Wednesday, March 18, 2009

SHS as Source for Anti Human Exceptionalism Column Ideas? Fetal Farming Pushed in Huffington Post

I wasn't going to run with this because bioethicist Jacob M. Appel seems to be following the same business model to career success as Julian Savulescu and others: stake out the most wild and radical positions conceivable and you are sure to get attention--and perhaps big speaking fees--as Peter "Professor Infanticide" Singer's $20,000 per pop illustrates. (As I have previously noted here, Appel has supported assisted suicide for the mentally ill, genetic engineering of progeny, and the acceptability of bestiality.)

But this fetal farming boost appeared in the Huffington Post, perhaps the most influential blog on the Left, with millions of readers. And it is pernicious in the extreme. From Appel's column:

Opponents of reproductive choice will object to such a market on the grounds that it will increase the number of abortions -- which will indeed be the logical result. However, such a market might also bring solace to women who have already decided upon abortion, but desire that some additional social good come from the procedure. Like the families of accident victims who donate the organs of their loved ones, these women could well find their decisions fortified by the public benefit that they generate. An additional economic incentive would further assuage any doubts, and might even make the procedure more palatable to otherwise equivocal spouses or partners.
Hmm. That sounds familiar. One week before Appel posted his column, I sarcastically wrote much the same thing here reacting to calls by UK scientists for using abortions as source of organs. From my post of March 11, "Fetal Farming, Here We Come: UK Scientists Say to Use Aborted Fetuses as Sources of Organs":
Hey, I know: When a woman wants an early term abortion, we can pay her to gestate a couple of extra months so her fetus can be of societal use! And imagine the possibilities when artificial wombs are created: We can gestate fetuses to order. The road to fetal farming is already being paved.
I am beginning to think Appel uses SHS as a source of ideas and then restates what I criticize as a positive. Let's look at Appel's conclusion, which reinforces the last point:
Someday, if we are fortunate, scientific research may make possible farms of artificial "wombs" breeding fetuses for their organs -- or even the "miracle" of men raising fetuses in their abdomens. That day remains far off. However, the prospect of fetal-adult organ transplantation is a much more realistic near-term possibility. A market in such organs might benefit both society and the women who choose to take advantage of it.
Again, I don't intend to react to every Appel column because that would support his business model. But that the Huffington Post considers this a legitimate and acceptable argument to run on its site--it would never countenance a racist utilitarian rant--shows, in my mind precisely the dark place where the utilitarian Left is more than happy to go. And it reminds me of the wisdom of the late Fr. Richard John Neuhaus, who once wrote:
Thousands of medical thicists and bioethicists, as they are called, professionally guide the unthinkable on its passage through the debatable on its way to becoming the justifiable, until it is finally established as the unexceptionable.
That was true when he wrote those words for Commentary in 1988. It was more true when I used this quote in Culture of Death in 2001. And it is true in spades and exclamation points today.

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18 Comments:

At March 18, 2009 , Blogger Adrienne said...

That whole scenario is stomach churning...

 
At March 18, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

Pull the plug on them at one end of life, farm them at the other.

Maybe the number next to the Greek flag here keeps going up here more quickly than before the last few days because of Arianna Stassinopoulos Huffington's blog site? If that's the reason, I wonder what they must think.

 
At March 18, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

Fr. Neuhaus was right. Now, this is what happens when there is even a field called "bioethics." Ethics can't be debated in the first place! Something either is ethical or it isn't, and we know what's ethical; we feel it; we just know. In that respect, it's good to remember that we are related to non-human animals and that we are animals, too; what we share in common with them is what we need to live; we all have physical bodies, organ systems, blood, bones, skin -- no species is any other, but we all share certain things in common, including sensitivity, ability to feel pain, sensibility -- and instinct. The other things we share with them are not bad; why then is instinct? Animals do act ethically, in their way; we are just as capable of the same and, especially if we are exceptional, we are even more capable of it. It's not bad to rely on instinct; it is a matter of survival for us as it is for other animals. That we have qualities they do not does not mean that we must abandon what we share with them -- should we abandon having physical bodies, blood, bones? Anyway, we know what's ethical. We don't have to have committees and meetings and seminars and lectures and courses and specialties and write about it. Is it debatable that we should not kill, or steal? Likewise that which "bioethics" pretends -- pretends -- to address. It's just an excuse to open the door to the unethical, and that is why those who are not ethical created it. No point in playing their game. Appel and his ilk, Singer, assisted suicide murderers, only gain a form of legitimacy and a platform on which to advance their agenda thereby. Well, that's what I think.

