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Turnout burnout: As Terri Schiavo's life ebbed, expected pro-life foot soldier army turned up AWOL
WORLD ^ | 4/2/05 | Joel Belz

Posted on 03/25/2005 4:22:40 PM PST by rhema

PINELLAS PARK, Fla. - They built it—but almost nobody came.

From the welcoming entryway to the Woodside Hospice, bright orange snow fence stretched 500 feet to the east on 102nd Street and another 500 feet to the west. The barrier—at some points four layers deep in a town where it never snows—was there not just to protect the hospice complex. Pinellas Park police installed the fence to restrain and control the big crowds they were told might arrive from all over the United States to protest what was happening inside the hospice, where Terri Schiavo edged near death after medical personnel removed her feeding tube on March 18.

One policeman told WORLD his department had been warned that as many as 25,000 or even 50,000 people might show up on Palm Sunday weekend. His department, he said, was ready. "We built it," he said, "and they can come."

So the Pinellas Park police built their barrier. Bewilderingly, almost nobody came.

To be sure, several hundred passionate partisans did show up to protest the state's official treatment of Terri Schiavo, the brain-damaged—but in the testimony of her parents, by no means "vegetative"—victim of a heart attack 15 years ago. Mrs. Schiavo, 41, had for almost all that time depended on a feeding tube to keep her alive. But soon after noon on the Friday before Palm Sunday, that feeding tube was removed at the insistence of her husband, Michael Schiavo. After some 23 court decisions involving at least 16 judges in different jurisdictions, Mr. Schiavo also had the state of Florida on his side.

Medical experts differed about whether, deprived of all food and water, Terri Schiavo would experience severe pain and suffering. But no one disagreed that, because of her husband's decision and the state's concurrence, she would die—and probably within 10 to 14 days.

So the human drama, or the prospect of watching thousands of people respond to the drama, attracted the media. The little industrial park across from Woodside Hospice became a bustling media village with a dozen or more satellite transmission trucks turning the venue into something more like Madison Square Garden than a quiet Florida side street.

Bob Franken and his crew from CNN staked out a prime spot for their hour-to-hour coverage. Reporters from The New York Times, The Philadelphia Inquirer, and The Los Angeles Times jostled each other for a chance to talk alone with Terri's mother and father, Bob and Mary Schindler. But mostly, the media people talked to each other. The big crowds, predicted by some activists to begin rolling in by the busload, never materialized. On March 18—the day the feeding tube was removed—200 people milled about the site; the next day, no more than 100 folks were still around. By Palm Sunday, fewer than 50 protesters and activists remained in front of the hospice at any given time. Media people easily outnumbered the folks they were supposedly covering.

The lack of boots on the ground in Pinellas County "does not mean a lack of concern," said Lynda Bell of Florida Right to Life. "There's so much you don't see going on behind the scenes in this case."

Her group has worked since 2001 to save Mrs. Schiavo, keeping in close contact with family members and lobbying the Florida statehouse—and recently Congress—for legislative action. The group was instrumental in ushering through Terri's Law, the measure that enabled Florida Gov. Jeb Bush to order Mrs. Schiavo's feeding tube reinserted in 2003. Last month, Florida Right to Life quietly hammered lawmakers to move HB701, a Schiavo remedy which passed the Florida House but failed in the Senate.

As pro-lifers in Tallahassee hounded the state Senate for passage in what appeared to be the last hours of Mrs. Schiavo's life, those outside the hospice were a motley and disordered crew.

Chris Braren, a 38-year-old plumber from Valdosta, Ga., said he came because "if we don't start by helping her, it will be the old folks' home next." Mr. Braren wasn't sure he'd still have a job when he got back to Valdosta, since he was taking unauthorized time off. But this was more important. "I've been such a poor Christian," he said, "but it's time for me to get ahold of God like I never have."

