Terri Schiavo—Life, Death, and Law
Editorial
The decision to deprive Terri Schiavo of sustenance, and allow her
to die of starvation, was lacking in decency and, I would suggest,
illegal, an act of presumption by the court that has no sanction in
the U.S. Constitution. The making of laws is the sole prerogative of
Congress. The judiciary may declare a law of Congress
unconstitutional, but this was not relevant in the Schiavo debate. The
U.S. Congress and the State of Florida passed laws that the federal
courts negated without comment. One of the legal arguments in favor of depriving Terri of
life-support was that legal action has to observe due
process—whatever that means. It was claimed that due process had
been observed several times and, therefore, no change should be made
from the first decision. I am not impressed. Due process or legal
methodology is of less importance than substance, or method is less
important than fact. There are many facts that were not considered by
the court. 1) Michael Schiavo was married to Terri but wanted her to
die. What his reasons were is not the point. He remarried and became a
bigamist. I am not aware of the legal claims of bigamists. The right
of a bigamist to control the life of his former wife was improperly
assumed. He could have removed Terri from being a burden by divorce,
but that would have returned control of his former wife to someone
other than himself. He did not want to lose control of the possibility
of putting her to death. 2) Terri’s parents wanted to continue her
life and were willing to pay the expenses for this. The choice was
between life and death. The court and her former husband chose death.
The important point is that the legal decision lacked common decency
and was abhorrent. That legal process takes precedence over decency is
a reflection on our courts and our culture. Some years ago, before Roe versus Wade
in 1973, as a young clergyman, I was asked to speak to a group of
young women. I did not know they were pregnant and did not mention the
obvious fact when I spoke, but I recall to this day that group of
fifteen or so young women sitting silently, motionless, with sadness
on their faces. They were aware of a mistake and they knew they would
give their children to strangers. Few people would dare to deny that, in the choice between life and
death, the preference should be given to life. In the dispute about
abortion, death has been preferred to life by our courts and probably
by a majority of citizens when a mother does not wish to continue her
pregnancy. This decision is a reflection of current morality. Prior to Roe versus Wade, abortion was legal only to save the life of the mother. The
argument for abortion was that if it were illegal many women would
abort without proper medical attention so that they would be in
danger. The argument has weight but it has also tragic consequences
for general morality. We have become a sex-dominated society without
discipline and have developed one-parent homes that condone sexual
license. Continence is not honored, conversation is without dignity,
popular entertainment is without taste. In an earlier day, humorists
were men of decency but not so now. Popular entertainment is dominated
by sex, and so is the conversation of current humorists. Everything is
dominated by sex. We have unlimited legal action but every legal action is a moral
decision. If we do not have clear moral principles, we have no basis
for sound legal action. That we have no legal principles to guide us
explains the present moral confusion. For more than a thousand years all European countries were
dominated by the Ten Commandments. The relevant ones for society were:
honor your mother and father, you will not kill, you will not commit
adultery, you will not steal, you will not lie, you will not covet
your neighbor’s wife or his property. We cannot repudiate any of
these laws without falling into chaos, but we accept them for the sake
of convenience rather than as holy commands, and the extent of our
repudiation of any of them measures our decadence. That these commands are negative gives a positive message. If we
keep ourselves from breaking these ancient commands, everything else
is honorable. We are free to do what is good and there is no
limitation to our behavior. The Ten Commandments were part of the
Christian tradition, but they were part of the Jewish tradition for
many hundreds of years before they were followed by European
Christians. No one rejected the wisdom of these commandments until
modern thinkers. In addition to the Ten Commandments, Natural Law has been observed
for centuries as a basis for legal action. Natural Law follows the
belief that man has been endowed by the Creator with rights that
cannot be denied. This was Jefferson’s meaning in the Declaration of
Independence when he wrote that our rights to life, liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness come not from government but from God. Because
men desire freedom, it is a command of his nature and therefore of
God. If the government or a stranger seizes your property or denies
your freedom, these are denials of your Natural Rights and are
therefore illegal. No law, no political act, can seize your property
or invade your freedom because the possession of these rights is
natural and, therefore, a gift of God. We may yield rights for the common good in taxation and limited
acts of eminent domain, and even our freedom, but we do so without
denying that our Natural Rights are fundamental and yielded only by
consent and in a limited manner. The Supreme Court decided this in
1798. The Connecticut Legislature enacted a statute that took property
of one citizen and gave it to another. The highest court of the state
invalidated the act of the legislature and the Supreme Court followed
suit, ruling that the legislature acted illegally. Natural Rights
could not be invalidated by legislative action. Today our courts flout Natural Law. In 1981 the Supreme Court of
Michigan allowed the government to destroy a community so that General
Motors could build an assembly plant: As
a result of the new GM plant, 3,468 people were displaced and had
their homes confiscated by the government. The court simply
rubber-stamped the government’s claim that the condemnation would
benefit the public because the GM plant would result in the creation
of six thousand new jobs. The
Constitution’s public use requirement was intended to protect
against just this sort of usurpation. If GM wanted the property, it
should have been required to purchase it. The government’s use of
the eminent domain power to transfer private land from one private
party to another is an unconstitutional use, even if it creates one
million new jobs. No “public benefit” can counterbalance the fact
that 3,468 people lost their homes so that a wealthy company could
become wealthier. --Judge Andrew Napolitano, Constitutional Chaos,
p. 73. The only valid laws are those grounded in the pursuit of goodness.
Our society denies this as it denies the Ten Commandments and Natural
Law. We have substituted Positivism that states that law is whatever
government decrees. No matter what the law says, it is to be applied
by officials and obeyed by citizens. This is the doctrine of
dictators, with no consideration of minority rights or the traditions
of the ages. The problem of America today is that Positivism is the underlying
presumption of law—not all of the time, of course. Positivism is so
offensive both to tradition and common sense that we do not observe it
consistently, but we carry it as far we can, emphasizing private
interest over traditional morality. The refusal of the Senate to allow
the appointment of judges committed to traditional morality
illustrates present Positivism.
* “The battle,
sir, is not to the strong alone; it is to the vigilant, the active,
the brave.” Patrick Henry |
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