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readme: Policy made plain.
Taking Bush Personally
By Michael Kinsley
Posted Thursday, Oct. 23, 2003, at 3:16 PM ET
Conservatives wonder why so many liberals don't just disagree with President
Bush's policies but seem to dislike him personally. The story of stem-cell
research may help to explain. Two years ago, Bush announced an unexpectedly
restrictive policy on the use of stem cells from human embryos in federally
funded medical research. Because federal funding plays such a large role,
the government more or less sets the rules for major medical research in
this country.
Bush's policy was that research could continue on stem-cell "lines" that
existed at the moment of his speech, in August 2001, but that otherwise,
embryo research was banned. Even surplus embryos already in the freezer at
fertility clinics-where embryos are routinely created and destroyed by the
thousands every year-could not be used for medical research and would have
to be thrown out instead.
Bush's professed moral concern was bolstered by two factual assumptions. One
was that there were more than 60 stem-cell lines available for research.
Stem cells are "wild card" cells. They multiply and evolve into cells for
specific purposes in the human body. A "line" is the result of a particular
cell that has been "tweaked" and is multiplying in the laboratory. The hope
is to develop lines of cells that can be put back into human beings and be
counted on to evolve into replacements for missing or defective parts. The
likeliest example is dopamine-producing brain cells for people with
Parkinson's disease. The dream is replacements for whole organs or even
limbs. But each line is a crapshoot. So the more lines, the better. And it
turns out that the number of useful lines is more like 10 than 60.
Bush also touted the possibility of harmlessly harvesting stem cells from
adults. He said, "Therapies developed from adult stem cells are already
helping suffering people." This apparently referred to decades-old
techniques such as removing some of a leukemia patient's bone marrow and
then reinjecting it after the patient has undergone radiation.
As for finding adult stem cells that could turn into unrelated body parts,
that was just a dream two years ago, and now it is not even that. A new
study, reported last week in Nature, concluded that when earlier studies
thought they saw new specialized cells derived from adult stem cells, they
were really seeing those adult cells bonding with pre-existing specialized
cells. There's hope in this bonding process, too-but not the hope
researchers had for adult stem cells, and nothing like the hope they still
have for embryonic stem cells. Since Bush's speech, scientists have used
embryonic stem cells to reverse the course of Parkinson's in rats.
Put it all together, and the stem cells that can squeeze through Bush's
loopholes are far less promising than they seemed two years ago while the
general promise of embryonic stem cells burns brighter than ever. If you
claim to have made an anguished moral decision, and the factual basis for
that decision turns out to be faulty, you ought to reconsider, or your claim
to moral anguish looks phony. But Bush's moral anguish was suspect from the
beginning because the policy it produced makes no sense.
The week-old embryos used for stem-cell research are microscopic clumps of
cells, unthinking and unknowing, with fewer physical human qualities than a
mosquito. Fetal-tissue research has used brain cells from aborted fetuses,
but this is not that. Week-old, lab-created embryos have no brain cells.
Furthermore, not a single embryo dies because of stem-cell research, which
simply uses a tiny fraction of the embryos that live and die as a routine
part of procedures at fertility clinics. And actual stem-cell therapy for
real patients, if it is allowed to develop, will not even need these surplus
embryos. Once a usable line is developed from an embryo, the cells for
treatment can be developed in a laboratory.
None of this matters if you believe that a microscopic embryo is a human
being with the same human rights as you and me. George W. Bush claims to
believe that, and you have to believe something like that to justify your
opposition to stem-cell research. But Bush cannot possibly believe that
embryos are full human beings, or he would surely oppose modern fertility
procedures that create and destroy many embryos for each baby they bring
into the world. Bush does not oppose modern fertility treatments. He even
praised them in his anti-stem-cell speech.
It's not a complicated point. If stem-cell research is morally questionable,
the procedures used in fertility clinics are worse. You cannot logically
outlaw the one and praise the other. And surely logical coherence is a
measure of moral sincerity.
If he's got both his facts and his logic wrong-and he has-Bush's alleged
moral anguish on this subject is unimpressive. In fact, it is insulting to
the people (including me) whose lives could be saved or redeemed by the
medical breakthroughs Bush's stem-cell policy is preventing.
This is not a policy disagreement. Or rather, it is not only a policy
disagreement. If the president is not a complete moron-and he probably is
not-he is a hardened cynic, staging moral anguish he does not feel,
pandering to people he cannot possibly agree with, and sacrificing the
future of many American citizens for short-term political advantage.
Is that a good enough reason to dislike him personally?

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