Tuesday, March 29, 2005

Take a Look in the Mirror - MSNBC -

MSNBC - Take a Look in the Mirror:

"April 4 issue - When he was governor of Texas, George W. Bush presided over 152 executions, more than took place in the rest of the country combined. In at least a few of these cases, reasonable doubts about the guilt of the condemned were raised. But Bush cut his personal review time for each case from a half hour to a mere 15 minutes (most other governors spend many hours reviewing each capital case to assure themselves that there's no doubt of guilt). His explanation was that he trusted the courts to sort through the life-and-death complexities. That's right: the courts.

I bring up that story because it's just one of several ironies that have arisen in connection with the Terri Schiavo saga, in which the president said that the government 'ought to err on the side of life.' Fine, but whose life? The inmate who might not be guilty? The poor people across the country denied organ transplants (and thus life) because Medicaid—increasingly under the Bush budget knife—won't cover them? The poor people across the world starving to death because we won't go along with Tony Blair when it comes to addressing global poverty?

Or how about Sun Hudson? On March 14, Sun, a 6-month-old baby with a fatal form of dwarfism, was allowed to die in a Texas hospital over his mother Wanda's objections. Under a 1999 law signed by Bush, who was then governor, cost-conscious hospitals are empowered to decide when care is 'futile.' The Hudson case is the first time ever that a court has allowed bean counters to override the wishes of parents. 'They gave up in six months,' Wanda Hudson told the Houston Chronicle. 'They made a terrible mistake.' Wanda apparently was not 'cable ready,' as they say in the television world, and she failed to get Randall Terry and the radical anti-abortionists on her side. Tom DeLay never called."

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