NYT Bias and Missouri Cloning
Well, it didn't work out as the pro-cloners wanted. Missouri opponents of human cloning didn't just roll over when Amendment 2 passed through one of the most deceptive campaigns I have ever seen, abetted by a totally biased and in the tank media. And, as I have written here previously, the amendment overreached by requiring funding of embryonic stem cell research if the state funded other forms of research. As a consequence, the universities in MO lost money for new life science buildings and projects.
Now, the NYT--second only to the Kansas City Star in bias, weighs in with a story bemoaning the lack of difference that the passage of Amendment 2 made. It is the ordinary fare you see in the in biased reporting about the cloning/ESCR MSM. But I wish to call attention to two points:
1. Embryonic stem cell research was legal in MO before Amendment 2. And no one has introduced any bill of which I am aware to make it illegal in MO. If the Stowers Institute wished to conduct ESCR before Amendment 2, it could have done so until the cows came home without fear or worry about the research later being outlawed.
2. Thanks to Amendment 2, human cloning, somatic cell nuclear transfer, is a constitutional right in MO. This is not the same thing as ESCR. As I have been forced to point out constantly because stories like this one won't, SCNT creates an embryo, one potential use for which is ESCR. Hence, the research Stowers wishes to do is not only ESCR, but creating embryos through cloning for the purpose of destroying them in ESCR. This is where the huge controversy lies, a point the media, as here, generally describes thusly:
Within hours of the vote, opponents said they would fight on, focusing their attention narrowly on one element of the research, known as therapeutic cloning or somatic cell nuclear transfer, in which the nucleus of a mature cell is transplanted into an egg cell, which would then produce stem cells.First, yet again, SCNT creates an embryo, not stem cells. Second, the definition of cloning was junk biology as defined in Amendment 2. The answer to this dispute about whether SCNT is or is not cloning has a scientific answer which would have been easy to learn with a few phone calls. But that would have proven the opponents right, so that reporting was never done. The Times likes to think of itself as the paper of record. It is actually the paper of bias.The debate has come down to a fight over what constitutes "cloning."
Supporters of the amendment say they banned human cloning, which they defined in the amendment as an act that could result in a woman's pregnancy and the creation of a human fetus inside a woman's uterus. Opponents say the replication of cells, regardless of implantation in the uterus, amounts to cloning.
Labels: Media Bias. New York Times


2 Comments:
I notice the NYT leaves out the part about males and females, replacing those details with "an act". For your readers, Here is the text of the bill, and here is its definition of cloning: “Clone or attempt to clone a human being” means to implant in a uterus or attempt to implant in a uterus anything other than the product of fertilization of an egg of a human female by a sperm of a human male for the purpose of initiating a pregnancy that could result in the creation of a human fetus, or the birth of a human being.
I agree that is a terrible definition of cloning, but as far as outlawing something that really needs to be outlawed right away, it does a far better job than any of the cloning bills introduced in Congress, which do nothing to stop genetic engineering because they only ban exact clones (or true clones) but leave a huge loophole precisely where the eugenicists want to go by not banning modified clones. Just one token change would get them around the Hatch and Brownback bans.
also note that the Missouri amendment doesn't allow anything that Federal law prohibits, so it doesn't really create a "right to clone", just a right to do what Federal law allows, which at this moment includes cloning and also genetic engineering and also implanting and giving birth. Missouri is the only state that has restrictions on implanting GE'd embryos.
I should finish making that last point: since only a federal ban on cloning makes sense, there is a lot more to be happy about with A2 than there is to worry about. We need a federal egg and sperm law ASAP, and whether it allows creating embryos for stem cells or not, we hopefully agree that it should certainly ban implanting "anything other than the product of fertilization of an egg of a human female by a sperm of a human male". That language is the most important part of A2, and both the NYT and Wesley don't write about it.
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