 
At March 18, 2009 , Blogger Don Nelson said...

I think Chuck Colson used to say it worked something like this. Someone says something very revolting or crazy. People get outraged, but then a PhD or some other person with some sort of credentials comes out and gives it credibility. People are outraged but then start discussing it and how to "regulate" it and then it goes into law. That's how the extreme becomes mainstream.

 
At March 18, 2009 , Anonymous Anonymous said...

This has been debated in the past, and the radical left insisted it would never happen. But, in this incredibly "green" age, we can't waste anything. Reduce, reuse, recycle.

I agree with Adrienne, this is stomach churning.

 
At March 18, 2009 , Blogger SAFEpres said...

That is DISGUSTING. That has NOTHING to do with reproductive choice or one's position on it. It has to do with the use of members of the human species being used as produce. One does NOT have to be pro life to be against this. Arianna Huffington really needs to get a life. I'm sorry, but her use of her position on abortion to justify such depravity burns me up to no end!

 
At March 18, 2009 , Blogger SAFEpres said...

This comment has been removed by the author.

 
At March 18, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

It's the same principle as never let oneself be drawn into a conversation with a salesman.

Arianna Stassinopoulos Huffington always has seemed to me to be about self-promotion and self-advancement, and something about her has never rung right with me. I don't think she's as concerned about who and what is on her blog as she is with having a blog. For heaven's sake, Alec Baldwin writes on it. She's not picky. Plus, there's a certain type of liberal who self-identifies as liberal and whose sense of self gets all wound up with how wonderful everything liberal is simply because it's liberal; it's not content that matters to them; it's the label.

 
At March 18, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

Meanwhile, if she really is liberal, she wouldn't want to censor anything. Not that all liberals who claim to refuse to censor anything have the guts and honesty to live up to that claim. But as long as she continues to oppose euthanasia, I can find common ground with her on that point.

 
At March 19, 2009 , Blogger SAFEpres said...

I didn't know that she opposed euthanasia. That at least is one redeeming feature. AH, to me, epitomizes the kind of liberal position that goes so far to the extreme that it winds up supporting evil acts. For instance, although I personally oppose abortion, I recognize that there are many good people who believe that abortion is a woman's right...but advocating for abortion up until the point of birth, and then arguing that we should harvest fetal organs, goes far beyond anything having to do with women's health or rights. It is anti-rights, because a fetus that is far along enough for its organs to be use is a baby, not a fetus, even if it is in the woman's womb.

 
At March 19, 2009 , Blogger SAFEpres said...

I didn't know that she opposed euthanasia. That at least is one redeeming feature. AH, to me, epitomizes the kind of liberal position that goes so far to the extreme that it winds up supporting evil acts. For instance, although I personally oppose abortion, I recognize that there are many good people who believe that abortion is a woman's right...but advocating for abortion up until the point of birth, and then arguing that we should harvest fetal organs, goes far beyond anything having to do with women's health or rights. It is anti-rights, because a fetus that is far along enough for its organs to be use is a baby, not a fetus, even if it is in the woman's womb.

 
At March 19, 2009 , Blogger Wesley J. Smith said...

SAFEpres: I don't know that Arianna still does. She has shifted 180 degrees on a lot of issues in the last several years. I have not seen or spoken with her since she set up shop in LA, whenever that was.

 
At March 19, 2009 , Blogger SAFEpres said...

That's interesting that you know her.
That's too bad that she has shifted on so many issues to embrace things that are anti-civil rights, while she thinks that she is embracing rights.

 
At March 20, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

I thought she used to be a conservative. Maybe it's the smog. Maybe she needs one of those mask things Tony Roberts had in Annie Hall. Or is wearing one. (Not to ridicule, just being facetious. But something has to explain it.)

 
At March 20, 2009 , Blogger SAFEpres said...

You know, it could be the water ;)

 
At March 25, 2009 , Blogger Joshua said...

lanthe: "Ethics can't be debated in the first place! Something either is ethical or it isn't, and we know what's ethical; we feel it; we just know."

I think that's why it is debated; people feel differently and 'know' differently about things. I probably find the arguments of Leon Kass as repugnant as others feel about Appel's arguments.

 
At March 26, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

Joshua: Even about lying, cheating, stealing, killing? Are those things ethically debatable?

 
At March 27, 2009 , Blogger Joshua said...

lanthe, there are certainly occasions where some people may feel it is acceptable to lie, cheat, steal and kill. Is it acceptable to lie to avoid hurting somebody's feelings? Is it acceptable to kill somebody if that person wants to die? I don't think there is a clear consensus on these questions.

 

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