Bobby Schindler Decries Current Plague in US of Hospitals Denying Life Sustaining Treatment

Commentary by Bobby Schindler

June 16, 2008 (LifeSiteNews.com) - Recently, yet another situation similar to that of my sister Terri Schiavo has made headlines. In West Palm Beach, Florida, Raymond Weber is asking the court to dehydrate his disabled wife, Karen, to death.

If you have read any of the reports in mainstream media, it’s just another case of a husband looking out for the “best interest” of his spouse. And just as in Terri’s case, Raymond Weber is asking the government to deliberately kill his wife who is not dying and is guilty of nothing more than having difficulty swallowing and therefore needing help, in the form of a feeding tube, to eat.

Not surprisingly, in a story by the AP, was a quote from the husband’s attorney who so touchingly referred to his client’s brain-injured wife as a “vegetable,” thus offending the tens of thousands of people and their families who do live with a profound brain injury.

The reporter also wrote that the decision whether Karen should live or die will depend upon whether or not a committee finds her “competent” to go on living. Yes, that is correct, competent enough to live. I guess passing an IQ test will be next.

Factors such as what is being taught in our medical schools, the breakdown of our health care system, the powerful influence of assisted suicide organizations, and the propaganda of our mainstream media have taken their toll.

As a result, the physically and mentally “inferior” are being denied the most basic care—food and water—in our nation’s medical facilities every day. (Thank goodness we have laws making it a felony if we do the same to an animal, although I would expect there would be a greater outcry if it were the family pets at risk.)

 

http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2008/jun/08061602.html

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This story really affects me

I was a member of Blogs for Terri, and my heart still goes out to her wonderful parents and brother who only wanted to be allowed to love her no matter what.  I remember vividly all the people who stood up for Terri outside her hospital and tried so valiantly to rescue her (including our Republican legislature).  I feel terribly sad and completely powerless just thinking about it again.  "Assisted suicide" is one thing.  Slowly dehydrating and starving a person to death is sheer torture for both the victim and certainly for their family as well.  People who decry waterboarding as they do on the Left, then turn around and fully support this type of human abuse, represent the most illiberal hypocrisy imagineable - except, of course, for the equally illiberal hypocrisy that approves of murdering children who could survive on their own if given a chance to do so.  And that just reminds me of one more reason why I don't want Barack Obama to be my President. When it comes to the ethics of human life, his record is utterly appalling.  In this matter, John McCain has consistently been an ally of the helpless.