
don't seem to count in this case."
[But
there is no room for defying Florida statues in order to try to
achieve a euthanasia precedent. Euthanasia (denying regular food and
water to cause death) and assisted suicide is not
legal in the state of Florida. Period.]
This
article is an example of propaganda.
Propagandists
use a variety of propaganda techniques to influence opinions
and to avoid the truth. Often these techniques rely on some
element of censorship or manipulation, either omitting
significant information or distorting it. (Quote source: Propaganda
techniques: Disinfopedia)
--30--
Joni B. Hannigan is managing editor of Florida Baptist Witness.
Go to www.FloridaBaptistWitness.com. For more information on the
Schiavo case, see the special section, "Terri Schiavo: A
life at Stake," at www.FloridaBaptistWitness.com.
notes:
(1)
"...her husband has refused to provide his wife any
rehabilitation or therapy for more than ten years;" (quote
source: Terri
Schiavo's Life and Death)
Scientology Vs Terri Schiavo
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