Sunday, March 27, 2005

Why Many People Still Don't Know Basic Schiavo Facts

The Terri Schiavo case has been one of the most media saturated stories in recent times. And yet, many people, apparently, still don't know the basic facts--even news reporters. This was brought home to me strongly today in three different manifestations.

First, I was a guest on Fox and Friends this morning. Fox News sent a car to bring me into San Francisco to do the show. The driver was very friendly and asked me what I was going to be interviewed about. I told him and he said, "Why don't they just let the husband decide?" I replied, "Well, some people think that a man who has lived with another woman for almost ten years and has two children by her, has lost the moral right to make these decisions." The driver was shocked. "He has? Why haven't I heard this before?" I replied that it had been reported in some outlets and far less in others. "Well, that's different," he said. "He should give her to her parents." I doubt he was buttering me up, since there would be no tip involved. But it was clear that the driver thought he knew a lot about the Schiavo story but really knew very little.

Then, when I was at Fox News waiting to do my "talking head" shtick, I watched a live spot from the hospice where Terri is dehydrating to death. Asked why the courts thought Terri would not want to live, the reporter said that several of her FRIENDS had come forward to say she told them she wouldn't want to live in this condition. Of course, that was just plain wrong. NO friends have come forward saying that and at least one has stated Terri would want to live. Those saying Terri would want to die are all very tight with Michael Schiavo, e.g., Michael, Michael's brother, and Michael's sister-in-law. When a news reporter can't even get one of the most basic and important facts about this case right, how can news consumers be expected to know the truth?

Finally, during the afternoon I was at a party. I met a very nice married couple, and as we were chatting they found out I have advocated publicly in support of the Schindlers. Both frowned deeply told me they were worried about the feds getting involved in their end-of-life medical decisions despite their having written advance directives. I assured them the government would not interfere with their decisions and that besides, Terri did not have a written directive. "She didn't???" both husband and wife said, their jaws dropping in unison. And once again, as we discussed the case, their attitudes toward those defending Terri's life softened as they learned the real facts.

What are we to make of this? I think for many people who are not news junkies, stories like the Schiavo case become so much background noise. But, since there is no way to avoid the story, certain impressions sink in. Thus, the media's constant incomplete description of Michael Schiavo as merely "Terri's husband," made the driver think Michael was a loyal and steadfast husband like the driver perceives himself to be. The people I met at the party assumed that because the court found she would not want to live, that she must have had a written advance directive. Of course, none of this excused the news reporter.

The same probably applies to me with regard to the Peterson murder case. I TRIED not to pay attention. I really did. Yet, I know a lot about it because it was a constant presence--or, maybe I just THINK I know a lot about the case.

And this gets me to the importance of creating the first impressions people receive about a public controversy as an essential aspect of successful public persuasion. But this post is long enough already, so we'll deal with that subject one insomnia-ridden night.

8 Comments:

At March 28, 2005 , Blogger RD said...

C'mon. We have GOT to unravel this thing quickly. Arguing about "life" with these people is hopeless and will only GUARANTEE her death. They are laughing at us because they think we are too stupid to (1) change the debate to the REAL issue these people are dodging -- FRAUD, and (2) ask Mr. Bush to press for an autopsy and see precisely how desperately they all try to resist. That will tell the public all they need to know. But it's got to happen NOW.

Some of us are ready to come forward to claim that (1) we can prove the CT scan used to allege "liquid brain" is a hoax, (2) that Dr. Cranford should have known better but chose to use it anyway, and (3) Michael has already incriminated himself beyond a reasonable doubt ON CAMERA.

There are only two things that will save this woman:

1. Unravel the media hypocrisy on Mr. Schiavo. Talking about "life" is pointless - they just don't get it.

2. Press for President Bush to INSIST on an autopsy, and escalate QUICKLY - BEFORE she dies - so the world sees how absurdly these people resist. Not that Bush will win - that's not the point - the point is, judge Greer and Mr. Schiavo will look like such guilty suspects when they refuse (even if the media deny it) that the world will at least begin to wake up to the possibility BEFORE her death that all of this has been a deliberate fraud.

It is our moral obligation not to allow the media to hype the euthanasia angle RELENTLESSLY on the one hand and then turn around later and "get with the real story" after the fact. It will not be "all right" for them to do this, and we ought not let them get away with it. We need them on the record - NOW - choosing sides so we can hold them accountable as well. Agreed?

We need picket signs in front of the hospice in the morning with THOSE signs, not signs equating homicide to murder. Those are important moral and intellectual arguments, but they won't help Terri in the slightest since they will only JUSTIFY the media's portrayal of us as "kooks" to their audience: "Geez, Why are they fighting so hard for a Stage 1 liquid-brained gooball?"

