Without doubt, the courts have failed Terri Schiavo. Charged
with upholding due process rights and equal protection for all
citizens, a succession of courtsboth state and federalfailed
Terri Schiavo by accepting debatable assertions presented by
compromised agents, and by refusing to consider the more
fundamental issues at stake.
Columnist Charles Krauthammer of The Washington Posttrained
as both an attorney and a physicianargues that the courts
failed Terri Schiavo by blind and uncritical adherence to the
generally sensible rules of Florida custody laws. As
Krauthammer argues, The general rule of spousal supremacy
leads you here to a thoroughly repulsive conclusion.
Krauthammer is referring to Michael Schiavo, Terri Schiavos
husband, who has been pressing for her death in recent years.
Acting as her court-recognized legal agent, Schiavo has claimed
that Terri had expressed a desire not to be kept alive by
artificial means. Nevertheless, Michael Schiavo, many would
argue, is no longer qualified to serve as Terris legal
agent with the presumption that he is acting in her best
interests. As Krauthammer frames the issue: The problem is
that although your spouse likely knows you best, there is no
guarantee he will not confuse his wishes with yours. Terris
spouse presents complications. He has a girlfriend, and has two
kids with her. He clearly wants to marry again. And a living
Terri stands in the way.
The courts have, following established precedent, simply
accepted Michaels claim that Terri would prefer to be dead.
Terris parents, Robert and Mary Schindler, wanted to keep
Terri alive and believe that this would have been her wish. Since
Terri left no written record of her intentions, the courts have
simply sided with Michael. As Krauthammer recognizes, Ones
natural human sympathies suggest giving custody to the party
committed to her staying alive and pledging to carry the burden
themselves.
As for Terri Schiavos medical condition, Krauthammer was
unconvinced. Michael Schiavo has not allowed any extensive
medical tests in recent years, so Terris condition was
endlessly debated. As Krauthammer argues, the medical evidence
is sketchy, old and conflicting. Beyond all this,
Krauthammer simply corrects the assumption that even if Terri
Schiavo was in a persistent vegetative state, she should simply
be considered unworthy of life. In Krauthammers words,
we do not go around euthanizing the minimally conscious in
the back wards of the mental hospitals on the grounds that their
lives are not worth living.
Looking at the larger legal context, Krauthammer sensibly
argues for the passage of legislation that would allow courts far
greater discretion in resolving conflicts among the loved ones of
patients who cannot speak for themselves. But, as sensible as
Krauthammers proposal is, it likely would not fare well in
the courts.
If the sad case of Terri Schiavo has demonstrated anything, it
has pointed to a horrible set of legal precedents and court
decisions. The courts have increasingly identified a right
to die as a matter of legal protection and, in some cases,
of constitutional right. In so doing, the courts have put
themselves into inevitable conflict with larger moral questions.
When the U.S. Supreme Court handed down its infamous Roe
v. Wade ruling on abortion in 1973, it based its
decision on a medical structure of pregnancy trimesters that is
now thoroughly out of date and should have been discredited from
the start. Similarly, in its 1990 decision, Cruzan v. Director,
the Court determined that hydration and food were forms of
medical treatment that could be denied, either by the patient or
by the patients legal agent. These precedents set the stage
for the tragedy experienced by Terri Schiavo.
Amazingly enough, those pushing for Terri Schiavos death
now champion her case as a triumph of judicial supremacy.
A myriad of commentators, political analysts, and editorialists
have suggested that, in Terri Schiavos case, the courts
were a bulwark of sanity, process, and the avoidance of political
considerations. Nothing could be further from the truth. As a
matter of fact, the courts were deeply imbedded in a political
process, and the refusal of a U.S. federal judge to follow the
clear will of Congress and the president constitutes a threat to
the separation of powers.
In an astounding article published in the March 24, 2005
edition of The New York Times, reporter Adam Liptak
makes this startling opening comment: The United States
Congress and the governor of Florida have devoted extraordinary
and all but single-minded energy to keeping Terri Schiavo alive.
But all they have achieved so far is a bitter lesson in judicial
supremacy.
Liptak congratulates Florida Circuit Court Judge George W.
Greer and a succession of federal judges for being the teachers
who have humbled the executive and legislative branches of
government. Liptak continues: If nothing else, this series
of decisions vindicated the one conception of American judicial
power. He cites Eric M. Freedman, a law professor at
Hofstra University as saying, It has been the basic premise
of the three-branch system set up by the Constitution that
judgments in individual cases are to be made by judges and not
legislative bodies or executive officials. That division, which
originated from unhappy experience in England, has been a
valuable protection of liberty in this country over many
centuries. Likewise, Mark Tushnet, a law professor at
Georgetown University warned, Judges dont like to be
fooled around with. If executive officials or legislators do
something that judges think look as if theyre being fooled
around with, it will be extremely resistant. Evidently,
Professor Tushnet believes that judges are a force of nature.
You can mess with Mother Nature, he asserted, but
its really hard to do effectively. Mother Nature has a lot
of tools at her disposal. So do judges.
Liptak seems to be completely oblivious to the internal
contradictions found within his article. One cannot argue that
the three branches of government are equal and then champion
judicial supremacy.
Some observers and advocates have condescendingly chastised
those who sought to protect Terris life for attempting
recourse through the federal courts. Some have asserted
repeatedly that this is a matter of state court jurisdiction and
that federal courts should neither review nor correct. Of course,
this logic would mean an absolute end to all death penalty
appeals to federal courts. Why do we not hear the same arguments
presented in favor of state court supremacy when a prisoner on
death row appeals for a federal review of his death sentence?
Once again, the court system has become a focus of controversy
and an engine for a cultural agenda. The vast expansion of court
authority and judicial activism should cause a chill to go down
every American spine. Unless these trends are checked, we are
increasingly facing a government ruled by judges, for judges, in
the name of the courts. This is no way to run a democracy.
R. Albert Mohler, Jr. is president of The Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky. For more articles
and resources by Dr. Mohler, and for information on The Albert
Mohler Program, a daily national radio program broadcast on the
Salem Radio Network, go to www.albertmohler.com.
Used with permission, Crosswalk.com.