Denise said:Thank you Renata.
No problem
In other words, I really hope none of us are never in a situation of that woman's family, when we have to make that choice- her husband's or her parent's.
Denise said:Thank you Renata.
Denise said:What does dignified mean? And if she is not aware how does it matter?
Well, I came very late, as usual, to this interesting topic. Though I haven't read the full thread, I think I have an overview of what it is all about.renata said:In other words, I really hope none of us are never in a situation of that woman's family, when we have to make that choice- her husband's or her parent's.
Thank you for writing it, Pat.Patricio Elicer said:Thanks for reading this
Patricio Elicer said:Well, I came very late, as usual, to this interesting topic. Though I haven't read the full thread, I think I have an overview of what it is all about.
The story touches me very closely.
Patricio Elicer said:Well, I came very late, as usual, to this interesting topic. Though I haven't read the full thread, I think I have an overview of what it is all about.
The story touches me very closely.
I made the decision of not connecting him to the machine, and surprisingly enough, my mom totally agreed with me. It would have been his own decision after all. We had talked about this possibility before, many times.
So our stand was: if he is able to survive on his own, so be it. It turned out that he wasn't. He died after 15 painful days at the hospital.
Thanks for reading this.
[...*fighting back tears*...]
Order to feed comatose woman illegal, say experts
CLEARWATER, Fla. (AP) — Legal scholars predicted today that Gov. Jeb Bush's intervention in a bitter right-to-die case involving a brain-damaged woman would be ruled unconstitutional, and the husband's lawyer angrily complained the woman was "abducted from her deathbed."
"It was just an absolute trampling of her personal rights and her dignity," George Felos, the lawyer for Michael Schiavo, said on NBC's Today. "We believe that a court sooner or later, we hope sooner, will find this law to be unconstitutional."
Legal scholars also decried the move as an extraordinary end run around the courts. "In my view the bill is plainly unconstitutional," said University of Florida law professor Joseph Little.
[...]
Legal experts widely agreed that the governor and the legislature went too far.
"This particular administration has not yet understood why we have separation of powers," said former Florida Supreme Court justice Gerald Kogan. "They seem to believe that the governor and the legislature can do whatever they want and the courts should not interfere and that's not right."
Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe said: "I've never seen a case in which the state legislature treats someone's life as a political football in quite the way this is being done."
dissonance said:A lot of people seem to think that when Terri dies, her husband gets some large amount of money. According to this article, at any rate, the money is long gone.
It certainly paints the husband in a far more positive light. Actually, there are a number of things that make him look better detailed in that article.
Frankly, I don't know what to think. It's a bad situation all around.