The Legacy of Terri Schiavo:
What we can do so this won’t happen again.
By Wesley J. Smith
TERRI SCHIAVO IS DEAD. But her death by dehydration need not be in
vain. Great good can still come from the harsh, two week ordeal she--and to
a lesser
extent,
we--were forced to undergo by court order.
Terri’s story generated a torrent of compassion. (The root meaning
of compassion is to “suffer with,” which is precisely what her legions of
supporters did.) Hundreds of thousands of people who had never participated
before in a major public event engaged untiringly in advocating for the sanctity
and equal moral worth of the life of Terri Schiavo.
And these many supporters were not, as the mainstream media took great glee
in portraying, limited to the Randall Terry brand of religious activist or
to orthodox Catholics. To the contrary, notables of the secular and religious
left--Ralph Nader, Jesse Jackson, Nat Hentoff
-- joined in solidarity with their usual conservative opponents, such as President
George W. Bush, Senator Bill Frist, and Rush Limbaugh,
to declare that Terri should live.
This suggests that deep political divisions can be overcome, at least
for a time, in pursuit of a public morality that was sorely missing in the
Terri Schiavo saga. Indeed, if Terri’s supporters channel their
passion into productive democratic reform, we can almost surely prevent future
such miscarriages of justice.
What would such reforms look like? While great care should be taken
in this important matter, here are a few initial suggestions:
--
are never again deemed to be the legal equivalent of a well-thought-out,
written advance medical directive. We don’t permit the property of the deceased
to be distributed based on their oral statements; surely human lives deserve
as much protection.
As Terri’s family made clear in their dignified public statement after
her death, it would dishonor her memory for her supporters to indulge in hatred.
Michael Schiavo, George Felos, and Judge
George Greer aren’t worth the psychic cost. How much better to honor Terri’s
memory by enacting a series of legal reforms that rededicate our society to
standing for the equal moral worth and unwavering legal protection of the
most weak and vulnerable among us.
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Wesley J. Smith is a senior fellow at the Discovery
Institute, an attorney for the International Task Force on Euthanasia and
Assisted Suicide, and a special consultant to the Center for Bioethics and
Culture. His latest book is Consumer’s Guide to a Brave New World.