The will of the people has been served: Terri Schiavo is dead.
That sounds like a harsh statement, and it is. It’s intended to be. I didn’t want Terri to die. Nobody I knew personally wanted Terri to die. Some corrupt judge, overextending his power, determined that an innocent, debilitated woman should be put to death by removing her access to basic sustenance: by far the cruelest termination to a life currently practiced in the western world. There are crueler ways to end a life, but none of them are legal. Their perpetrators will not go unpunished. This judge will.
Nevertheless, the will of the people has been served. Elected representatives and state and federal exectutives passed laws and made noise, but were unwilling to take the final form of interference, and call in the military to enforce their will. 30 years ago, the National Guard was called upon to defend a girl’s right to go to a certain public school. This week, the National Guard was *not* called upon to defend a disabled woman’s right to life. The independence of the court was deemed more important than the life of Terri Schiavo.
Nevertheless the will of the people has been served.