November 04, 2003
Starvation Nation
By
Michelle Malkin
In a country where
pet obesity and
soda-guzzling toddlers are the
health problems du jour, it might seem hard to
believe that starvation in America poses a far bigger
threat than overindulgence.
But a deeper look at the daily
headlines suggests exactly that. The famine at hand is
not about the absence of physical and material
nourishment. We are a nation that has been weaned off
the sustaining principle that all human life is
sacred. We are a nation addicted to the sugar water
of
relativism—a sweet-tasting, empty-caloried diet that
is at the root of a
deadly moral decay.
Terri Schindler-Schiavo, a
wide-awake
cognitively disabled Florida woman
whom the life-denying mainstream
media ghouls keep describing as “comatose,”
came perilously close to starving to death at the hands
of her husband and the courts last month. Michael
Schiavo, who vowed to love his ailing wife in sickness
and in health, demanded that Terri’s feeding tube
removed and denied her
Holy Communion. After
Gov. Jeb Bush and the state Legislature intervened
and the tube was reconnected, Schiavo again
blocked Terri from receiving sustenance—the
emotional sustenance of her loving and
vigilant parents.
Meanwhile, Schiavo has satisfied
his own base appetites by
taking up with a mistress, fathering
two illegitimate children, and squandering a massive
medical malpractice payment on “right-to-die”
lawyers and living expenses instead of rehabilitative
therapy for Terri.
Another reminder of inhumane
neglect last week came in the
emaciated faces of Bruce,
Keith, Tyrone, and Michael Jackson of
Collingswood, N.J. Bruce,
19 years old and 45 pounds, was caught rummaging through
a neighbor’s garbage for food. At home, Bruce and his
younger brothers had apparently been starved for the
past five years by adoptive parents who cashed in on the
state-subsidized kiddie racket.
Raymond and Vanessa Jackson
reportedly
received more than $30,000
from the state of New Jersey last year to help care for
their adopted children and raked in federal housing
subsidies to cover their rent. Yet, the Jacksons owed
about $9,000 in back rent and accepted at least $2,000
from a church to restore their electricity. Where did
all the aid go?
The Jacksons and their biological
children appear perfectly well-fed in family portraits.
Indeed, some of the healthy siblings could stand to lose
a few pounds. A friend of the family noted that the
Jackson family living room boasted a
large screen TV with cable hook-up. And there was
enough money to set up an alarm system in the kitchen,
presumably to keep the starving boys out. Meanwhile,
Bruce and his brothers apparently gnawed on
window sills and insulation to fight hunger. Their
teeth had rotted; their shrunken heads crawled with
lice. Friends and relatives rationalized the boys’
barbaric treatment with the circular claim that they had
eating disorders.
Every week, the
victims surface: A two-year-old Jacksonville, Fla.,
toddler survives on
ketchup and raw pasta for
two weeks while her mom sits
silently behind bars. A brother and sister are left
home alone with a few boxes of
Bagel Bites and corn dogs for three weeks while
their mom pursues a North Carolina man she met on the
Internet. A brain-injured man starves to death in a
Manassas, Va., nursing home after his wife has his
feeding tube yanked and then collects in excess of
$800,000 in tax-free insurance funds.
Earlier this year, the decomposing
body of
7-year-old Faheem Williams
was found stuffed in a plastic container in a Newark
basement. He had died of starvation and blunt force
trauma to his distended stomach. His brothers, a twin
and a four-year-old suffering from
malnutrition and dehydration, were found locked in a
room nearby covered with vomit and feces. Government
social workers had
visited the children
dozens of times to investigate allegations of burns,
beatings, drug trafficking, and lack of food. But they
failed to take any action other than feeding the
Nanny State bureaucracy with
useless paperwork.
To treat human beings as
vegetables, cash cows, disposable goods, and anonymous
case files is to cruelly rob them of fundamental respect
and dignity. We may be a nation of plenty, but without
the nourishment that only the Bread of Life can bring,
we are slowly wasting away.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
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