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President Bush has declared war on the health and well-being of all
Americans!
Earlier this month 60 leading scientists and philosophers, including Nobel
laureates, backed a Union of Concerned Scientists report that accused the
Bush administration of distorting scientific advice to fit ideological
goals.
The following article taken from yesterday's Washington Post reported that
Bush dismissed two members of his handpicked Council on Bioethics -- a
scientist and a moral philosopher who had been among the more outspoken
advocates for research on human embryo cells.
In their places he appointed three new members, including a doctor who has
called for more religion in public life, a political scientist who has
spoken out precisely against the research that the dismissed members
supported and another who has written about the immorality of abortion and
the "threats of biotechnology."
It's apparent that this "advisory" council is not constituted to discuss and
debate all aspects of scientific and ethical views on biomedical research.
Rather, they have been selected to reinforce the President's predetermined,
ideological views.
What ever happened to the concept of government by, for and of the people?
He was elected to be and promised to be the president of all the people and
by law, he is.   His philosophy is "don't bother me with facts, my mind is
already made up."  As our elected leader, President Bush owes it to the
millions of people affected by this decision to consider all sides of the
question.
Our President borders on being as righteously sure of his positions as the
terrorists are of theirs.  This philosophy borders on being a threat to
democracy.
+++
Bush Ejects Two From Bioethics Council
Changes Renew Criticism That the President Puts Politics Ahead of Science
By Rick Weiss
Washington Post
Saturday, February 28, 2004; Page A06
President Bush yesterday dismissed two members of his handpicked Council on
Bioethics -- a scientist and a moral philosopher who had been among the more
outspoken advocates for research on human embryo cells.
In their places he appointed three new members, including a doctor who has
called for more religion in public life, a political scientist who has
spoken out precisely against the research that the dismissed members
supported, and another who has written about the immorality of abortion and
the "threats of biotechnology."
The turnover immediately renewed a recent string of accusations by
scientists and others that Bush is increasingly allowing politics to trump
science as he seeks advice on ethically contentious issues.
Last week, a Washington-based interest group released a report detailing
what it called many examples of the administration distorting the scientific
process to achieve desired policy answers relating to pollution, embryo
research and other topics. Some in Congress, led by Rep. Henry A. Waxman
(D-Calif.), have also been getting vocal on the topic, as have academics,
scientific organizations and science journal editors.
One of the dismissed members, Elizabeth Blackburn, is a renowned biologist
at the University of California at San Francisco. She said she received a
call yesterday morning from someone in the White House personnel office.
"He said the White House had decided to make some changes on the council. He
wanted to express his gratitude and said I'd no longer be on the council,"
Blackburn said.
She said she had no warning and had not heard from the council's director,
University of Chicago ethicist Leon Kass. She said she believed she was let
go because her political views do not match those of the president and of
Kass, with whom she has often been at odds at council meetings.
"I think this is Bush stacking the council with the compliant," Blackburn
said.
The other dismissed member, William May, an emeritus professor of ethics at
Southern Methodist University, is a highly respected scholar whose views on
embryo research and other topics had also run counter to those of
conservative council members. Efforts to reach him last night were
unsuccessful.
Asked why Blackburn and May had been let go, White House spokeswoman Erin
Healy said the two members' terms had expired in January, and they were on
"holdover status." Asked whether, in fact, all the council members' terms
had formally expired in January, she said they had.
Pressed on why Blackburn and May had been singled out for dismissal, she
said: "We've decided to go ahead and appoint other individuals with
different expertise and experience." She would not elaborate further.
Kass, who has written prolifically about biotechnology's toll on human
dignity and was selected by Bush to head the council, was traveling
yesterday and could not be reached.
Bush created the council by executive order in 2001 to "advise the President
on bioethical issues that may emerge as a consequence of advances in
biomedical science and technology." He recently renewed its commission for
another two years.
The group of scholars, scientists, theologians and others has produced
several reports, including ones on human cloning, stem cell research and the
use of biotechnology to enhance human beings. But the council has often
found it difficult to reach consensus on issues.
The three new appointees are Benjamin Carson, the high-profile director of
pediatric neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins University; Diana Schaub, chairman
of the department of political science at Loyola College in Maryland; and
Peter Lawler, a professor of government at Berry College in Georgia. All are
respected members of their fields. And their writings suggest their tenures
will be less contentious than their predecessors'.
When not performing some of the most difficult surgeries in the world,
Carson is a motivational speaker who often invokes religion and the Bible
and has lamented that "we live in a nation where we can't talk about God in
public."
Schaub has effusively praised Kass and his work. In a 2002 public forum
discussing the council's cloning report, she talked about research in which
embryos are destroyed as "the evil of the willful destruction of innocent
human life."
In a book review in the conservative Weekly Standard in late 2002, Lawler
warned that if the United States does not soon "become clear as a nation
that abortion is wrong," then women will eventually be compelled to abort
genetically defective babies.
Michael Gazzaniga, a Dartmouth neuroscientist who sits on the council, said
he was "upset" by Blackburn's ejection.
"She was one of the basic scientists who understood the biology of many of
the issues we're talking about," Gazzaniga said. "It will be a loss for
sure."
Research editor Margot Williams contributed to this report.

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