Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#17
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Camilo" wrote in message ... "Curtis CCR" wrote in message ups.com... In reality, her not taking the steps did not strongly indicate anything. Again, most people her age (at the time of the incident) have not thought about living wills, durable power of attorney, or advance medical directives. In the absence of all that, the spouse generally makes the decisions by default under the law. We just have to assume that spouses will act, to the best of their ability, in the best interest of the patient. The strongest indication that Terri could have given as to what she wanted would have been formally assigning DPOA to her husband. And the strongest evidence that her husband could have given was announcing her desire immediately, not years later when he was impregnating someone else. Curtis, the bottom line is that most, if not all states have spouses as guardians. This is the law and is well established and well accepted, by state and federal courts and with the exception of the politics played recently by Gov and Pres. Bush, federal and state administrations. It is an intensely personal and difficult decision and someone has to be responsible. That person is the guardian, and the guardian is the spouce, period. The congress and president getting involved in a personal issue governed by state law is pure and simple GRANDSTANDING. They should be ashamed of themselves. Every married person knows, or should know that. In addition, many (most?) religious pronouncements about marriage indicate strongly that the new married relationship takes precedence over old child/parent relationships. I agree. It gets muddy. In the Schaivo case, I think the classy and moral thing to to have happened would have been for the spouse to turn Terri's care over to her parents. He had no legal obliagtion to do that, but I think the circumstances in this case would have made it the right thing to do. It is not muddy in any way. The spouse is the legal guardian period. Well established in state and federal law, and in religions. Only if they are acting in their best interest. It is an intensely personal and difficult decision, period. The only persons OPINION that matters is the victim's. The only person, legally and ethically, in a position to judge that is the guardian. PERIOD. There is no question or muddiness. The classy thing to do is for the guardian to make his/her BEST JUDGEMENT about the wishes of the victim The EASY and WEAK thing to do is to relinquish this responsibility under pressure from a non-guardian if that non-guardian's opinion is different from what the victem's wishes are (as determined by the GUARDIAN). It is not CLASSY or RIGHT to "err on the side of life" if the guardian's best judgement is that the victem's wish would be to die. LETTING THE PERSON DIE IS THE CLASSY AND RIGHT THING TO DO. What the parents have been doing is a travesty and an insult to Ms Shaivo. I can't think of a single adult sibling or good friend of mine - literally dozens or hundreds of people- that would rather that their parents' make this decision for them rather than their spouse or adult children. Personal ancedotes do not make a valid arguement. This is just bizarre thinking to me, that a parent knows their ADULT, MARRIED child better than that persons' spouse. It is bizarre that you cannot 'think' of one situation where they might. This is a irrelevant issue- made up by those who feel their personal religious or ethical beliefs are more important than the wishes of the victim. No, it is not. There is no basis in law or ethics, for putting parents ahead of spouses in making decisions for adult, married individuals. period. You are wrong.......the basis is that the spouse was not acting in the best interest of her. That could easily be turned 180 degrees. What about people in bad marriages? Until now, would someone in a bad marriage situation think about the fact the person they may hate can make life or death decisions? How about married couples that have separated? Not divorced, but might be headed to divorce. If they are still married, who should be making right-to-die decisions for someone that is still legally married, but has left their spouse? Every situation has nuances, changing you mind already?....in the same post? but neither was the case in this situation, so by bringing them up, you're avoiding the real issues. There is plenty of evidence to suggest such 'nuances'......you just chose to ignore them. Camilo |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
( OT ) Terri Schiavo and the fight over Bush's judges | General | |||
( OT ) The Politicization of Terri Schiavo | General | |||
( OT ) Down with the judicial tyrants who are killing Terri Schiavo! | General | |||
( OT ) Down with the judicial tyrants who are killing Terri Schiavo! | General | |||
The same people | ASA |