"Stem Cell Debate is Over Ethics, Not Science"
I have a piece in today's Sacramento Bee rounding out my critique of the Obama ESCR policy and his rescission of the Bush executive order requiring the Feds to fund alternative sources for funding of pluripotent stem cells. Some of this will be familiar to SHSers, but I think the points I make in the column are too little heard in the world beyond this blog. From my piece:
From the moment President George W. Bush imposed federal funding restrictions on embryonic stem cell research, Big Biotech, patient advocacy groups, celebrities and the media have been obsessed with eviscerating the policy. Indeed, although the Bush administration funded about $175 million in grants for human embryonic stem cell research, and despite the literally billions poured into the field from public and private sources such as the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, or CIRM, and philanthropists, the public was continually warned that embryonic stem cell research in the United States was in danger of withering on the vine due to Bush.I discuss the point that President Obama's new policy--he says--will also involve ethical controls:
With such abundant funding, that wasn't true. Nor was the charge that Bush's policy was "anti-science" because it funded only research on stem cell lines in existence as of Aug. 9, 2001. But the controversy was never a science debate. It was--and remains--an ethics debate that impacts directly on the importance and meaning of human life. Indeed, the question raised by embryonic stem cell research is whether it is morally right to treat and exploit human life--even at the nascent stage--as a mere natural resource.
Last week, the new president kept a campaign promise to free up federal funding for all embryonic stem cell lines whenever derived. But he also told the country that ethics still matter, stating: "We will support it (embryonic stem cell research) only if it is both scientifically worthy and responsibly conducted. We will develop strict guidelines, which we will rigorously enforce, because we cannot ever tolerate misuse or abuse."And I get into the Obama and CIRM hypocrisy over resisting legal requirements for the funding of "alternative" sources of pluripotent cells, such as IPSCs, and suggest that there is a reason for pushing embryonic methods:
How is that different in kind from what Bush did? Are ethical constraints "anti-science" only if one disagrees with where the lines are drawn
If pursuing the best and most ethical science were truly the goals, why deflect increased support for this promising research to which no one objects? Perhaps it is because this debate involves more than stem cells taken from embryos "left over" from in-vitro fertilization--as the argument is usually couched--which brings us back to ethics. In the wake of the Obama changes in federal policy, the New York Times editorially threw down a gauntlet, calling for both the rescission of the Dickey Amendment and federal funding of human therapeutic cloning research. Now that the Bush restrictions are history, look for these battles--which again are not science debates--to flare in the years to come. In this sense, embryonic stem cell research threatens to become a launching pad to an ever-deepening erosion of the unique moral status of human life.That's my story, anyhow. And I'm sticking to it.
Labels: ESCR. Bush Funding Policy. Obama Stem Cell Policy. Wesley J. Smith.


7 Comments:
Congrats on publication. I guess this is the one you referred to last week...
It's a good story to stick to. It's getting harder and harder to make the pathetic political charge that opponents of ESCR are anti-patient and anti-science after $2 billion in funding and no results from ESCR and the danger it poses. Maybe they can overcome the new concern that we'll never be able to tell which ESCs will become tumorours or which may not. Maybe, maybe not. It's hard to make the anti-science anti-patient charge when we are passionate supporters of research that is providing progress and benefits for the very conditions that embryonic stem cell supporters say could be helped by ESCs. It's hard to sustain the anti-science anti-patient charge when Obama revokes the iPSCs order and doesn't issue a new one that takes our the Bush wording on the dignity of the embryo. Who's anti-patient and anti-science? The ones pushing for something that has been a bust, or those pushing that which is producing results but has no political value?
Not to mention that SCIENCE is 100% behind ADULT stem cell research, which has produced 73 treatments, while ESCR has produced tumors, tremors, and dead lab rats.
How is pursuing a line of research that produces nothing but disasters "scientific"?
Nicely argued. It is really good to find quality discussion on this issue - well done getting it published.
You might like to read my husband, a Christian philosopher who specialises in ethics' critique of common bad arguments for human embryonic stem-cell research. He looks specifically at Obama and the media's promotion of Michael J Fox and Christopher Reeves and rips the reasoning apart with a strong applied ethics angle.
Nice bobble head!
GrannyGrump: How is electing a President who incessantly speaks of and produces disaster democracy? Well those who did it thought it was democracy, just as people think it's science. But true in neither case.
SHS: But this blog does seem to be reaching further and further out into the world, doesn't it, and people seem to be reaching toward it with arms outstretched, don't they.
Most scientists would agree that in this nascent stage of ESCr they are engaged in basic medical research to figure out how cells function. Treatments and cures to disease follow from learning how to control cellular activity.
Some therapies may partially stick to the wall if you throw enough materiel at it, but these therapies yield no clue as to the root of how stem cells work to repair disease.
ES cells show the process of how life is created. Without understanding how they work we're just playing pin the tail on the donkey and that's just not good enough for the rest of us.
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home