Technology Review - Published By MIT
Advertisement

David Ewing Duncan's blog

Getting real about the life sciences, medicine and biological discovery.

View Complete Bio
Advertisement
Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Stem-Cell Vote Due in Congress ... Again

Two bills to allow embryonic stem-cell research are poised for votes in the Senate as the feds continue to debate a moot point: should we research these special cells or not?

Is anyone else weary of this federal imbroglio over embryonic stem-cell research?

When right-wing politicians initially took over the Oval Office, it was a siren song that there would be no federally funded research on embryonic stem cells. These are the miraculous wonder cells that are formed in the first few days of an embryo and offer the possibility of a renewable source of replacement cells and tissues because of their ability to regenerate into any type of cell. Scientists believe that these cells hold the key to treating and curing everything from shattered spines to Alzheimer's disease.

Last summer the debate was effectively ended when a conservative Republican Congress, frightened of losing its majority in the 2006 elections, voted to pass a bill relaxing President Bush's restrictions on the federal funding of embryonic stem-cell research. The vote accentuated that those opposed to this research were a shrinking minority: more than 70 percent of Americans say they favor embryonic stem-cell research, and even Evangelicals are split fifty-fifty.

President Bush killed the bill by issuing his first veto, which indeed may have contributed to the Republicans' narrow loss in last year's congressional elections. Certainly, his action seemed out of touch with science, with the will of the majority, and even with a branch of the right wing led by abortion foes, such as Senator Orin Hatch (R-UT), who view embryonic stem cells in a petri dish as cells, not human beings.

Now the Senate is set to pass a bill, similar to one approved earlier this year by the House in the first 100 hours of the Democratic Congress, that relaxes the funding restrictions for embryos discarded during in vitro fertilization (IVF) treatments that could be used to develop stem-cell lines for research and treatment.

Conservative Republicans have proposed an alternative bill that would allow federal funding for embryonic stem cells derived from fetuses that cannot grow into humans. This is a retreat from an earlier right-wing bill that called for a complete banning of all embryonic stem-cell research.

Bush has said that he supports the Republican measure and will again veto the Democrats' bill. His veto is likely to stand in a sharply divided Congress.

As we know, some religious conservatives, including the president, believe that using embryos for research is the same thing as experimenting on and murdering humans. But as the Harvard bioethicist Michael Sandel writes this week in the Boston Globe, if Bush truly believed this, he would insist on a ban rather than restrictions. The administration's policy allows state and private funding for embryonic stem-cell research.

Sandel, who wrote a thoughtful cover story in 2004 for the Atlantic Monthly titled "The Case against Perfection," writes in the Globe,

If he [Bush] does not want to ban embryonic stem cell research, or prosecute stem cell scientists for murder, or ban fertility clinics from creating and discarding excess embryos, this must mean that he does not really consider human embryos as morally equivalent to fully developed human beings after all.

But if he doesn't believe that embryos are persons, then why ban federally funded embryonic stem cell research that holds promise for curing diseases and saving lives?

To me, the biopragmatist, Sandel's argument is interesting but fails to acknowledge the central reality in this tortuous debate: that the discussion about allowing or not allowing stem-cell research is over. All over the world, stem-cell research is being conducted, and it will not be stopped.

I'm all for being cautious about embracing new and unknown discoveries and technologies that impact the basic stuff of life. But it's long past time to move on to the next phase of the debate, the one about how to safely pursue stem-cell research to ensure that we don't make mistakes.

I look forward to this secular debate, which has been going on in the United Kingdom and Australia and in other countries but has yet to really be chatted up here in America.

Tags: stem cells

Comments

  • Stick to the facts:
    Once again an article which lies through a distortion of what the argument is about.  There is currently no federal law banning or even impeding embryonic stem cell research in America by any reputable lab.  There is only a ban on federal funding of much of this research.  Several states and a few private companies have invested billions on this research.  The federal government has invested quite a bit on some projects which can be argued by those opposed to unrestricted research on embryos to be more ethical and by others to be flawed.  One need not be very religious to see that any research involving human embryos poses ethical and moral questions and dilemmas.  I find it most telling that many of the people who question the ethics of animal research are very much in favor of research using embryos.  In both cases strict ethical standards need to be agreed to and adhered to by all researchers.  From my standpoint, I believe that the standards for work on people need to be even stricter than those on animals.  Given that the research involving non-embryonic stem cells has thus far proved at least as viable as that involving the termination of an embryo, a preference for supporting research without ethical questions seems justifiable. 
    Rate this comment: 12345

    jsessex
    04/10/2007
    Posts:13
    Avg Rating:
    4/5
  • stem the tide
    omne vivum ex ovo.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    phoenix
    04/11/2007
    Posts:172
    Avg Rating:
    3/5
  • I find it tired as well
    ...especially considering that after all the embryonic stem cell research that's taken place over the years, still nobody has yet produced any promising results.  If they had, rest assured that the liberal media and liberal congress would be drumming it up.  Just Google yourself and you'll see what I mean.  Well maybe that would be too much work, instead, just bash the conservative republicans and the religious right for being so preposterous as to not step in line with yet another 'it sounds good, so it has to be...' mantra.

    What a waste of taxpayer money this bill is.  Congress should have banned embryonic stem cell research by now; instead, we get this crap again.
    I suppose I sould be surprized at how many votes the bill got... I'm not.

    Really there are many reasons not to like embryonic stem cell research, even if you're not capable of recognizing the fact that embryo's should be considered human lives.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    Starcub
    04/13/2007
    Posts:1
Advertisement

Log In

Forgot your password?     Register »
Advertisement
Technology Review November/December 2009

Current Issue

Natural Gas Changes the Energy Map
The United States has vast supplies of this cleaner fossil fuel. But how should we use it?
•  Subscribe
Save 36%
•  Table of Contents
•  MIT News
» Gift Subscription
» Digital Subscription
» Reprints, Back Issues
» Subscribe
» Table of Contents
» MIT News

More Technology News from Forbes

Advertisement
MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology © 2009 Technology Review. All Rights Reserved.