Originally published Monday, January 15, 2007 at 12:00 AM
Charles Krauthammer / Syndicated columnist
Stem-cell advocacy without shame
When President Bush announced in August 2001 his restrictive funding decision for federal embryonic-stem-cell research, he was widely attacked...
WASHINGTON — When President Bush announced in August 2001 his restrictive funding decision for federal embryonic-stem-cell research, he was widely attacked for an unwarranted intrusion of religion into scientific research. His solicitousness for a 200-cell organism — the embryo Bush declared should not be destroyed to produce a harvest of stem cells — was roundly denounced as reactionary and anti-scientific. And cruel to boot. It was preventing the cure for thousands of people with hopeless and terrible diseases, from diabetes to spinal-cord injury.
This kind of stem-cell advocacy did not just shamefully inflate its promise. It tended to misrepresent the basis for putting restrictions on embryonic research, insisting that it was nothing more than political enforcement of the religious fundamentalist belief that life begins at conception.
This has always been a tendentious characterization of the argument for restricting stem-cell research that relies on the destruction of embryos. I have long supported legal abortion. And I don't believe that life — meaning the attributes and protections of personhood — begins at conception. Yet many secularly inclined people like me have great trepidation about the inherent dangers of wanton and unrestricted manipulation — to the point of dismemberment — of human embryos.
You don't need religion to tremble at the thought of unrestricted embryo research. You simply have to have a healthy respect for the human capacity for doing evil in pursuit of the good. Once we have taken the position of many stem-cell advocates that embryos are discardable tissue with no more intrinsic value than a hangnail or an appendix, then all barriers are down. What is to prevent us from producing not just tissues and organs, but human-like organisms for preservation as a source of future body parts on demand?
South Korea enthusiastically embraced unrestricted stem-cell research. The subsequent greatly heralded breakthroughs were eventually exposed as a swamp of deception, fraud and coercion.
The slope is very slippery. Which is why, even though I disagreed with where the president drew the line — I would have permitted the use of fertility-clinic embryos that are discarded and going to die anyway — I applauded his insistence that some line must be drawn, that embryos are not nothing, and that societal values, not just scientific imperative, should determine how they are treated.
Congress will soon vote to erase Bush's line. But future generations may nonetheless thank Bush for standing athwart history, if only for a few years. It gave technology enough time to catch up and rescue us from the moral dilemmas of embryonic destruction. It has just been demonstrated that stem cells with enormous potential can be harvested from amniotic fluid.
This is a revolutionary finding. Amniotic fluid surrounds the baby in the womb during pregnancy. It is routinely drawn out by needle in amniocentesis. The procedure carries little risk and is done for legitimate medical purposes that have nothing to do with stem cells. If it nonetheless yields a harvest of stem cells, we have just stumbled upon an endless supply. Not just endless, but uncontroversial. No embryos are destroyed.
Even better, amniotic fluid might prove to yield an ideal stem cell — not as primitive as embryonic stem cells and therefore less likely to grow uncontrollably into tumors, but also not as developed as adult stem cells and therefore more "pluripotential" in the kinds of tissues it can produce.
If it is proved that these are the Goldilocks of stem cells, history will record the amniotic breakthrough as the turning point in the evolution of stem-cell research from a narrow, difficult, delicate and morally dubious enterprise into an uncontroversial one with raw material produced unproblematically every day.
It will have turned out that Bush's unpopular policy held the line, however arbitrary and temporary, against the wanton trampling of the human embryo just long enough for a morally neutral alternative to emerge. And it did force the country to at least ponder the moral cost of turning one potential human being into replacement parts for another. Who will be holding the line next time, when another Faustus promises medical nirvana if he is permitted to transgress just one moral boundary?
Charles Krauthammer's column appears Monday on editorial pages of The Times. His e-mail address is letters@charleskrauthammer.com
NEW - 5:04 PM
A Florida U.S. Senate candidate and crimes against writing
NEW - 5:05 PM
Guest columnist: Washington Legislature is closing budget gap with student debt
Guest columnist: Seattle Public Schools must do more than replace the chief
Leonard Pitts Jr. / Syndicated columnist: The peril of lower standards in the 'new journalism'
Neal Peirce / Syndicated columnist: How do states afford needed investment and budget cuts?

Entertainment | Top Video | World | Offbeat Video | Sci-Tech
general classifieds
Garage & estate salesFurniture & home furnishings
Electronics
just listed
14 week old female min pin for sale
14K White Gold 3/4 Carat t.w. Leo Diamond B...
AKC sable male collie
More listings
POST A FREE LISTING
- Four dead in avalanches at Stevens and Snoqualmie passes
- Backups while city waited 11 hours to send crew to broken West Seattle traffic light
- Deaths highlight boom in backcountry skiing
- Huskies' Terrence Ross, Tony Wroten in no-lose situation, but here's how they win | Jerry Brewer
- Chinatown ID restaurateurs say longer parking hours cut business
- It's a logjam at third for Mariners; is Kyle Seager the odd man out?
- Microsoft sharpens its advertising sword to jab rivals
- Mariners confirm Ichiro to No. 3 in order, Chone Figgins to lead off | Mariners Blog
- Head of Madigan removed from command amid PTSD probe
- A look at possible Mariners lineup | Mariners Blog
- Judge: State can't make druggists sell Plan B contraceptive
557 - Chinatown ID restaurateurs say longer parking hours cut business
328 - The overdue split among Democrats on education reform
232 - Speculators blamed for rising oil, gas prices
173 - Chone Figgins taking all the heat off of Ichiro as Mariners go in bold new direction
133 - AP source: Obama seeks 28 percent corp. tax rate
128 - Seattle's hopes of luring NBA's Kings here takes a hit
127 - Elks lodges are hot again in Seattle
85 - Seattle full-day kindergarten fees to increase 15%
79 - Brendan Ryan and Munenori Kawasaki having fun and working hard at Mariners camp
57
- Elks lodges are hot again in Seattle
- Spaghetti squash can be a side or main dish
- Deaths highlight boom in backcountry skiing
- Japan quake studies suggest harder jolt to NW possible
- Seattle surprises in James Beard nominations | All You Can Eat
- Head of Madigan removed from command amid PTSD probe
- Ichiro's style change is bigger news than his lineup change | Larry Stone
- Zumba's Latin rhythms on the move in the fitness world
- 'Oklahoma' seen in a new light | Nicole Brodeur
- Four dead in avalanches at Stevens and Snoqualmie passes
