I think the issue that everyone forgets is QUALITY OF LIFE. This poor woman has none and should I ever be in the same state I would hope that someone would terminate me painlessly.
I don't think anyone is forgetting it. In fact, if you follow the case, it is mentioned quite extensively. But here's the thing. Who determines another's quality of life? Sure, she may not be running marathons next summer, but does that mean she should die?
There's an ethical theory called "slippery slope". I'm sure you've all probably heard about it. If not, what it says is that once you take that first step, the ball is going to keep rolling, and it's going to get worse and worse down the line.
That applies to this case in ways that terrify me. Once we determine that a human's life has no "quality" and therefore should be aborted, we open up an entirely new can of worms.
What about poor people? What about blind people? Fat people? Black people? Now, that last one probably hacked you off, didn't it? That's what it was meant to do. It isn't a racist thing at all. But what if you WERE racist? If you hated a specific group, be it a minority or otherwise, you could argue that they have no quality of life, in your opinion. So should we kill them because some view them as having no quality of life? (Incidentally, I don't think any of the aforementioned groups have a lesser quality of life.)
Leave be and let nature take it's course.
It would seem to me that this contradicts your general quality of life argument, no? Lets apply it to the Schiavo case.
Terri has now been without food or water for 9 days. Surely this is evidence that she was never on life support, and with the exception of feeding herself, is quite capable of surviving out of a hospice environment. But I've seen my share of elderly folks, or brain damaged people, who can't feed themselves either. Alzheimers Dimentia, for example, could render someone incapable of feeding themselves. Should we starve them as well, claiming that it's "nature in action"? If nature would let her live, as we've seen over the last 9 days, then isn't starving her to death the same interference to which you object?
It's important that we not project OUR wishes into that case. I know that's what this thread was originally about, but when it comes to someone else's life, it is their wishes that matter. In the Schiavo case, Michael Schiavo has failed to prove those wishes.
Also, I have been thinking a lot about this thread. I hope that no one perceives it to be a flame war. In fact, I want to commend all of you for not letting it turn into that. This is a case that I am, like many of you are, very passionate about. I disagree with some of you, but it is disagreement which gets conversation started, and gets things done.