Guabe Garcia-Jones, a lawyer for the American Life League in Washington, D.C., decided while driving to Florida that if Terri's tube were actually withdrawn, he would take no food or water either until it was restored. Mr. Garcia-Jones pitched a small tent in a grassy area set aside for protesters. He lay quietly on a mat, seeking no attention, but talking agreeably with those who asked—including Gwen, an 11-year-old girl who was understandably intrigued with his commitment. "I don't fear death," he said. But then: "Well, not too much, anyway. I just hope this makes me good enough to meet God." That was on Saturday. On Sunday, Mr. Garcia-Jones and his tent were no longer there.

Franciscan Brothers of Peace Paul O'Donnell, Anthony Sweeney, and Hilary McGee came from St. Paul, Minn. They said their order was first established to protest abortion. "But now," said Mr. Sweeney, "Satan has run around to the other end of life and is attacking our older people. If this is allowed, thousands and maybe millions of people will die premature deaths."

Another unusual trio included Carol Cleigh from Brasstown, N.C., Eleanor Smith from Atlanta, and Heather DeMian from Columbia, Mo. All three rolled up to the federal courthouse in Tampa in wheelchairs—and all three were outspokenly non-Christian. "This is a horrible thing," said Ms. Cleigh. "A 'better-dead-than-disabled' theme is behind the right-to-die movement. It's an insult to us, and we adamantly reject it." The three said the judicial actions threatening Mrs. Schiavo are anti-feminist ("they treat women like chattel") as well as anti-disabilities.

Standing virtually alone was Tim Harmon, one of the few protesters who openly supported Michael Schiavo. Mr. Harmon, a 44-year-old hair stylist from Tampa, said it angered him that Congress and President Bush became involved in a personal situation after Florida's courts had so thoroughly considered the case. "What utter hypocrisy," he snorted at posters with messages like "Feed Terri—Starve Michael."

Pro-life activists Randall Terry and Gary McCullough volunteered to help the Schindler family organize press conferences and provide a semblance of order. But what the media did not find in the Pinellas Park encampment was a ready and broad supply of prepared pro-lifers, well equipped to make an articulate argument for the preservation of Mrs. Schiavo's life.

"People have become so disillusioned with our court system that they don't know how to change what has happened," said Lanier Swann, director of government relations at Concerned Women for America (CWA). "You can't lobby judges."

For a movement that has built itself on sidewalk activism, the no-shows were notable. Who was missing? A serious and coherent Roman Catholic presence, for one thing. Three Franciscan monks, however passionate and well spoken they may have been, could hardly make up for the conspicuous absence of any leaders from the St. Petersburg diocese. Not a single priest showed up, in spite of the Schindler family's reputation as loyal, practicing Catholics. Last year, the local bishop is reported to have prohibited the mention of Mrs. Schiavo in area churches; he yielded finally to allow such mention—but only in prayers. "The pope," Mr. Sweeney of St. Paul told WORLD, "has made his position clear. It angers me that good Catholics are ignoring his message. There should be thousands of busloads heading this way."

Also missing were any big-name, high-profile evangelical leaders. Christian talk radio and internet outlets were abuzz for weeks about the Schiavo crisis. Conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh devoted hours to it.

Yet no prominent Christian leader showed up in Pinellas Park. Rather than encourage on-scene activism, groups like Concerned Women for America and the Family Research Council said they used their massive mailing lists and national radio broadcasts to motivate citizen activism, such as writing or phoning congressional representatives. Focus on the Family president James Dobson devoted four one-hour broadcasts in the last month, and parts of others, to the case. Few apparently thought to send foot soldiers.

Generation Life national director Brandi Swindell said many activists and ordinary folk associated with her group wanted to descend on Pinellas County en masse, but often were restrained by limited vacation time or childcare responsibilities.

Their absence was not lost on the media, many of whom were already cynical about evangelical claims about the size of their following.

