Big Media Shamefully Biased and Unfair to Terri Schiavo
Michelle Malkin
Thursday, March 24, 2005
However you feel about the Terri Schiavo case, one fact is
indisputable: The mainstream media coverage of the matter has been abysmal.
On a fundamental matter of life and death, the MSM heavyweights
have proven themselves utterly incapable of reporting fairly. Take a widely
publicized ABC News poll released on Monday that supposedly showed strong
public opposition to any Washington intervention in Terri's case. Here is
how the spinmasters framed the main poll question:
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"As you may know, a woman in Florida named Terri Schiavo
suffered brain damage and has been on life support for 15 years. Doctors say
she has no consciousness and her condition is irreversible. Her parents and
her husband disagree on whether or not she should be kept on life support.
In cases like this who do you think should have final say, (the parents) or
(the spouse)?"
A follow-up question asked:
"If you were in this condition, would you want to be kept alive,
or not?"
The problem is that, contrary to what ABC News told those
polled, Terri Schiavo is not on "life support" and has never been on "life
support." The loaded phrase evokes images of a comatose patient being
artificially sustained by myriad machines and pumps and wires. Terri was on
a feeding tube. A feeding tube is not a ventilator. Terri can breathe just
fine on her own.
And as many of her medical caretakers and parents have argued,
if given proper rehabilitation, Terri could learn to chew and swallow on her
own as well. She is disabled, not dead.
But ABC News did not see fit to inform either the poll takers or
its viewers of the truth. Instead, it misled them - and the result was a
poll response that produced - voila! - "broad public disapproval" for any
government intervention to spare Terri from slowly starving to death.
Blogger Ed Morrissey of Captain's Quarters (captainsquartersblog.com) noted:
"Either ABC is completely incompetent in conducting research, or they have
attempted to fool their viewers and readership with false polling that
essentially lies about the case in question. Since when does ABC conduct
push polling for euthanasia?"
Imagine how the poll results might have turned out if ABC News
had made clear to participants that Terri is not terminally ill. Not in
excruciating pain. Capable of saying "Mommy" and "Help me." And of "getting
the feeling she's falling" or getting "excited," in her husband's own
testimony, when her head is not held properly.
Imagine how the poll results might have turned out if ABC News
had informed participants that in a sworn affidavit, registered nurse Carla
Sauer Iyer, who worked at the Palm Garden of Largo Convalescent Center in
Largo, Fla., while Terri Schiavo was a patient there, testified: "Throughout
my time at Palm Gardens, Michael Schiavo was focused on Terri's death.
Michael would say 'When is she going to die?' 'Has she died yet?' and 'When
is that bitch gonna die?'"
Now, if you were in this situation, would you want to be kept
alive, or not?
Not to pick on ABC News, but, well, let's. In an attempt to
embarrass Rep. Dave Weldon, R-Fla., who noted that withdrawing food and
water from someone like Schiavo was extremely rare, ABC's Jake Tapper last
week featured this counter-quote from Prof. Bill Allen, of the University of
Florida College of Medicine:
"Feeding tubes have been removed in the United States for many
years, and it's been a common practice. This has happened in many cases,
probably a hundred thousand times in this country."
"A hundred thousand times"? There have been a hundred thousand
cases of non-terminally ill, non-brain dead individuals slowly starved and
forced to die in this country? Tapper demanded no proof from his professor.
Instead, he dismissed lawmakers as ignoramuses contradicted by "experts,"
cited the biased ABC News poll cited above, and tossed it back to Jennings
with this slam: "Terri Schiavo and her family deserved better than the way
Congress worked this week."
Meanwhile, contradicting the experience of every starved child
in Africa and abandoned street animal at your SPCA shelter, the New York
Times informs us: "Experts Say Ending Feeding Can Lead to a Gentle Death."
Is it any wonder the credibility of the MSM is withering on the
vine?
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