Trapped by ideology
Pro-aborts: Trapped by
their ideology
Saturday, January
13, 2007
By David N. Bass
© 2007
News earlier this week
that researchers at Wake Forest University and Harvard Medical School have
uncovered a new non-controversial stem cell treatment did nothing to stem the
tide of pro-embryonic stem cell madness that swept Congress on Thursday.
In a vote that still fell well short of the two-thirds majority required to
overcome a presidential veto, the U.S. House passed H.R. 3 by a 253 to 174
margin Jan. 11. The bill would lift restrictions established by President Bush
in 2001 that prevent federal dollars from being used for additional research
involving the destruction of human embryos.
Completely side-stepping the morality of annihilating human life in the name of
curing disease, Rep. Diana Degette, D–Colo., the bill's primary sponsor,
expressed elation in a prepared statement after the legislation passed.
(Column continues below)
"This is a victory for ethical science as well as true
bipartisanship," she said. "Most importantly, it is a victory for the
100 million Americans and their families who suffer from diseases like
Parkinson's, Alzheimer's and diabetes."
Such rhetoric is nothing new from Washington politicians. The troubling reality
is that even scientists currently experimenting with embryonic stem cells admit
that cures are years and perhaps decades away from coming to fruition. Yet that
hasn't halted the rhetorical firestorm from Washington.
John Edwards eloquently displayed such blather in 2004 by suggesting that a vote
for John Kerry was a vote for helping Christopher Reeve out of his wheelchair.
What's the next promise – that embryonic stem cells will cause humans to walk
on water and raise the dead?
For all their talk about cures, though, the nagging question is why Democrats
and liberal-minded Republicans in Congress habitually extol the miraculous
benefits of embryonic stem cells while downplaying the myriad ethical
alternatives. The rhetoric is even more hypocritically in light of the fact that
non-embryonic stem cell research is already revealing the kinds of treatments
Edwards is looking for, but without the dubious ethical implications.
Earlier this week at Wake Forest's Institute for Regenerative Medicine in
Winston-Salem, N.C., Dr. Anthony Atala and his research team announced they were
able to extract stem cells from the amniotic fluid that surrounds the developing
fetus in pregnant women.
The amniotic-fluid derived stem cells are believed to closely resemble those
found in human embryos. In fact, the stem cells have already been used to create
"muscle, bone, fat, blood vessel, nerve and liver cells in the
laboratory," according to an Institute for Regenerative Medicine press
release.
So, with the IRM research, not to mention the other treatments developed from
adult stem cells, why does Congress have an apparent obsession with destructive
embryonic stem cell research?
I can tell you in one word: abortion.
Those who subscribe to the pro-abortion ideology have very little wiggle room
when it comes to the value of an embryo. After all, what makes medical
experimentation on human embryos immoral if life begins at some unspecified date
after conception or birth? In that case, embryos are merely "products of
conception" wholly lacking any human worth, right?
This is the chief reason embryonic stem cell research is being pushed so
feverishly, even in the face of non-controversial alternatives. To admit even
the slightest possibility that an embryo might have human worth would be to
violate the sacrosanct pro-abortion philosophy. Why else would abortion advocacy
organizations like Planned Parenthood and NARAL Pro-Choice America so strongly
support embryonic stem cell research? Stem cells seemingly have nothing to do
with abortion, birth control or "sexual liberation," so why the big
fuss?
The answer is simple: For all their talk about choice, abortion advocates have
only one option on the stem cell issue. Anything less than no-holds-barred
embryo research would violate their ideology – they can't afford not to
support it.
It's a sad cultural commentary when any nation sanctions abuse and manipulation
of the weak to improve the livelihood of the strong, especially in the name of
political philosophy. Throughout history, evil is almost always tied to a
socially desirable idea that gives it a tolerable face, and embryonic stem cell
research is no different.
The question for the American people is whether we will settle for evil cloaked
around a "good idea" or uphold one of the highest ideals known to man
– the sacredness of every human life.