"How many protesters would you say are there right now?" asked ABC network news anchor Peter Jennings of his local on-site reporter. "About six," responded the reporter, inaccurately, after glancing around. He may have missed by a factor of five or six—but it hardly mattered. "That's what I thought," Mr. Jennings replied for all America to hear. "By tomorrow, this may not be a story at all."

It was, in fact, a remarkable story—many of the details of which remained blurred by such reporting. What, indeed, was Terri's actual physical state? Was she capable of basic communication, as claimed by her mother Mary, her father Bob, her sister Suzanne, and her brother Robert? Was the rumor true that authorities in the hospice were forbidding relatives even to slip ice chips through Terri's parched lips? How could a genuinely interested media army come up with so few details and so little documentation about the lifestyle of a husband like Michael, who has lived with another woman for 10 years, fathering two children outside his marriage, and who so aggressively pursued his wife's death?

Protesters here at Pinellas Park joined others across the country in raising all those and other questions as well. But if the puny crowds who gathered here were the only evidence to go on, the big media might have been forgiven for concluding it really wasn't that big a story after all. The people who said it mattered most didn't even show up. —with reporting by Lynn Vincent

'No sense of humanity'

If anybody outside the Pinellas Park hospice seemed less like a "protester" than all the others, it had to be Bob Schindler, Terri Schiavo's father.

Consumed with his cause and exhausted by the fight, Mr. Schindler nonetheless was a picture of gentle civility. Even when given the opportunity to lash out at Michael Schiavo, the man who has so relentlessly sought his daughter's death, Mr. Schindler said simply: "Her mother and I know what we know about Terri's condition. He'll have to account for the false things he's said."

Throughout the weekend drama, Mr. Schindler made it a point to move repeatedly and quietly through the small crowd of demonstrators, shaking hands and earnestly thanking people for their support.

When asked by WORLD what the highs and lows of his roller-coaster week had been, he noted on the one hand his appreciation of the public support provided by Pope John Paul, but his deep disappointment—"No," he said, "call that disgust"—for the U.S. judiciary system.

"There is no sense of humanity in the judges I have seen."

Terri's sister Suzanne and brother Robert were not always so restrained. Even while they carry their parents' good manners, dark suggestions about Michael Schiavo's early years with their sister spill frequently from their comments. Yet none of those has resulted in any court findings to that end, a fact not lost on a skeptical and sometimes cynical media force.

On the other hand, the whole Schindler family expresses frustration that the investigative media, usually eager to root through ugly issues, have shown so little fascination in the case of their sister and her husband. —•


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: cary; euthanasia; prolife; schiavo; terri; terrihysteria; terrischiavo
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1 posted on 03/25/2005 4:22:41 PM PST by rhema
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To: rhema
The question seems to be why we didn't go to Pinellas Park to riot?

No doubt those ghouls would like for the cops to shoot some more Right to Life people.

2 posted on 03/25/2005 4:25:09 PM PST by muawiyah
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To: muawiyah

We're mourning.


3 posted on 03/25/2005 4:25:56 PM PST by The Grim Freeper
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To: rhema
Standing virtually alone was Tim Harmon, one of the few protesters who openly supported Michael Schiavo. Mr. Harmon, a 44-year-old hair stylist from Tampa, said it angered him that Congress and President Bush became involved in a personal situation after Florida's courts had so thoroughly considered the case. "What utter hypocrisy," he snorted at posters with messages like "Feed Terri—Starve Michael."

Hair stlylist? Please. I'm not going there. But they find the lib amongst the crowd.

4 posted on 03/25/2005 4:26:24 PM PST by writer33 ("In Defense of Liberty," a political thriller, being released in March)
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To: rhema

Big events are nice, but I'd rather have 100,000 phone calls and letters to elected officials than 100,000 people at a rally.


5 posted on 03/25/2005 4:31:31 PM PST by Zack Nguyen (parties.)
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To: rhema
Wow! An article stating that not as many protesters turned up as expected.

I am still looking for articles like this about anything reported about liberal/leftist/socialist/communist/pink/gay protests.!

