Monday, June 05, 2006

Ian Wilmut Actively Promoting Reproductive Cloning

The man who led the team that cloned Dolly the sheep--he didn't do the actual cloning--has come out in favor of reproductive cloning for therapeutic purposes. That is, he would like to use cloning and genetic engineering to eradicate serious inherited disease.

Wilmut has always been interested in genetic engineering. A veterinarian, he first worked on cloning to permit animals to be genetically engineered so as to provide therapeutic substances in their milk. He once said he had no interest in human cloning, but that assertion became inoperative when his animal cloning project went bust. Now he works in human cloning research at Edinburgh University.

The slippery slope is sliding away even before we know whether humans can actually be cloned. And of course, even if we could do "therapeutic" reproductive cloning, it wouldn't be very long before the solipsistic began to demand the right to enhance their offspring to fit parental desires--backed by many bioethicists and members of the scientific establishment who only oppose reproductive cloning now because it isn't "safe."

I agree with the United Nations General Assembly that voted by a 3-1 margin urging member states to "prohibit all forms of human cloning inasmuch as they are compatible with human dignity and the protection of human life."

2 Comments:

At June 05, 2006 , Blogger Don Nelson said...

Wesley, it seems to me that we are well down the path to believing that parents have a right to kids who meet the expections we have to meet our needs. I think IVF and embryo screening selective reduction abortions indicate that. There seems to be a strong undercurrent in consumer society that children are to meet the needs of parents and that they are more extensions of the parent than ends in and of themselves. I think there’s also an element that says it would be cruel to let children with certain genes come into the world.

Sometimes I wonder if my mother would have survived the embryo screening process and the coming designer baby process. She lived 59 years, the last two dying from cancer. What if some embryologist said… “we can’t let this little one in. She’ll die from cancer with that predisposing to cancer gene. It would be cruel to let her live and come to that kind of end.”

I frequently think about your comment that physically and mentally handicapped people are some of the most wonderful people you’ve ever known. There’s something seriously missing in our desire for a perfect world.

 
At June 06, 2006 , Blogger bmmg39 said...

Well, whatever.

I mean: of the two, "reproductive" cloning* is clearly the LESSER of the two evils, clearly less evil than creating human beings purely to destroy them.

* Of course, "reproductive" and "therapeutic" cloning are poor labels. If you create a new embryo via cloning, you have reproduced -- case closed -- whether you intend to let that embryo live or not.

 

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