Berkowitz is a liar. Here is a REAL discussion of the issue from the disability rights organization Not Dead Yet:
That bipartisan moment didn't last long. It actually started to unravel several days before this press conference. Senator Martinez inadvertently passed a memo to Senator Harkin that listed a list of "Republican talking points" that involved ways the Schiavo case could be used to attack Democrats. The memo was written by an aide to Senator Martinez, who professed ignorance over its contents at the time.
After Terri Schiavo died, several leaders of Conservative interest groups started using the unsuccessful court challenge as a political rallying cry:
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As the vigil in Florida ended for Ms. Schiavo, who was severely brain-damaged, conservatives said the refusal of the federal courts to step in underscored the need for Senate Republicans to end the ability of the Democratic minority to filibuster President Bush's judicial nominees.
Dr. James C. Dobson, the founder of the evangelical group Focus on the Family, said the judges who would not stop the removal of Ms. Schiavo's feeding tube were ''guilty not only of judicial malfeasance -- but of the cold-blooded, cold-hearted extermination of an innocent human life.''
Tony Perkins, the president of the Family Research Council, said: ''It is a tragic, unfortunate but avoidable event that should awaken Americans to the problem of the courts. It is no longer theoretical. It is life or death.''
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Right-Wing interest groups and leaders weren't the only ones looking to further polarize the public - and revise history - in the name of political gamesmanship.
In mid-April 2005, DNC Chair Howard Dean announced that Democrats would make the Schiavo case an election issue:
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Dean, who has called congressional intervention in the Schiavo case "political grandstanding," singled out House Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R-Texas) for his leading role in the matter.
"This is going to be an issue in 2006, and it's going to be an issue in 2008," Dean told about 200 people at a gay rights group's breakfast in West Hollywood, "because we're going to have an ad with a picture of Tom DeLay saying, 'Do you want this guy to decide whether you die or not? Or is that going to be up to your loved ones?' "
Dean, a practicing physician until he became governor of Vermont in 1991, added: "The issue is: Are we going to live in a theocracy where the highest powers tell us what to do? Or are we going to be allowed to consult our own high powers when we make very difficult decisions?"
Before Schiavo's death, the Republican-controlled Congress passed legislation giving her parents the right to take action in federal court to have her feeding tube reinserted, but no judge intervened. Schiavo's husband had fought for years to withdraw the tube, arguing that she would not have wanted her life extended.
Although Democrats voted for the measure, Dean said it provided an opportunity to showcase what he called Republican intrusiveness in the lives of Americans.
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This is far from a complete list of those who promoted a revisionist history of the Schiavo strruggle for their own political ends, but it's pretty representative.
On the right and the left, both bet on the same revision of history - that the battle over Terri Schiavo was a chapter in the "culture wars." In the end, it would seem that Howard Dean won the "bet" over who would be best served by that revision.
The real losers, of course, are people under guardianship or a conservatorship. The atmosephere at present is poisonous in terms of revisiting what kind of protections people whose decisionmaking is in the hands of others might need.
Stephen DrakePeople who support the medical killing of the disabled, no matter how profound, are not liberals or progressives. Period.
Make sure to watch the C-SPAN video at the link. Tom Harkin was in the forefront of trying to give Terri Schiavo the right to a federal review of the case, just as death row inmates have that right.
I wish the so-called "left" would quit the deceit.