|
Subcommittee on Health
June 20, 2001
10:15 AM
2123 Rayburn House Office Building
I
am Richard M. Doerflinger, Associate Director for Policy Development at the
Secretariat for Pro-Life Activities, National Conference of Catholic Bishops.
I am grateful for this opportunity to testify on human cloning, and to
express our Conference=s
support for a federal ban on the practice as proposed in Congressman Weldon=s
AHuman Cloning Prohibition Act of 2001@
(H.R. 1644).
The
sanctity and dignity of human life is a cornerstone of Catholic moral and
social teaching. We believe a
society can be judged by the respect it shows for human life, especially in
its most vulnerable stages and conditions.
At
first glance, human cloning may not seem to threaten respect for life because
it is presented as a means for creating life, not destroying it.
Yet it shows disrespect for life in the very act of generating it.
Here human life does not arise from an act of love, but is manufactured
in the laboratory to preset specifications determined by the desires of
others. Developing human beings
are treated as objects, not as individuals with their own identity and rights.
Because cloning completely divorces human reproduction from the context
of a loving union between man and woman, such children have no Aparents@
in the usual sense. As a group of
experts advising the Holy See has written:
In
the cloning process the basic relationships of the human person are perverted:
filiation, consanguinity, kinship, parenthood.
A woman can be the twin sister of her mother, lack a biological father
and be the daughter of her grandmother. In
vitro fertilization has already led to the confusion of parentage,
but cloning will mean the radical rupture of these bonds.
From
the dehumanizing nature of this technique flow many disturbing consequences.
Because human clones would be produced by a means that involves no
loving relationship, no personal investment or responsibility for a new life,
but only laboratory technique, they would be uniquely at risk of being treated
as Asecond-class@
human beings.
In
the present state of science, attempts to produce a liveborn child by cloning
would require taking a callous attitude toward human life.
Animal trials show that 95 to 99% of cloned embryos die.
Of those which survive, many are stillborn or die shortly after birth.
The rest may face unpredictable but potentially devastating health
problems. Those problems are not
detectable before birth, because they do not come from genetic defects as such
B
they arise from the disorganized expression of genes, because cloning plays
havoc with the usual process of genetic reorganization in the embryo.
Scenarios
often cited as justifications for
human cloning are actually symptoms
of the disordered view of human life that it reflects and promotes.
It is said that cloning could be used to create Acopies@
of illustrious people, or to replace a deceased loved one, or even to provide
genetically matched tissues or organs for the person whose genetic material
was used for the procedure. Each
such proposal is indicative of a utilitarian view of human life, in which a
fellow human is treated as a means to someone else's ends -- instead of as a
person with his or her own inherent dignity.
This same attitude lies at the root of human slavery.
Let
me be perfectly clear. In
objective reality a cloned human being would not be an Aobject@
or a substandard human being. Whatever
the circumstances of his or her origin, he or she would deserve to be treated
as a human person with an individual identity.
But the depersonalized technique of manufacture known as cloning
disregards this dignity and sets the stage for further exploitation.
Cloning is not wrong because cloned human beings would lack human
dignity -- it is wrong because they have
human dignity, and are being brought into the world in a way that fails to
respect that dignity.
Ironically,
startling evidence of the dehumanizing aspects of cloning is found in some
proposals ostensibly aimed at preventing
human cloning. These initiatives
would not ban human cloning at all -- but would simply ban any effort to allow
cloned human embryos to survive. In
these proposals, researchers are allowed to use cloning for the unlimited mass
production of human embryos for experimentation -- and are then required by
law to destroy them, instead of allowing them to implant in a woman's womb.
In
other words: Faced with a 99% death rate from cloning, such proposals would Asolve@
the problem by ensuring that the death rate rises to 100%.
No live clones, therefore no evidence that anyone performed cloning.
This is reassuring for researchers and biotechnology companies who may
wish the freedom to make countless identical human guinea pigs for lethal
experiments. It is no great
comfort to the dead human clones; nor is it a solution worthy of us as a
nation.
Congressman
Greenwood=s
ACloning
Prohibition Act of 2001@
(H.R.
2172) is even worse than previous bills of this kind.
It would actually have the Department of Health and Human Services
authorize and license the
practice of destructive cloning. In
a new way, our
government would be actively involved in human cloning B
but only to ensure that no cloned embryos get out of the laboratory alive.
Under the guise of a ban on cloning, the government would assist
researchers in refining their procedure; then, ten years after the date of
enactment, it would obligingly drop all penalties for using cloning to
initiate a pregnancy, so they could use their newly honed skills to
manufacture babies. This bill
would even invalidate any future state law seeking to establish a genuine ban
on cloning, by preempting any such law that does not take the same
irresponsible approach.
