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Monday, June 25, 2001
Ancients Arise to Challenge Modern Science
By VIRGINIA POSTREL

While everyone was talking about federal funding for stem cell
research, the Bush administration took a stand on a more
important biomedical issue. And it came down on the side
of sickness and death.

The issue is "therapeutic cloning." Suppose I need new heart
tissue or some insulin-secreting islet cells to counteract diabetes.
You could take the nucleus from one of my cells, stick it in an
egg cell from which the nucleus had been removed, let that
develop into stem cells (special, early-stage cells that can
become any other type) and then trigger the stem cells to
form the specific sorts of cells needed. The new "cloned"
tissue would be genetically mine and would not face rejection
problems. It would function in my body as if it had grown there
naturally.

Obviously, there are a lot of scientific advances needed before
we can do this sort of tissue creation, but you can see the
enormous promise it holds for curing all sorts of diseases.
You can also see that there are no babies involved.

A bill sponsored by Reps. David Joseph Weldon (R-Fla.)
and Bart Stupak (D-Mich.) would make this process a federal
crime, punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

At a congressional hearing last Wednesday, Claude Allen,
deputy secretary of Health and Human Services, declared that
the administration supports the bill with some technical quibbles.

This is a radical law that goes far beyond the live-and-let-live
attitude that says controversial biomedical research should be
privately funded. This bill would treat biomedical research like
methamphetamine labs.

In a Fox News Channel interview, conservative pundit Bill Kristol
said the bill is important because nucleus-transfer technology
would be "a step over the line from medical therapy and from the
advancement of science to a 'brave new world' scenario of the
manipulation of human nature."

This is a common misuse of "Brave New World." In a world of
individual choice and biomedical freedom, "Brave New World"
can't happen. Aldous Huxley's dystopia depends on government
control of the means of reproduction. More than two decades
after the first test-tube baby, we should know that institutions,
not technologies, create dreadful societies. Artificially conceived
children are everywhere, beloved by their parents, and their
existence hasn't radically altered society.

"Brave New World's" government-controlled vision of the
good is where Kristol and his allies are heading. They believe
they know the one best way for human beings to live, and their
dogma forbids tampering with "human nature," defined in
a narrow, biological way.

This is not an argument between liberals and conservatives,
in the usual sense, but between moderns and ancients.
In his Fox interview, Kristol cited the conservative philosopher
Leon Kass, who testified in favor of the bill and whose ideas are
embodied in it. Kass excoriates contemporary culture for showing
irreverence toward bodies in pursuit of longer, healthier,
happier lives.

In his 1985 book, "Toward a More Natural Science," Kass
criticizes moderns for not emulating the ancient Greeks:
"We, on the other hand, with our dissection of cadavers,
organ transplantation, cosmetic surgery, body shops, laboratory
fertilization, surrogate wombs, gender-change surgery, 'wanted'
children, 'rights over our bodies,' sexual liberation and other
practices and beliefs that insist on our independence and
autonomy, live more and more wholly for the here and now,
subjugating everything we can to the exercise of our wills,
with little respect for the nature and meaning of bodily life."

Congress is basing legislation on the reasoning of a man who
finds the dissection of cadavers morally troubling. This isn't
about the 21st century. It's about the 16th.

In his testimony, Kass stuck to a more politically appealing
argument: The only way to ban baby cloning is to imprison
scientists who transfer human nuclei for any purpose at all.
He may be right about that.

The question is: How many people are you willing to let
suffer and die--and what police tactics are you willing to use
against science--to stop the birth of a few cloned humans?

In Kass' view, and perhaps in the administration's, there
is no limit. Any amount of suffering is justified to prevent
cloned children and preserve an ancient idea of the "nature
and meaning of bodily life." Let's hope Congress is more
humane.

- - -

Virginia Postrel, Editor-at-large of Reason Magazine,
Is the Author of "The Future and Its Enemies" (Free Press, 1998)

http://www.latimes.com/news/science/science/20010625/t000052480.html

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