The
MSM's life and death distortions
Michelle
Malkin
March 23, 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:
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?
Michelle
Malkin is a syndicated columnist and maintains her weblog at michellemalkin.com
http://www.townhall.com/columnists/michellemalkin/printmm20050323.shtml