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The Washington Post
The Mad Scientist Bogeyman
By Richard Cohen
Tuesday, August 7, 2001; Page A15

I am a twin. I am not an identical twin, but even identical twins
are not really identical. They may look alike, but they have
different experiences and, ultimately, different personalities.
It would be the same with clones -- the dreaded human clones
that Congress is threatening to outlaw. Maybe just to be safe
they should outlaw twins.

Pardon my sarcasm, but no one who has followed the recent
debate in Congress regarding human cloning and stem cell
research -- they are intertwined -- could help being impressed
by the sheer stupidity of the rhetoric, as well as the outcome.
By a lopsided vote of 265 to 162, the House banned all human
cloning, having decided the matter after less than a day
of debate. Propelled largely by religious conviction, the
leadership -- now, there's a reason to ban cloning -- was
ecstatic.

"This House should not be giving the green light to mad
scientists to tinker with the gift of life," said Rep. J. C. Watts,
fourth in the GOP House leadership.

Congress then went on its summer recess, enabling us all
to entertain the (probably vain) hope that, as the members
sit on their respective front porches, they will reflect
on their impetuousness and be overcome with shame.
As they sip their iced teas, they may also come to wonder
why they moved with such alacrity to forbid something
that -- along with time-travel and hair restoration -- does
not yet exist.

For all the talk, human cloning is not quite around the
corner. Cloning has famously been accomplished in
sheep (Hello, Dolly) but not yet in dogs or higher
mammals. The experts I've consulted say we're talking
30 years down the road and overcoming daunting
difficulties. Fusing new DNA with old DNA is not as easy
as banning the process.

And even then what are we talking about? Why do
legislators like Watts employ the language of grade B
science fiction flicks to talk about what, someday, may
just be another reproductive choice? But he is not alone.
In a recent essay in the New Republic, the ethicists
Leon R. Kass and Daniel Callahan -- both of whom were
consulted by President Bush -- call human cloning
"unethical." Maybe so, but they never say why.

I grant you the prospect is scary, and no doubt it ought
to be regulated. But at the moment, babies are being
produced by in vitro fertilization. I know of a child produced
by once-frozen sperm and carried in the womb of a surrogate
mother. This, to say the least, is not traditional. I am not at all
sure what God thinks of it. Nor does the so-called miracle
of conception always involve something warm and wonderful.
Think of two drunks in the backroom of some frat house.
If God approves of that, then who's to say He frowns upon
a childless couple producing a clone of one of them? I don't
see the ethical problem here. Taste? Propriety? Difficulties?
Yes to them all. Among other things, the clone would know
its genetic destiny, and it would be saddled, as are identical
twins, with a lifetime of stupid remarks -- "How do you know
who you are?" -- but these are inconveniences,
not momentous moral issues.

Had the House opted for a moratorium on human cloning,
it would have been praised for its sagacity. Instead, it leaped
into the debate on stem cell research. After all, if stem cells
have the capacity to reverse or cure diseases such as
Parkinson's, think of what could be done with cells produced
not by a stranger, but by the recipient himself.

Back in 1969, Kevin Phillips published "The Emerging
Republican Majority." Now he might want to write
"The Emerging Republican Theocracy." It is led in the House
by Tom DeLay, Dick Armey and the aforementioned Watts.
They substitute faith for thought. For a minister, that's okay.
For a legislator, it's a sin.

The stakes are enormous. If the government doesn't fund
stem cell research and also forbids human cloning, this sort
of medical exploration will be stopped dead. No one else is
going to do it, because (1) the payoff for private firms is too
far down the road to justify the investment, and (2) if the
United States doesn't lead, the rest of the world is not going
to do much either.

This is a complicated subject -- a peek into a frightening
and unknowable future. Congress should move slowly and
not be spooked by silly language about "mad scientists."
If moral questions are what concern our politicians, then
they ought to consider this: If they continue on their present
course, people will die -- that's all there is to it.

Tell me the morality of that.

SOURCE:  The Washington Post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A40713-2001Aug6.html

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