An Insider's Report of the Big Bush Stem Cell Funding Decision
An article in Commentary by is a very interesting read. It amounts to an inside story about how and why President Bush made his controversial stem cell funding decision that has caused "the scientists" and media so much heartburn. It is a long piece but a few points stand out. One, for example, is that prominent scientists told Bush things in private that they have rarely repeated in public. Lefkowitz writes:
On the hard science of embryonic research, the meetings reflected a greater ambiguity than boosterish media reports indicated was the case. Several scientists told Bush plainly that the efficacy of embryonic stem cells remained to be proved. As a result, some felt that only a few lines were needed to determine whether the field had genuine potential or was just a pipe dream.
Indeed, in an interview with the New York Times shortly before Bush's August speech, Irving Weissman of Stanford stated that "a finite number [of stem-cell lines] would be sufficient. If we had 10-15 lines, no one would complain."
Now that the debate seems to be over, what can we say about Bush's policy and the long months it took for him to devise it? I think it is fair to look upon it as a model of how to deal with the complicated scientific and ethical dilemmas that will continue to confront political leaders in the age of biotechnology. Bush refused to accept the notion that we must choose between medical research and the principle of the dignity of life at every stage. He sought both to advance biomedical science and at the same time to respect the sanctity of human life. In the end he came to a moderate, balanced decision that drew a prudent and principled line. The decision was both informed and reasoned, based on lengthy study and consultation with people of widely divergent viewpoints. It was consciously not guided by public-opinion polls.
This is a heterodox view, of course, but it worth the read even for those who despise Bush and his policy. And it seems right to me. From my discussions with those who have been literally into the Oval Office about these matters, there is no question in my mind that Bush acted with integrity and courage. And, as I have written previously, while I don't think the stem cell wars are over--believe me "the scientists" are working overtime to create cloned embryos and cloned stem cell lines in part to overcome the political impact of the iPSCs--the president deserves great credit for the way things seem to be turning.Labels: Bush Stem Cell Policy



2 Comments:
"Now that the debate seems to be over"!!! are you kidding? ESC are key to understanding the development of human beings. How can anyone believe that they are so unimportant that research on them will stop!! No, supporters of this research will forge ahead. President Bush's decision was only a speed bump in the way of finding out and I do mean 'yes or no' what uses stem cells have. Cultures with millions of people are working on the answer. The world will know it. as I said in my blog http://stemcellreport.blogspot.com/, my bet is that the President's stand will reside in the dust bin of bad ideas.
SayHiThere:
I agree that the debate isn't over on ESCR. But Bush lines will be fine for investigating plutipotency issues. What iPSCs do is profoundly impact the cloning debate, however, since they provide what "the scientists" called the gold standard, tailor made, patient specific,pluripotent stem cells.
The anytyhing goes crowd will want to forge ahead to human cloning, genetic engineering, fetal farming, and the rest. But if treatments come adult stem cells and good research from iPSCs, the ethics of the matter favor drawing reasonable lines.
Thanks for stopping by.
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