| | Pete, I've been following this case lately, though not in great depth, and it's difficult to be certain one is getting the story accurately from television and the newspapers. That being said, it appears that there is not any written documentation of Terry Schiavo's wishes; she did not have a living will. However, it's reasonable to assume that she would not want to be kept alive in the state she's in; who would?
It's being said that her husband is lying, that she did not say this to him, It's said that he's lying in order to get her insurance money when she dies. But apparently that money is already gone, having been used for fifteen years' worth of medical expenses. And recently, a wealthy man offered him a million dollars if he'd give her care over to her parents, as they want him to do; he has refused. So it's not money he's after. I believe, although I'm not positive, that he could divorce her if he chose to.
There is a great hue and cry about what will be the manner of her death: the removal of her feeding tube. It's being said that she will die in agony. Her doctors say that is nonsense, that the centers in her brain that could cause suffering have been destroyed, and that she will peacefully, and without pain, sink into a coma as a prelude to death.
More to the point, this is not by any stretch of any laws the business of Congress. To step in and make a law in order to satisfy their own desires in this case, is illegal, unconstitutional, and immoral. It is the business only of the husband and the woman's doctors. The husband says she would want to die. Her doctors say she is not aware and that there is not the least chance that she can recover, even to a minimal extent. The courts agree. That should have ended the issue.
Barbara
|
|