Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,764,603 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Too vigorously assisted suicide.


Opponents of assisted suicide assisted suicide: see euthanasia.  have good reasons for persisting in efforts to save Terri Schiavo's life. But supporters of assisted suicide may have even better ones.

The opponents have always asserted that allowing assisted suicide at all, while bad in itself, would lead to further evils: that we would start by allowing people who want to die to kill themselves, but end up allowing the killing of people who do not want to die. If we were supporters of assisted suicide, we would want to disprove disprove,
v to refute or to prove false by affirmative evidence to the contrary.
 these predictions. We would want to make sure that safeguards are in place to prevent such abuse.

The facts of this case suggest that existing safeguards are dangerously inadequate. The evidence that Mrs. Schiavo would have wanted the removal of the tube that brings her food and water appears sketchy at best. Even if we granted that she said both that she did not want to be on life support and that she would not want to be in a coma, it would not establish that she would not even want food and water when she is not in a coma.

Terri Schiavo has had no MRI 1. (application) MRI - Magnetic Resonance Imaging.
2. MRI - Measurement Requirements and Interface.
 or PET scan PET scan (pĕt) or positron emission tomography (pŏz`ĭtrŏn' ĭmĭsh`ən təmŏg`rəfē) . Only a CT scan CT scan: see CAT scan.


See CAT scan.
 has led some neurologists to conclude that her cerebral cortex cerebral cortex

Layer of gray matter that constitutes the outer layer of the cerebrum and is responsible for integrating sensory impulses and for higher intellectual functions.
 has liquefied; other neurologists dispute the possibility of reliably making that inference from CT scans. Many of the initial determinations of fact under Judge Greer relied on the testimony of Dr. Ronald Cranford. He is certainly a medical expert; but he is also a right-to-die zealot who advocates the removal of feeding tubes for patients with Alzheimer's dementia.

While several courts have been involved in litigation An action brought in court to enforce a particular right. The act or process of bringing a lawsuit in and of itself; a judicial contest; any dispute.

When a person begins a civil lawsuit, the person enters into a process called litigation.
 surrounding the case, the other courts have deferred to Judge Greer's questionable factual findings. The legal conclusions built on those factual findings do not inspire great confidence, either. It is hard to see how Mrs. Schiavo could be found to be in a "persistent vegetative state persistent vegetative state: see under coma, in medicine. " when Florida law defines that term as including "the absence of voluntary action or cognitive behavior of any kind." (Some of the doctors the judge consulted did not believe that she was in a persistent vegetative state.)

The dispute between Mrs. Schiavo's husband, who wants her to die, and her parents and siblings, who want to keep her alive, has perhaps inevitably led to ugly allegations all around. SOme of those who have fought to keep Mrs. Schiavo alive, including some congressmen, have speculated rather too freely about Mr. Schiavo's perfidy. But it is not necessary to believe the worst about him to think that it is madness to accept his word about his wife's wishes. He has fathered two children with another woman, to whom he has gotten engaged. It is not necessary to judge that behavior harshly to think that his desire to move on, however understandable, compromises his ability to represent his wife fairly.

Republicans and Democrats in Congress concluded that the situation required their intervention. After some embarrassingly uncoordinated un·co·or·di·nat·ed  
adj.
1. Lacking physical or mental coordination.

2. Lacking planning, method, or organization.



un
 attempts to pass a bill, a House committee issued a subpoena subpoena (səpē`nə) [Lat.,=under penalty], in law, an order to a witness to appear before a court. A subpoena ad testificandum [Lat.  that would have had the effect of keeping Mrs. Schiavo's tube from being disconnected (and could, in theory, have led to a clarification of some of the factual disputes in the case). Whatever one thinks of the merits of that use of the subpoena power, it seems remark ably highhanded high·hand·ed  
adj.
Arrogant; overbearing: was annoyed by the manager's highhanded attitude.



high
 of Judge Greer to flout flout  
v. flout·ed, flout·ing, flouts

v.tr.
To show contempt for; scorn: flout a law; behavior that flouted convention. See Usage Note at flaunt.

v.intr.
 it.

Congressional subpoenas have not heretofore been considered subject to the review of state courts--a point that was lost on all the commentators who confidently opined that it was the congressmen who were threatening the separation of powers separation of powers: see Constitution of the United States.
separation of powers

Division of the legislative, executive, and judicial functions of government among separate and independent bodies.
.

Next, Congress--having come back into session on an emergency basis--passed a law authorizing a federal court to review whether Mrs. Schiavo's constitutional rights were being violated. Opponents of the bill were put in an impossible argumentative Controversial; subject to argument.

Pleading in which a point relied upon is not set out, but merely implied, is often labeled argumentative. Pleading that contains arguments that should be saved for trial, in addition to allegations establishing a Cause of Action or
 position. On one hand, they had to believe that courts never simply make up the law as they go along: Judge Greer was, for their purposes, infallible. But then what was the harm of a review by a federal court? If a constitution al claim existed, they could hardly oppose its enforcement; and if one did not, the federal court would have to be trusted not to recognize one.

So opponents of the bill were left with various complaints of hypocrisy. The conservatives who wanted to save Mrs. Schiavo were said to be trampling on their traditional beliefs in federalism and the sanctity of marriage. The complaint about federalism would have more force if we had reason to think that the people of Florida, acting through their legislature, had prospectively blessed the decisions of Judge Greer. But Judge Greer has twisted the state's law; and the legislature has enacted a law designed to save Mrs. Schiavo's life, which the state's courts set aside. The sanctity of marriage, meanwhile, has never been held to be so absolute that authorities could not take action to prevent someone from killing a spouse.

It is hard, again, to believe that most citizens who approve of assisted suicide meant to create laws that would allow it in a case of this type. We applaud Congress for having taken corrective action. We hope that federal judges will follow the law it passed rather than emulate Judge Greer's willfulness--and that this case brings attention to the cavalier manner in which the law too often allows the killing of the sick.
COPYRIGHT 2005 National Review, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Publication:National Review
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 11, 2005
Words:898
Previous Article:Ruling out compromise.(changing state marriage law)
Next Article:Muscleheaded.(PUBLIC POLICY III)(Government Reform Committee's regulation on juvenile substance abuse)
Topics:



Related Articles
Assisted suicide and euthanasia: the cases are in the pipeline. (Civil Rights)
Death wars: as euthanasia advocates press their case, the moral health of the country is at stake.
Letter from Oregon: the state of euthanasia.
Choosing to die.(euthanasia supported by 76% of Canadian population)(Brief Article)
USA: "no" to assisted suicide.
'Double effect': getting the argument right.(physician-assisted suicide)
Other countries.(WORLD REPORT)
Media coverage.(Canada)(Brief Article)
Tom Harpur's "Right to Die.".(Canada)
Bishop Henry: 'fight euthanasia'.(Canada)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles