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Our political vegetative state

 
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SBD
Admiral


Joined: 19 Aug 2004
Posts: 1022

PostPosted: Tue Apr 12, 2005 6:53 am    Post subject: Our political vegetative state Reply with quote

WorldNetDaily

Tuesday, April 12, 2005
between the lines Joseph Farah Our political vegetative state
Posted: April 12, 2005
1:00 a.m. Eastern

By Joseph Farah
© 2005 WorldNetDaily.com

Terri Schiavo is dead.

Those who brought about her demise told us it was because she was in a "persistent vegetative state."

The evidence didn't support such a finding. In fact, I don't believe human beings ever become "vegetables."

But I do believe governments and political systems can reach the point of "persistent vegetative states," and, judging from the fallout from this remarkable legal case, the United States just might be there.

Let's recall just what happened in the last days of the life of the disabled Florida woman.

* A local county elected politician, a judge, made the determination to accede to the wishes of Terri's estranged husband to pull her feeding and hydration tube, thus sentencing an innocent, non-terminal handicapped woman to death. He did this despite mixed medical opinions about her prognosis. He did this despite the urgings of her parents and siblings. He did this after taking money from several attorneys representing her estranged husband and despite accusations and suspicions that Michael Schiavo abused Terri and may have tried to kill her, leading to her medical condition.

* The U.S. Congress passed a law in emergency session and got it signed by President Bush in the middle of the night calling for a federal court review of all the evidence in the case and the restoration of Terri's feeding and hydration tube. The federal court showed contempt for Congress and refused to follow the wishes of the American people.

* The U.S. Congress issued a subpoena to the county judge, which he ignored.

* Florida Gov. Jeb Bush pleaded with the county judge to restore the feeding tube, citing Florida law that trumped his decision. He dismissed the claims of the governor.

There are many more extraordinary details of this case, but I want to focus just on these for the moment.

Members of Congress were huffing and puffing about the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals after its decision to ignore the will of Congress. Yet there has not been a move by the most powerful branch of the federal government to hold the federal court accountable for its contempt of Congress or its role as an accomplice to judicial homicide.

This is what I mean by a "political vegetative state."

The rule of law and the will of the people have been ignored, abused, subverted, undermined, trampled, raped and mocked in this case. And no one in Congress is lifting a finger to do a thing about it.

No one in the governor's office of the state of Florida is doing a thing about it.

Is that leadership? Is that responsiveness to the will of the people? Is that executing the rule of law?

I suspect members of Congress are a little embarrassed to be outfoxed by a local politician-judge. I suspect some of them are shocked to find out how easy it is to ignore a congressional subpoena and an act of Congress.

However, if there are no consequences for these actions, then every American should feel free to ignore future subpoenas and future acts of Congress as Judge George Greer did and as the 11th Circuit did.

I suspect Jeb Bush is humiliated. I suspect he is happy to be out of the spotlight – to have the pressure off of him now that Terri is gone. Unfortunately, he has signaled to the people of his state and the rest of the country that he is a paper tiger who can also be ignored.

Unless these renegade judges are reined in – and I mean with criminal prosecution, if necessary – this case will represent a landmark, not just in the state-sanctioned death of an innocent woman, but in the breakdown of law and order in our society.

In other words, it wasn't Terri who was in a persistent vegetative state. It is our system that is in a political vegetative state.


Joseph Farah is founder, editor and chief executive officer of WND and a nationally syndicated radio talk-show host. He is also the founder of WND Books. In addition to his daily column in WND, he writes a nationally syndicated weekly column available to U.S. newspapers through Creators Syndicate.


SBD
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Barbie2004
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Joined: 18 Sep 2004
Posts: 338

PostPosted: Tue Apr 12, 2005 12:26 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I have been waiting with baited breath to find out when the hearings are going to begin. Have you heard anything??

Tom Delay needs to get that going. If memory and the reports serve me right, Frist has already stated that what the judges did was "OK". I thought I was going to gag.

Quote:
I suspect Jeb Bush is humiliated. I suspect he is happy to be out of the spotlight – to have the pressure off of him now that Terri is gone. Unfortunately, he has signaled to the people of his state and the rest of the country that he is a paper tiger who can also be ignored.


This is also a very sad point. I would vote for Jeb over John Kerry or Hillary, but not over many other people.

I am so disgusted at how Congress is so weak kneed. What they don't realize is, is that doing the right thing would have also benefited them politically, dispite what the press leads them to believe.

Evil or Very Mad Evil or Very Mad Evil or Very Mad
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