Sunday, March 28, 2010

Media Silents Senator Schaeffer

CLARKESVILLE, Ga. - Former state Sen. Nancy Schaefer and her husband were found dead in their home in north Georgia and it is being investigating it as a possible murder-suicide, authorities said Friday.

Six GBI agents were at the home investigating at the request of the Habersham County Sheriff's department, GBI spokesman John Bankhead said.

The preliminary investigation is looking at the case as a murder-suicide, but he did not have further details.

Schaefer, 73, was a Republican who represented a north Georgia district for two terms. She was a prominent conservative known as a vocal opponent of abortion and same-sex marriage.

State Rep. Rick Austin announced Schaefer's death to a packed House chamber Friday night and led lawmakers in a moment of silence.

"Nancy Schaefer was a great lady, and she served Georgia and her constituents with honor and grace," Austin, a Republican from Demorest, said.

State Sen. Don Thomas told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution he knew the couple well and that he believed Bruce Schaefer was suffering from cancer.
Deaths of Former Ga. Lawmaker, Husband Probed as Murder-Suicide

AP

Former Georgia state Sen. Nancy Schaefer and her husband were found dead in their home in north Georgia and it is being investigating it as a possible murder-suicide.

"In those moments, you are not at your complete sanity," said Thomas, a physician and Republican from Dalton. "Some people figure the best way is to end it for both of you. They were married for so long. Loved each other so much. When you see somebody that you love so much, every now and then, you think the best way out of it is to go and be with the Lord."

Schaefer moved to Turnerville after more than three decades in Atlanta, where she was a former candidate for mayor. She was also GOP nominee for lieutenant governor in 1994.

In 1986, Schaefer founded a nonprofit foundation, Family Concerns Inc., which focused on opposition to abortion and the display of the Ten Commandments in public buildings.

What is even more of a tragedy, the media did not mention the work of what she was most popular for: exposing the fraud in child welfare.

Former Senator Schaefer was one of the first elected officials that was willing to take on the issue of fraud and the harms in child welfare, long before Children's Rights and long before the DHHS OIG began running audits on the states.

Unfortunately, her battle cries were drowned out with the apparent contradictions of her arguments.

In one voice, she would proclaim the sanctity of marriage is the only viable environment for children to be raised, then in the same breath she would aver against the existence of a certain group of humans (the LBGT community), yet in her second voice, she continued to challenge the legitimacy of the child welfare industry that supported and concurred with her first voices.

She will always be considered as a pioneer in the field of child policy and shall continue to be an international inspiration to those who aspire to master the discipline.

1 comment:

BEVERLY TRAN said...

Nancy had a trafficking tiny humans trust fund. Now I know why she was so funky with me. I believe they were corporate shape shifters. Did I just find her network? https://g.co/kgs/beC1wg