6 posted on 03/25/2005 4:33:01 PM PST by rocksblues (First there was Terri, whose next? You, me, your child, your wife?)
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Comment #7 Removed by Moderator

To: muawiyah

I disagree. I was shocked about how few people showed up to help this issue. I don't exactly see overwhelming number of concern people milling around the nursing home to help him make saving his daughter a reality. For all the smoke, I dont see any fire. In a different, better time, the police would have been overrun and the woman would have been rescued.

You are assuming something would be done if they are arrested. You errr. Nothing would be done. There is no groundswell of support to help them break their daughter's out.

Think about this. In this country, people ramapage after football and basketball game wins. And football and basket ball are in essence, not real. They are pseudoevents provided for profit.

A real event occurs which requires emotion, and action. And the men and women of this country change the channel.

We will lose every important battle about life and morals in this country because we are not really committed.

Homosexuality...we lost. Sanctity of life issues...we lost. Freedom of religion....we are losing.


8 posted on 03/25/2005 4:35:42 PM PST by mlmr (The Culture of Death will get a lot more deadly before it's done.)
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To: smyrna1967

The corruption is total. Sometimes I just want to leave. I wish there was a place I could go, where Christian morals are important, where I could raise my children to an alive church and christian culture. Where the church bells speak.


10 posted on 03/25/2005 4:56:34 PM PST by mlmr (The Culture of Death will get a lot more deadly before it's done.)
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To: rocksblues
Wow! An article stating that not as many protesters turned up as expected. I am still looking for articles like this about anything reported about liberal/leftist/socialist/communist/pink/gay protests.!

You might see them in a magazine like WORLD, but because such articles would require introspective and dispassionate honesty, you'll see them in the mainstream media simultaneously with the first frosty morning in the eternal habitation of the impenitent.

11 posted on 03/25/2005 5:03:14 PM PST by rhema
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To: vishnu6

Hindu troll


13 posted on 03/25/2005 5:06:27 PM PST by mlmr (The Culture of Death will get a lot more deadly before it's done.)
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To: vishnu6

See ya!

14 posted on 03/25/2005 5:10:14 PM PST by rocksblues (First there was Terri, whose next? You, me, your child, your wife?)
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To: rhema
On the other hand, the whole Schindler family expresses frustration that the investigative media, usually eager to root through ugly issues, have shown so little fascination in the case of their sister and her husband.

You gotta be kidding! It has been non-stop Terri for the past week and a half.

15 posted on 03/25/2005 5:10:19 PM PST by ContraryMary
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To: rhema
Amazing that this is what goes on. And liberals complaining about bias in the news always say that Fox News is the main culprit.
16 posted on 03/25/2005 5:13:01 PM PST by rocksblues (First there was Terri, whose next? You, me, your child, your wife?)
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To: mlmr

I was saying this exact same thing today. I am disgusted with America right now, it's a sad time. I was so hopeful after the election & now I feel like we are winning the battle around the world, but losing the war back here at home.


17 posted on 03/25/2005 5:27:30 PM PST by alicewonders
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To: ContraryMary
"On the other hand, the whole Schindler family expresses frustration that the investigative media,...

THE "investigative" media, not the "reporting" media. There have been plenty of reporters, what about the investigation???

18 posted on 03/25/2005 5:43:43 PM PST by jackibutterfly
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To: mlmr
The corruption is total. Sometimes I just want to leave. I wish there was a place I could go, where Christian morals are important, where I could raise my children to an alive church and christian culture. Where the church bells speak.

Well, there is an effort by some Christians to move to South Carolina to make a powerful voting bloc. You can read it here at Christian Exodus Like you, I wish there was a place we can go and have a decent life.
19 posted on 03/25/2005 5:51:30 PM PST by Nowhere Man (I hope you enjoyed your dinner, Terri Schiavo can't. B-()
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Comment #20 Removed by Moderator


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