The REAL reason: She's actually a Stage 3 palsy victim deliberately, fraudulently misdiagnosed as Stage 1 and condemned to death. And THAT'S what court-approved euthanasia has led us to, NOT the kinds of "moral quandries" we can debate all day long.

It's horrible to even THINK of picketing Terri's murderers with signs about "autopsy" when we hope desperately that she's going to be fed at the last minute. But it isn't the point anymore is it: we've simply got no other choice. The BEST way to get her hydrated is to use the leverage of incrimination against these scam artists NOW - before it's too late - and see to it that she's sprung from prison.

It's time to put the screws to these bastards. There are definite ideas that WILL WORK, they just have to be employed. Do you know anyone we can contact to get the ball rolling, FINALLY? We can shut this thing down in 2 hours flat. Once these people are exposed for what they are BEFORE her death, THEN (and only then - after her death, forget it!) the entire country will finally understand why [Y]OUR position is obviously - always - the correct one.

Sincerely
RD

Liberals & Conservatives For Terri
Schiavogate

 
At March 28, 2005 , Blogger RD said...

This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

 
At March 28, 2005 , Blogger RD said...

STAGES OF HOPE AS SEEN BY THE MEDICAL PROFESSION (my numbering system :)

Stage 1: Beyond hope - "pull the plug"

(minimal cortex left: fetal position, no pain, no emotion, no memory, no open eyes, death is only a matter of time)

Terri's CT Brain scan puts her here.

Stage 2: Hope - "keep alive"
(no way to speed it along, therapy does not help, etc.)

PVS fits in this category and not Level 1, if only because 50% of PVS patients are reclassified as Stage 3 within their lifetime (!).

Brain scans run the gamut from partially atrophied to intact - vast majority [75-90%] are only minimally atrophied.

Terri's "clinical" diagnosis by Dr. Cranford puts her here.

Stage 3: Don't need to hope, can Expect improvement - "rehabilitate"
(therapy works, has an effect, etc.)

Terri's diagnosis by ALL other professionals - nurses, doctors & so on - put her here.

 
At March 28, 2005 , Blogger Wesley J. Smith said...

Thank you both for writing.

President Bush can't order an autopsy. He doesn't have the authority. The parents have requested one. Time will tell whether their request will be honored.

The categories seem right, except I don't think many in bioethics would support keeping patient alive for long in cateogry two.

 
At March 28, 2005 , Blogger Wesley J. Smith said...

Re: Being outlawyered. Happens a lot. Those who want plugs pulled go to advocacy groups and get their lawyers expert advise. We who may oppose, may not hear from lawyers until after trial or just before because the lawyers "can't believe any judge would order such a move." Can't tell you how many times I have heard that one!

 
At March 28, 2005 , Blogger Jerri Lynn Ward, J.D. said...

ccepdx,

Judge Greer is elected, not appointed. We have elected state judges here in Texas as well. In some cases, I believe that lawyers run for judge because they can't make it in private practice. I learned a long time that the fact someone is a judge is not necessarily an indication of that person being intelligent--or fair minded for that matter.

Many state judges are in the pocket of lawyers. Hardly anyone but the lawyers even pay attention to judicial races. Most of the campaign funding for judges comes from lawyers.

People need to start scrutinizing their county's probate judges. Probate judges have tremendous power and very little oversight.

 
At March 28, 2005 , Blogger Jerri Lynn Ward, J.D. said...

ccepdx,

Judge Greer is elected, not appointed. We have elected state judges here in Texas as well. In some cases, I believe that lawyers run for judge because they can't make it in private practice. I learned a long time that the fact someone is a judge is not necessarily an indication of that person being intelligent--or fair minded for that matter.

Many state judges are in the pocket of lawyers. Hardly anyone but the lawyers even pay attention to judicial races. Most of the campaign funding for judges comes from lawyers.

People need to start scrutinizing their county's probate judges. Probate judges have tremendous power and very little oversight.

 
At April 07, 2005 , Blogger Maggie said...

to the person who was asking about a coalition to join, I suggest that you have a look at BlogsforTerri.

Also, it is true that there are Liberals and Conservatives for Terri. I am a regular reader of that site, and I am a conservative. The owner of the blog has been doing a magnificent job on certain aspects of the case.

However, I think if you want a more general interest, and the way forward is to help others in the same situation, BlogsforTerri is the way to go. The new coalition will bring together a group of people who fit all parts of the political and religious spectrum.

 

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