Sometimes
it is said that such proposals would ban Areproductive
cloning@
or Alive
birth cloning,@
while allowing Atherapeutic
cloning@
or Aembryo
cloning.@
This may sound superficially reasonable.
If banning all cloning is too difficult a task, perhaps we could ban
half of it B
and the half that is Atherapeutic@
sounds like the half we=d
like to keep.
But
this description relies on a fundamental confusion as to what cloning is.
I can sum up the real situation in a few propositions.
1. All human cloning is embryo cloning.
Some accounts of cloning seem to imagine that cloning for research
purposes produces an embryo, while cloning for reproductive purposes produces
a baby or even a fully grown adult B
like new copies of Michael Keaton or Arnold Schwarzenegger springing
full-grown from a laboratory. This
is, of course, nonsense. In the
words of Professor Lee Silver of Princeton University, a leading advocate of
human cloning: AReal
biological cloning can only take place at the level of the cell.@
Cloning
technology can also be used to produce other kinds of cells; these are not the
subject of this hearing, and they are explicitly excluded from the scope of
Congressman Weldon=s
legislation. But when somatic cell nuclear transfer is used to replace the
nucleus of an egg with the nucleus of a human body cell and the resulting cell
is stimulated, a human embryo results, whatever one=s
ultimate plans on what to do next.
2. In an important sense, all human cloning is reproductive
cloning.
Once one creates a live human embryo by cloning, one has engaged in
reproduction B
albeit a very strange form of asexual reproduction. All subsequent stages of development -- gestation, birth,
infancy, etc. -- are simply those which normally occur in the development of
any human being (though reaching them may be far more precarious for the
cloned human, due to the damage inflicted by the cloning procedure).
To
say this is not to make a controversial moral claim about personhood or legal
rights.
It is to state a biological fact: Once one produces an embryo by
cloning, a new living being has arrived and the key event in reproduction has
taken place. The complete human
genome that once belonged to one member of the human species now also belongs
to another. Anything that now
happens to this being will be Aenvironmental@
influence upon a being already in existence -- transfer to a womb and live
birth, for example, are chiefly simple changes in location.
Moreover,
even government study commissions favoring harmful human embryo experiments
concede that with the generation of a new embryo, a new life has come into the
world. They describe the early
embryo as Aa
developing form of human life@
which Awarrants
serious moral consideration.@
Thus
generating this new human life in the laboratory confronts us with new moral
questions: Not AShould
we clone?@
but AWhat
do we do with this living human we have produced by cloning?@
If all the available answers are lethal to the cloned human 95% to 100%
of the time, we should not allow cloning.
3. All human cloning, at present, is experimental cloning.
The line between Areproductive@
and Aexperimental@
cloning is especially porous at present, because any attempt to move toward
bringing a cloned child to live birth would first require many thousands of
trials using embryos not
intended for live birth. Years of
destructive research of this kind may be necessary before anyone could bring a
cloned human through the entire gestational process with any reasonable
expectation of a healthy child. Therefore
legislation which seeks to bar creation of a cloned embryo for purposes of
live birth, while allowing unlimited experimental cloning, would actually
facilitate efforts to refine the cloning procedure and prepare for the
production of liveborn children. This
would be irresponsible in light of the compelling principled objections to
producing liveborn humans by cloning.
4. No human cloning is
Atherapeutic@
cloning. The
attempt to label cloning for purposes of destructive experiments as Atherapeutic
cloning@
is a stroke of marketing genius by supporters of human embryo research.
But it does serious damage to the English language and common sense,
for two reasons.
First,
the experiments contemplated here are universally called Anontherapeutic
experimentation@
in law and medical ethics B
that is, the experiments harm or kill the research subject (in this case the
cloned human embryo) without any prospect of benefitting that subject.
This standard meaning of Anontherapeutic@
research is found, for example, in various state laws forbidding such research
on human embryos as a crime.
Experiments performed on one subject solely for possible benefit to
others are never called Atherapeutic
research@
in any other context, and there is no reason to change that in this context.
Second,
the Atherapeutic@
need for human cloning has always been highly speculative; it now seems more
doubtful than ever in light of recent advances in adult stem cell research and
other noncontroversial alternatives. In
the stem cell research debate, as one recent news report observes, AThere
is one thing everyone agrees on: Adult stem cells are proving to be far more
versatile than originally thought.@
Adult stem cells have shown they can be Apluripotent@
B producing a wide array of different cells and tissues.
They can also be multiplied in culture to produce an ample supply of
tissue for transplantation.
Best of all, using a patient=s
own cells solves all problems of tissue rejection, the chief advantage cited
until now for use of cloning.
In
1997 the National Bioethics Advisory Commission reviewed the idea of cloning
human embryos to create Acustomized
stem cell lines@
but described this as Aa
rather expensive and far-fetched scenario@
B and added that a moral assessment is necessary as well:
Because
of ethical and moral concerns raised by the use of embryos for research
purposes it would be far more desirable to explore the direct use of human
cells of adult origin to produce specialized cells or tissues for
transplantation into patients.
