[star]The American Mind[star]

March 22, 2005

Sowell on Schiavo

Few public intellectuals can put the complexities of Man's existence into so clear a form as Thomas Sowell. He's the best conservative thinker who simple conveys the flawed world we're stuck in.

There are no good solutions to this wrenching situation. It is the tragedy of the human condition in its most stark form.

The extraordinary session of Congress, calling members back from around the country, with the President flying back from his home in Texas in order to be ready to sign legislation dealing with Terri Schiavo, are things that do us credit as a nation.

Even if critics who claim that this is being done for political or ideological reasons are partially or even wholly correct, they still miss the point. It is the public's sense of concern -- in some cases, outrage -- that is reflected by their elected representatives.

What can Congress do -- and what effect will it have? We do not know and Congress does not know. Those who are pushing for legislation to save Terri Schiavo are obviously trying to avoid setting a precedent or upsetting the Constitutional balance.

It is an old truism that hard cases make bad law. No one wants all such cases to end up in either Congress or the federal courts. But neither do decent people want an innocent woman killed because she was inconvenient and a court refused to recognize the conflict of interests in her legal guardian.


Sowell is as uncomfortable as me about Congress having to act on Terri Schiavo's behalf. If anyone understands unintended consequences it's Sowell yet still his conscience dictates that an extraordinary case deserves extraordinary actions.

"'Cruel and Unusual'" [via Michelle Malkin]

Posted by Sean Hackbarth in Culture of Death at 10:37 PM | Comments (0) | Trackbacks (0)