Friday, February 25, 2005

Discomfort in the Court

"The court is no longer comfortable granting stays simply upon the filings of new motions," Greer wrote. "There will always be 'new' issues."

Poor Judge Greer is no longer comfortable. He doesn't want to grant any more stays. He wants to wash his hands of the matter.

Some questions: Why does Greer believe there will always be "new issues?" Could it be that Terri's condition is not the irreversible, stagnant, vegetative state that Michael Schiavo's camp claims it to be, thus accounting for the possibility of "new issues" to arise?

When Greer spouts that the case needs to end, he sounds like he cares more about alleviating his discomfort rather than serving justice or showing concern for the greater good.

"If Mr. Schiavo legally succeeded in provoking the death of his wife, this would not only be tragic in itself, but it would be a serious step toward legally approving euthanasia in the United States," Cardinal Renato Martino, the head of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, told Vatican Radio on Thursday.

It is my hope that March 18, 2005, will not take its place alongside January 22, 1973, as another marker of the obselescence of respect for life in America.

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