Terri Schiavo's case truly represents "A Great Political Issue."
Excerpts from:
'A Great Political Issue'
By Richard Cohen
The Washington Post
March 22, 2005
Sen. Bill Frist watched a videotape last week of Terri Schiavo made by her parents in 2001. He did this in his capacity as Senate majority leader and as a renowned physician. In both roles he performed miserably. As a senator, he showed himself to be an unscrupulous opportunist. As a physician, he was guilty of practicing medicine without a brain.
After viewing the tape, Frist felt confident in questioning the several courts and many doctors who -- apparently handicapped by firsthand examinations -- had erroneously concluded that Schiavo was in a "persistent vegetative state."
"I question it based on a review of the video footage," he told the Senate. "She certainly seems to respond to visual stimuli." Doubtful. What's more certain is that Frist and his colleagues were responding to political stimuli: the so-called right-to-life crowd.
Frist and his (mostly) GOP colleagues were operating under such pressure that they sometimes did not know which subterfuge to adopt.
Rep. Tom DeLay, the House majority leader, proved you don't need a medical degree to make foolish statements about Schiavo. "It won't take a miracle to help Terri Schiavo," he said, neglecting to cite his source. "It will only take the medical care and therapy that all patients deserve."
Someone -- no one knows who -- committed candor and truth in Washington (a federal offense?) by circulating a memo to Republicans alerting them to the obvious: Schiavo was "a great political issue." Frist, who is almost certainly running for president next time out, took umbrage at that: "I condemn the content of the memo," he umbraged, "and reaffirm that the interest in this case by myself (and others) is to assure that Mrs. Schiavo has another chance at life."
Congress was intent on intruding into a family matter in which the courts had ruled repeatedly in favor of the husband. The parents felt otherwise, granted, but they had had their day in court. [Ms. Schiavo's husband and parents fight has been reviewed by 19 judge in six court in 15 years since she had a heart attack that cut off oxygen to her brain.] Those courts did not rule as Congress would have liked and so, by pretty close to fiat -- no hearings, no witnesses and absolutely no thought -- the matter was moved to the federal courts, where the outcome will probably be what it was at the state level. A change in jurisdiction is not going to change Schiavo's condition [as we know it did not].
Terri Schiavo's husband said she would not want to live the way she does now -- and that she even said so. But she was only 26 when tragedy struck, probably too young to have given serious thought to these matters. Besides, what she once wanted is not the point. That person is gone -- or so say the experts and so say the courts that have heard from the experts. What remains is a legal case that no longer is about Schiavo. Instead it's about the politics of abortion -- right to life -- and political opportunism. Terri Schiavo lives so that others, notably Frist, can run for higher office. I know that by watching the tape.
'A Great Political Issue'
By Richard Cohen
The Washington Post
March 22, 2005
Sen. Bill Frist watched a videotape last week of Terri Schiavo made by her parents in 2001. He did this in his capacity as Senate majority leader and as a renowned physician. In both roles he performed miserably. As a senator, he showed himself to be an unscrupulous opportunist. As a physician, he was guilty of practicing medicine without a brain.
After viewing the tape, Frist felt confident in questioning the several courts and many doctors who -- apparently handicapped by firsthand examinations -- had erroneously concluded that Schiavo was in a "persistent vegetative state."
"I question it based on a review of the video footage," he told the Senate. "She certainly seems to respond to visual stimuli." Doubtful. What's more certain is that Frist and his colleagues were responding to political stimuli: the so-called right-to-life crowd.
Frist and his (mostly) GOP colleagues were operating under such pressure that they sometimes did not know which subterfuge to adopt.
Rep. Tom DeLay, the House majority leader, proved you don't need a medical degree to make foolish statements about Schiavo. "It won't take a miracle to help Terri Schiavo," he said, neglecting to cite his source. "It will only take the medical care and therapy that all patients deserve."
Someone -- no one knows who -- committed candor and truth in Washington (a federal offense?) by circulating a memo to Republicans alerting them to the obvious: Schiavo was "a great political issue." Frist, who is almost certainly running for president next time out, took umbrage at that: "I condemn the content of the memo," he umbraged, "and reaffirm that the interest in this case by myself (and others) is to assure that Mrs. Schiavo has another chance at life."
Congress was intent on intruding into a family matter in which the courts had ruled repeatedly in favor of the husband. The parents felt otherwise, granted, but they had had their day in court. [Ms. Schiavo's husband and parents fight has been reviewed by 19 judge in six court in 15 years since she had a heart attack that cut off oxygen to her brain.] Those courts did not rule as Congress would have liked and so, by pretty close to fiat -- no hearings, no witnesses and absolutely no thought -- the matter was moved to the federal courts, where the outcome will probably be what it was at the state level. A change in jurisdiction is not going to change Schiavo's condition [as we know it did not].
Terri Schiavo's husband said she would not want to live the way she does now -- and that she even said so. But she was only 26 when tragedy struck, probably too young to have given serious thought to these matters. Besides, what she once wanted is not the point. That person is gone -- or so say the experts and so say the courts that have heard from the experts. What remains is a legal case that no longer is about Schiavo. Instead it's about the politics of abortion -- right to life -- and political opportunism. Terri Schiavo lives so that others, notably Frist, can run for higher office. I know that by watching the tape.
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