Now
PPL Therapeutics, the Scottish firm involved in creating ADolly@
the sheep, says it has indeed found a way to reprogram ordinary adult cells to
become stem cells capable of being directed to form almost any kind of cell or
tissue B
without creating or destroying any embryos.
Even
in the field of embryonic stem cell research, new developments have called
into question the need for cloning. The
problem of tissue rejection may not be as serious as once thought when cells
from early human development are used, and there are other ways of solving the
problem B
for example, by genetically modifying cells to become a closer match to a
patient.
For
all these reasons, a recent overview of the field concludes that human Atherapeutic
cloning@
is Afalling
from favour,@
that Amany
experts do not now expect therapeutic cloning to have a large clinical impact.@
Even James Thomson of the University of Wisconsin, a leading
practitioner and advocate of embryonic stem cell research generally, calls
this approach Aastronomically
expensive@;
in light of the enormous wastefulness of the cloning process and the damage it
does to gene expression, Amany
researchers have come to doubt whether therapeutic cloning will ever be
efficient enough to be commercially viable@
even if one could set aside the grave moral issues involved.
We
should clearly understand what would be entailed by any effort to implement a Atherapeutic
cloning@
regimen for stem cell transplants. This
would not be a case in which human embryos are destroyed once to form a
permanent cell line for future use. For
each individual patient,
countless human embryos B
the patient=s
genetic twin brothers or sisters B
would have to be created in the laboratory and then destroyed for their stem
cells, in the hope of producing genetically matched tissue for
transplantation. Thus the
creation and destruction of human life in the laboratory would become an
ongoing aspect not only of medical research but of everyday medical practice.
And what would become of those who have profound moral objections to
cloning, and to having new lives created and destroyed for our benefit?
Would we be told that we must choose between our life and our
conscience?
In
short, the Atherapeutic@
case for cloning is as morally abhorrent as it is medically questionable.
Which brings me to a final proposition on how to assess proposals for
preventing human cloning.
5. Because cloned humans are humans, any proposal to prevent
human cloning must not do to cloned humans anything that would be universally
condemned if done to other humans at the same stage of development.
This
proposition can be universally endorsed by people on both sides of the cloning
issue, and on both sides of the abortion issue. To quote Lee Silver once more: ACloned
children will be full-fledged human beings, indistinguishable in biological
terms from all other members of the human species.@
Thus, for example, cloned embryos deserve as much respect as other
human embryos of the same stage B
whatever that level of respect may be.
Silver=s
point about cloned humans being Aindistinguishable@
from others raises a major practical problem for efforts to allow creation of
cloned embryos while forbidding their transfer to a womb.
Once the embryo is created in a fertility clinic=s
research lab (as such a law would permit) and is available for transfer, how
could the government tell that this embryo was or was not created
by cloning? And if it cannot do
so, how can it enforce a prohibition on transferring cloned embryos (but not
IVF embryos) to a woman=s
womb?
However,
an even more serious moral and legal issue arises at this point.
If the government allows use of cloning to produce human embryos for
research but prohibits initiating a pregnancy, what will it be requiring
people to do? If pregnancy has
already begun, the only remedy would seem to be government-mandated abortion B
or at least, jailing or otherwise punishing women for remaining pregnant and
giving birth. We need not dwell
on the abhorrence such a solution would rightly provoke among people on all
sides of the abortion issue. It
would be as Aanti-choice@
as it is Aanti-life.@
However,
even if the law could act before transfer actually occurs, the problem is
equally intractable. For the law
would have to require that these
embryos be killed -- defining for the first time in U.S. history a class of
human embryos that it is a crime not
to destroy. It is impossible to
reconcile such a law with the profound Arespect@
and Aserious
moral consideration@
that even supporters of human embryo research say should be accorded to all
human embryos.
If
the law permitted (or, even
worse, licensed) creation of
cloned embryos for research, while prohibiting
their creation for any other purpose (or prohibiting any other use of them
once created), the government would be approving the one practice in human
embryo research that is widely condemned even by supporters of abortion
rights: specially creating human embryos solely for the purpose of research
that will kill them.
In
1994 the National Institutes of Health did propose funding such abuses, as
part of a larger proposal for funding human embryo research generally.
The moral outcry against this aspect of the proposal, however, was
almost universal. Opinion polls
showed massive opposition, and the NIH panel making the recommendation was
inundated with over 50,000 letters of protest.
The Washington Post,
while reaffirming its support for legalized abortion, attacked the Panel=s
recommendation:
The
creation of human embryos specifically for research that will destroy them is
unconscionable... [I]t is not necessary to be against abortion rights, or to
believe human life literally begins at conception, to be deeply alarmed by the
notion of scientists=
purposely causing conceptions in a context entirely divorced from even the
potential of reproduction.
