Forget about whether she can be rehabilitated. Forget if she has mush for brain or the potential for recovery. Forget the husband's alleged misdeeds or his faithlessness. Forget about burden on society and all that. None of the above matters. What matters is that Terri never left behind a written statement that would compel people to pull the plug on her.
The state should have stayed out of it. The courts should have stayed out of it too. Terri has commited no crime, yet she is sentenced to a fate we would not wish on our worst criminals and terrorists: death by starvation. The politicians and the judges are playing tennis, trying to increase their power over the other party, and the only losers are the people. If Congress is trying to extend their power into the courts, it can also be argued that the courts have been extending their power into the lives of people for some time already.
The law should be changed here. If the afflicted in question has left no written will on euthanasia, instead of granting custody automatically to a nearest spouse(husband), the responsiblity for taking care of him/her should devolve down. If the husband wants to give up the responsibility, the next concerned party steps in. And so on.
If there is even a single person in the whole wide world willing to devote finances, time, love, and tears on another human being in this condition, then what right do we have to stop the good samaritan/s? Easy, we don't. We let them do their works.
I'm not religious here, being an agnostic, but my personal philosophy and the principles I live by convince me that saving an innocent life is not wrong. I don't need religion to tell me that. It may be silly, it may be stupid, even, but it'll be an individual's choice.
What's interesting is that the right and left both are split down the middle by this issue. There are right wingers arguing that the Florida court decision should be abided by, and that the federal powers have no business butting in. Then there are those on the left who support Terri's right to live, like Nader, and would support any decision by the federal powers to keep her alive. The Belmont Club had a very good post on this.
http://www.wretchard.com/blogs/the_belm ... hiavo.aspx
The world is turned upside down because of this issue, and I think it is all the better for it. These are fundamental questions about the nature of modern society, civilization, the basis for law and government, and they should be answered.