Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

To: All
I saw Kate's testimony before the Florida legislature just recently on Florida public television. Her testimony was quite moving. Another article I found:

Former "Vegetative State" Patient Speaks
Her feeding tube was removed for eight days.

Last weekend a rally of over three-hundred of Terri Schiavo's most die-hard supporters heard the first-hand account of the sufferings and remarkable recovery of Kate Adamson.

Struck down in 1995 at the age of thirty-three by a rare double brainstem stroke, Kate, then a mother of two young girls, was completely paralyzed; she was unable even to blink her eyes. Like Terri Shiavo, the medical staff treating her questioned the merit of continuing granting Kate the most basic human right of food and water.

Terri Schiavo, although not nearly as severely disabled as Adamson once appeared to be, is slotted to have her feeding tube removed at 1:00 pm this Friday. Similarly, Kate Adamson's feeding tube was at one point removed for a full eight days before being reinserted due to the intervention of her husband (also a competent lawyer).

Frequently described by medical authorities as a humane way to die, Kate -- now as vibrant and beautiful as before her stroke -- testified before the crowd of Terri's family and supporters that this form of legalized execution was "one of the most painful experiences you can imagine." Unable to respond or to indicate awareness, Kate Adamson asserts, "I was just like Terri…but I was alive! I could hear every word. They were saying 'shall we just not treat her?'...I suffered excruciating misery in silence."

This personal testimony confirms what Terri supporters have long suspected -- that the execution sought by her husband Michael Schiavo is anything but painless and humane. Furthermore, Kate's remarkable recovery to nearly full mental and physical health -- she still suffers partial paralysis of her left side -- gives Terri supporters hope that Terri too may still experience a similar recovery, if granted proper care and treatment.

During her early-afternoon speech Kate declared that "If they want to kill Terri they should have the guts to put a gun to her head" rather than condemn her to such a slow and painful death. She finished off by summing up the full import of the Schiavo case, saying, "The measure of a society is how they treat the least of us. Life is sacred or meaningless, there is nothing in between."


12 posted on 03/19/2005 11:08:30 AM PST by DBeers
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies ]


To: DBeers
another article:

Back to main page

Thursday, March 17, 2005

What is it like to die of thirst?

by Ree-C Murphey | 03/17/2005 10:48 pm

If you had no food or water, how long would it take for your to die? The answer: 10-14 days.

What would it feel like? Would it be like dying in your sleep? You go to sleep "here" and end up "there"?

One lady, Kate Adamson, lived through having food and liquids taken away from her for 8 days in an effort to let her die since she was in a "coma". This is how she describes it:

The agony of going without food was a constant pain that lasted not several hours like my operation did, but several days. You have to endure the physical pain and on top of that you have to endure the emotional pain. Your whole body cries out, "Feed me. I am alive and a person, don't let me die, for God's Sake! Somebody feed me."

She described it as "sheer torture". She went on:

I craved anything to drink. Anything. I obsessively visualized drinking from a huge bottle of orange Gatorade. And I hate orange Gatorade. I did receive lemon flavored mouth swabs to alleviate dryness but they did nothing to slack my desperate thirst.

Read the whole thing.

Then think about Terri Schiavo. What will she go through? What will she feel? Are you willing to bet her life on it? Her "husband" is.......

I said it before, I'll say it again: If Terri Schiavo is to die and die she must in accordance with the courts and her husband, then give her the same lethal injection we give death row inmates instead of starving her to death. (I am not advocating for her death, far from it. I just don't want her to endure the brutality of what her husband and courts are ordering her to endure. Make the death humane if she MUST die.)


13 posted on 03/19/2005 11:37:22 AM PST by DBeers
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 12 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson