Print

Print


Op/ED from Detroit Free Press

MITCH ALBOM: Bush's stem cell veto: Whom does it save?

July 23, 2006

by MITCH ALBOM

FREE PRESS COLUMNIST
Consider this scenario: Many years from now, some great-granddaughter 
of President George W. Bush is crippled in a car accident. There are 
treatments available that will heal her wounded spinal cord. But the 
doctor shakes his head and says, "I'm sorry, your great-grandfather 
didn't support our research, so we're not going to help you."

That would be cruel, right? Turning your back on someone in need?

No crueler than what Bush did last week.

There are people dying in this country from conditions that might be 
cured through embryonic stem cell research. Their children may be 
prone to similar afflictions.

Yet with a staged backdrop that was as hypocritical as it was 
arrogant, Bush used the first veto of his presidency to put a kibosh 
on funding more stem cell research. This, despite 63 yes votes in the 
Senate and 70% of Americans being in favor of it.

In a presidency already peppered with questionable decisions, this 
may go down as the most stubborn and selfish of them all.

Now, put down your pens if you're going to write me about abortion, 
because you'll be falling into the very trap that the president and 
his handlers set for you: to make you believe this is all about that 
issue. It is not.

Keep one thing in mind as we discuss this -- the embryos in question 
here are being thrown away. Disposed of. Tossed out. And thanks to 
this veto, they will continue to be. Bush never mentioned this once 
in his well-orchestrated event. But it's true.

Bill carefully constructed

The bill that Bush vetoed was painfully constructed to avoid abuse. 
It insisted that only extra, discarded embryos from fertility 
clinics -- and only when the donor of those embryos gave written 
approval and was not paid for them -- could be used for research.

Yet Bush made it seem as if scientists would be grabbing babies from 
mothers' wombs.

"This bill would support the taking of innocent human life ..." he 
said. "Each of these human embryos is a unique human life with 
inherent dignity and matchless value."

OK. If Bush's believes that, why isn't he closing down every 
fertility clinic in America right now? Almost any woman who goes in 
for fertility treatments ends up producing more embryos than are 
implanted. According to Dr. Sue O'Shea, the director of the Michigan 
Center for Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research, "per treatment, 
approximately 20 to 30 individual embryos get thrown away."

That's per woman, per treatment. If, as Bush insists, these embryos 
are little people, that's 20-30 murders per patient, right?

Where is the outrage?

Thousands of embryos available

Instead, with babies crying behind him, Bush ignored that question 
and proudly noted that embryos could be adopted, as some mothers in 
the room had done. So? How would this bill have stopped that? 
According to Sen. Arlen Specter and others, there have only been 
around 128 adoptions of such embryos in the last nine years. And 
since there are currently around 400,000 frozen embryos, clearly 
anyone who wants to adopt one can do so. That still leaves the unused 
ones to be thrown out.

And if you do that, you are surely showing them less respect than 
using them for potential cures for Alzheimer's, diabetes or ALS.

"Crossing this line would be a mistake," Bush said. But those are 
code words for what this is all about: making it look, sound and feel 
like the abortion debate. Yet, much as this pains people to hear, 
abortion is legal in America. So fetuses can be aborted but tiny 
cells about to be thrown out can't be used for research? We don't see 
the hypocrisy in that?

We're heard all the tired objections: We have enough stem cells. You 
can get them elsewhere. Scientists have negated these arguments. Even 
usual Bush-supporters such as Nancy Reagan and Bill Frist supported 
this bill. The research will go on -- despite Bush -- through private 
funding and in foreign countries. But it will be slower, and future 
patients who might be saved will die.

You wonder if one of those future patients will be one of Bush's 
great-grandchildren. If so, I hope that person is given help. It 
would be a kinder fate than what great-granddaddy just delivered to 
others.

Contact MITCH ALBOM at 313-223-4581 or [log in to unmask]

----------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:[log in to unmask]
In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn