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___________________________________________________________EDITORIAL__________ Stem Cells and Moral Options The short speech in which he announced his decision was a minor political masterpiece. But the conclusion that President George W. Bush reached on stem-cell research was a grave disappointment. After carefully explaining the arguments both for and against embryonic stem-cell research—in language so persuasive that listeners on opposite sides of the debate thought he was on the verge of endorsing their position—the President did his utmost to find some middle ground, and he failed. While he reiterated his opposition to the deliberate destruction of human life, President Bush nevertheless accepted the proposition that some human beings may legitimately profit from the death of others. He attempted to set limits on the use of human embryos for medical research, but his position is undermined by the logic of his own argument. For the first time, thanks to the President’s decision, the US government will fund—and thus the American taxpayer will subsidize—research on tissue that only exists because human embryos were destroyed. It is important to understand that if he had slammed the door on all use of embryonic stem cells in taxpayer-sponsored research, President Bush would merely have been ratifying what Congress had already decided. The existing legislation bars federal funding for research on embryonic tissue. In a characteristically cynical and mendacious move, the previous occupant of the White House had ruled that stem cells should not be classified as embryonic tissue. Bush could simply have corrected that obvious solecism, citing as his authority the immutable rules of science and logic. Yes, it is true that Bush refused to support research on newly harvested embryos. Federal funds will only flow to those scientists who use stem-cells drawn from embryos that are already dead. So Uncle Sam will not directly subsidize those researchers who destroy human lives in order to harvest stem-cells. But the government will accept, and pay for, the results of that harvesting. How does that differ from the moral position taken by someone who opposes the killing of human beings in concentration camps, but is ready to buy the gold teeth taken from the corpses? Decisions already made Now apply that logic to the thousands of frozen embryos now preserved in laboratories. They are not yet dead, but they soon will be; their fate has already been sealed. If they are not used for research, the vast majority of them will simply be discarded. The Bush administration has no plans to rescue them. So, since they are slated for destruction, why shouldn’t we profit from their demise? Already, in the few weeks since the President’s announcement, dozens of public pleas have been entered by scientists seeking to extend the scope of federally financed research. If the government is prepared to subsidize research on the stem-cell lines harvested from embryos prior to August 9, why not those harvested later in August, or in September? The logic of the Bush policy leaves no compelling answer to such questions. The proper answer—the morally consistent answer—is that human lives should never be used as a means to an end. Mature, thinking adults should never accept the exploitation of other human beings. Perhaps Christians should attack the “demand side” of the stem-cell research equation by organizing the patient’s equivalent of the Hippocratic Oath. We might join in a pledge that we shall refuse any medical treatment that requires, or profits from, the deliberate killing of human beings. Another look at in vitro fertilization This year’s debate over the fate of frozen embryos would not have occurred if, years ago, the world had listened to the wisdom of the Catholic Church, and recognized the immorality of in vitro fertilization. We are tempted to exploit these embryos for stem-cell research only because we are already exploiting them to achieve pregnancy by artificial means. It is a great blessing when a barren couple conceives a child, just as it would be a great blessing if patients recovered from Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease as the result of stem-cell research. But if the blessed result is achieved through the destruction of human lives, then the cost is too high. —By Philip F. Lawler Back to Catholic World Report October 2001 Table of Contents |