BLOW SMOKE
Blowing Smoke on
Stem-Cell Research
By Wesley J.
Smith,
[Note: Wesley Smith
is the author of Culture of Death: The Assault on Medical Ethics in America
published by Encounter Books. You can purchase his books online in the books
section of http://www.roevwade.org]
There is an old saying
among trial lawyers that goes something like this: "If you can't argue the
facts, argue the law, if you can't argue the facts or the law, blow smoke."
This proverb is equally applicable to political arguments. In the Great
Stem-Cell Debate the smoke blown by proponents of federal funding for
embryonic-stem-cell research (ESCR) has grown so thick that global-warming
activists should sound the alarm.
Up until now, those who
advocate federal funding for ESCR have driven the debate. This isn't surprising
given the blatantly biased coverage by the mainstream media as exposed by the
Statistical Assessment Service (STATS), which I described in a previous NRO
piece. But now, opponents of federal funding are beginning to hope that time may
actually be on their side. Indeed, the longer President Bush ponders what to do,
the clearer the air is becoming.
The following are the
primary arguments in favor of federal funding. What once appeared to be concrete
pillars supporting a compelling argument have turned out to be constructed out
of wispy particulate matter that may be beginning to collapse.
Only IVF Embryos Would Be
Targeted For Destruction:
The American people are
deeply pragmatic. Thus, the most potent argument in favor of federal funding has
been the promise that only embryos destined for destruction from IVF fertility
experiments would be used in federally funded research. Opponents' response to
this argument--that no law requires these embryos to be destroyed, that some
might be ultimately adopted by infertile couples, that such attitudes lead
directly to the slippery slope, etc--while certainly true, have not persuaded a
public that seems to view the use of unneeded IVF embryos as being akin to
recycling aluminum cans.
But a story has now
exploded into the news that should shatter this popular complacency. Scientists
at the Jones Institute for Reproductive Medicine in Norfolk, Virginia bragged in
a press release that they paid women between $1,500 and $2,000 apiece for their
eggs, and then used them -- with the egg providers' consent -- to create embryos
for the purpose of destroying them in ESCR. These scientists claim that making
embryos for research is "as ethical" as using frozen IVF embryos.
Moreover, they contend, freshly created embryos might be "superior"
for research purposes to those thawed out of a deep freeze. If that is true, how
long would scientists be content to use "in excess of need" IVF
embryos?
The response of pro-ESCR
scientists and bioethicists to this development has been especially telling.
Rather than forcefully and unequivocally condemning Jones Institute, their
primary complaint has been that the "timing could not have been worse"
-- meaning that the disclosure makes a bad appearance that could give President
Bush grounds to refuse federal funding. There has been no reported outcry from
the ESCR crowd that the creating human embryos solely for the purpose of
destroying them in research is immoral.
With this breaking story,
it is now clear that the IVF boundary would never hold. Instead, federally
funding ESCR would merely free up private dollars, now used for IVF research, to
fund the kind of activities undertaken by the Jones Institute. Moreover, we must
not forget that the biotech industry is lobbying hard against the Weldon Bill --
crucial legislation that would ban all human cloning -- on the basis that
cloning would be a necessary aspect of embryonic-stem-cell medicine should the
research ever become clinically viable. Thus, all of this talk of restricting
the research to IVF embryos is really nothing but the old bait and switch.
Embryos Would Not Really
Be Destroyed in the Research:
Some advocates of federal
funding who are queasy at the thought of destroying embryos have settled their
uneasy tummies by changing the scientific definitions. Thus, the Washington
Times's Suzanne Fields wrote, "Though these fertilized eggs are popularly
referred to as embryos, they really aren't, not until implanted in a uterine
wall. They are more precisely blastocysts."
Fields may be a good
writer but she clearly doesn't know her human biology. An embryo by any other
name is still an embryo. The 1989 edition of the American Medical Association's
Encyclopedia of Medicine explicitly states, "From the time of conception
until the eight week, the developing baby is known as an embryo." In its
earliest stage of life the embryo is known as a zygote. The embryo is called a
blastocyst when it reaches the stage of development where it can implant into
the womb. At this point the embryo may be made up of more than a hundred cells
encased in an embryonic lining. This is the stage of the embryos that are
destroyed when their stem cells are harvested.
Along these same lines,
Senator Orrin Hatch, former Senator Connie Mack, and other ESCR supporters who
self-identify as pro-life, have taken to asserting that life doesn't really
begin until actual implantation in the mother's womb, thereby seeking to hold on
to a thin thread of consistency with their previous anti-abortion advocacy.
(Hatch put it rather indelicately, stating, "Life begins in the womb, not a
refrigerator.")
The idea that life begins
in the mother and not a Petri dish may reflect a metaphysical belief system to
which these anti-abortion politicians are surely entitled. But it isn't biology.
Biologically, an individual human life commences as soon as sperm merges with
egg. At that point, its entire genetic makeup of a human individual has been
determined. The rest is simply a matter of time and development.
Only Embryonic Stem Cells
Offer the Full Promise of Medical Breakthroughs:
For years, the propaganda
coming from ESCR supporters has claimed that only embryos offer the potential
for the full range of cures that scientists hope to develop with stem-cell
research. Happily, amazing breakthroughs using alternative stem cell sources --
umbilical cord blood, organs, fat, etc. -- have dramatically altered the playing
field. Indeed, terrible human maladies have already been healed using stem cells
found in umbilical cord blood. Moreover, a recent scientific journal report
stated that stem cells found in bone marrow might be as flexible as embryonic
cells. Thus, scientists may be able to obtain virtually all of the medical
benefits that ESCR advocates hope to achieve using alternative cell therapies
without our society having to accept a Faustian bargain in which medical
advances are paid for at the cost of human lives commodified into a crop, ripe
for the harvest.
The Stem-Cell Issue is the
Latest Chapter in the Pro-Life versus Pro-Choice Debate:
The media has played the
Great Stem-Cell Debate as merely another front in our country's never-ending
cultural struggle over abortion. But it isn't. The point of legalized abortion
-- whether or not one accepts the premise -- is that the law should not force a
woman to use her body for gestation and giving birth against her will. But in
ESCR, there is no woman being forced to do anything. Thus abortion is utterly
irrelevant.
In the Great Stem-Cell
Debate our nation confronts a crucial question that cannot be finessed or
compromised. Indeed, it is an ultimate issue: does human life have inherent
value simply because it is human? If so, then federally funding ESCR would be
wrong because, in effect, it would, place the people's seal of approval on
destroying life for the utilitarian purpose of harvesting its valuable parts. If
not, if we have no inherent value different from that of other life on the
planet, then what's all the fuss about?
Perhaps this is why the
issue sears our collective consciousness with such burning intensity. In the
end, the denouement of the Great Stem-Cell Debate may not be about embryos at
all, but about the meaning and purpose of human life.