I have a modest proposal to make. Let's send spammers to Guantanamo Bay. Let's put the PATRIOT Act to good use for once.
I have a modest proposal to make. Let's send spammers to Guantanamo Bay. Let's put the PATRIOT Act to good use for once.
After years of nagging, frequent Ales Rarus commenter John Thompson has finally
created a blog of his own.
“My name is John. I’m studying History and Physics at the University
of Pittsburgh. So that’s where my tendency towards historical analysis and secular
humanism come from. I’m a fairly loyal Democrat, but I am at the same time often
frustrated with them. ”
It’s called Interesting
Times. Go check it out! 🙂
A few days ago, I wondered out loud if the results of Terri Schiavo’s autopsy might mean that Michael is owed an apology. The discussion in the comments was long and interesting. Be sure to check it out.
That discussion got me thinking about some issues surrounding the autopsy results, the post mortem diagnose, and the various medical examinations during Terri’s life.
Adrian
Warnock announced the results of his “major overhaul” of the Blogdom of
God. It actually seems to be more a result of some
cool changes that have been made to TTLB. Anyhow, the spiffy new feature is
a
community page, which shows latest BoG postings and the most popular (by links)
postings in newspaper fashion, as well as ranking of participating Christian blogs
(by links). IOW, now you can find out which posts and which blogs are getting the
most buzz in the Christian blogosphere.
BTW, when last I checked, I’m ranked 72 out of ~3500 Christian blogs. Fellow Pittsburgh
Oratory frequenter, Donna
“Quenta Narwenion” Lewis is ranked 26. Woohoo! 🙂
The Terri Schiavo autopsy results are out and nobody seems to be talking about them. Or rather, it seems nobody who was rallying the troops in her defense is talking about them. Maybe I’m just reading the wrong blogs, but the only ones that I’ve noticed mentioning the autopsy at all are those by folks who were supporters of Michael Schiavo’s position – and they’re gloating.
She wasn’t abused.
Her brain was damaged beyond all hope of repair.
She was blind.
In short, it seems she had long ago ceased to be a living, thinking human being by any reasonable definition.
I’m still waiting to learn more of the details before saying too much, but I’m going to go out on a limb and suggest that the pro-life community and Christians in particular may owe Michael Schiavo and his supporters an apology.
Thoughts?
Update 06/19/05: Obviously, around the time I wrote this post, the skeptics (of the autopsy) started posting. Here are some examples.
"The autopsy also documented significant brain atrophy, and the medical panel called the damage ‘irreversible.’
"This is not the same as saying she had no cognitive ability. " – Pro-Life Blogs
To say that would be redundant to the CT scans taken of here brain (source 1, source 2, source 3). If the correct interpretation of scans is that she had no cortical function left, she could not have had any cognitive ability.
"For me, the whole tragedy surrounding Terri and the people who wanted her dead didn�t hinge on how severely brain-damaged she was. She was alive and wasn�t on life support, and her husband�s credibility was extremely low, too low to trust his assertion that Terri wanted to die if ever severely brain-damaged. Forget about what you�d want if you were ever in the same condition. Take yourselves out of the equation."
"The way they killed her was appalling, and I was angry for a long time afterward. I�m giving you a heads-up. Don�t be alarmed or disgusted by the liberal media and liberal bloggers (and some conservatives, too) declaring that Terri�s wayward husband is somehow �vindicated� by the autopsy report. The doctor-induced starvation was immoral." – LaShawn Barber
If Terri Schiavo ceased to be a a thinking, feeling human being years ago, was it actually wrong to starve her empty shell to death? I guess that hinges on whether Michael Schiavo could have had sufficient knowledge to demonstrate that she was, beyond reasonable doubt, lacking cognition.
BTW, Smart Christian seems to agree with my suggestion that there might be some apologies owed. For the record, I haven’t made up my mind on this matter. I’m just not content with plugging my ears, yelling "La, la, la. I can’t hear you!", and essentially ignoring the consequences of the autopsy report, as so many of my Christian and pro-life brethren seem to be.
Stay tuned for another post on this topic.