The
Chicago Sun-Times likewise
editorialized:
We
can debate all day whether an embryo is or isn=t
a person. But it is
unquestionably human life, complete with its own unique set of human genes
that inform and drive its own development.
The idea of the manufacture of such a magnificent thing as a human life
purely for the purpose of conducting research is grotesque, at best.
Whether or not it is federally funded.
In
the end, President Clinton set aside the recommendation for creation of Aresearch
embryos.@
Every
year since then, Congress has prohibited funding for all harmful embryo
research at the National Institutes of Health, through the Dickey amendment to
the annual Labor/HHS appropriations bills.
However, even members of Congress
who have led the opposition to the Dickey amendment agree with its rejection
of special creation of human embryos for research.
On the only occasion when an amendment was offered on the House floor
to weaken the Dickey amendment, the sponsors emphasized that it would leave
intact the clause rejecting the creation of embryos for research.
Similarly, the recent NIH guidelines for embryonic stem cell research,
as well as Senator Specter=s
AStem Cell Research Act of 2001,@
explicitly reject the idea of using embryos specially created for research
purposes.
As
mentioned above, at least nine states generally prohibit harmful experiments
on human embryos living outside a woman=s
body. A federal law that
facilitates such experimentation, by approving it as the only accepted use for human embryo cloning, would mark a radical
departure from state precedents on respect for nascent human life.
In short, human embryos produced by cloning would be created
specifically, and solely, for destructive embryo experiments that are a crime
in some states.
Ironically,
it seems the cloning procedure is so demeaning and dehumanizing that people
somehow assume that a brief life as an object of research, followed by
destruction, is Agood
enough@
for any human produced by this technique.
The fact that the procedure invites such morally irresponsible policies
is another reason to ban it. For
if an embryo produced by cloning cannot even garner the respect that we all
agree should be accorded to all other human embryos, but is treated as a
dangerous entity that must not be allowed to survive, how will we view any
human clone who is ultimately
born alive? As a mere Aorgan
farm@
for others? Or could we
compartmentalize our thinking, so that an embryo created solely for
destructive research will be greeted as a new individual with full human
rights if someone does bring him
or her to full term? In light of
some uses proposed even now for born human clones, it would be foolish to
assume that our society will shift gears so easily.
We
must remember that it is morally wrong and irresponsible to make
human clones, not to be
a human clone. The innocent
victim of cloning should not receive a government-sanctioned death penalty
simply for the crime of existing. Therefore
the approach taken by the Weldon bill, prohibiting the use of cloning to initiate
the development of a new human organism, is the only morally responsible
approach as well as the clearest and most effective one in practical terms.
The
Weldon bill even incorporates key distinctions and recommendations made by the
Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO) and its leading spokesperson on
cloning. It bans the specific act
of using cloning to make a new human organism, but does not ban Atherapeutic
cloning@
as defined in Dr. Okarma=s
recent House testimony on behalf of BIO: Acloning
specific human cells, genes and other tissues that do not and cannot lead to a
cloned human being.@
This bill clearly exempts from its scope the use of cloning to make any
cells other than human embryos. And
the Weldon bill=s
distinction between human embryos, which are complete human organisms, and
other cells such as pluripotent stem cells, which are not, was strongly
affirmed by BIO=s
chief spokesperson on cloning in December 1998 as a basis for federal policy
on embryo research.
By
contrast, the Greenwood bill is not only morally unacceptable because of the
encouragement it gives to experimental human cloning B
it also contains features which BIO has said are unacceptable in any cloning
ban. For example, instead of
prohibiting the specific act of cloning a human being, it relies heavily on
the Aintent@
of researchers in an attempt to define good and bad uses for human cloning.
BIO has declared that such a subjective standard Acould
grant undue discretion to enforcers, create uncertainty for researchers, and
consequently have a broad chilling effect among researchers.@
Moreover, unlike the Weldon bill, the Greenwood proposal has a
forfeiture clause calling for the confiscation of all a violator=s
assets, which BIO has said will have Aa
definite chilling effect of investor interest in funding research.@
Contrary
to what the biotechnology industry may now claim in a clumsy attempt to block
any real ban on cloning, then, BIO=s
own standards suggest that the Greenwood bill is a far greater threat to
legitimate medical research than the Weldon bill could be.
In addition, the Greenwood bill is singularly ineffectual at doing what
it was supposedly designed to do B
that is, preventing the live birth of human clones. While it seeks to ban the creation of cloned embryos with the
Aintent@
to initiate a pregnancy, it freely allows the unlimited creation of these
embryos in the laboratory B
and then freely allows anyone (except the person who first created them) to
use them to initiate a pregnancy, since the act of doing so is not itself
prohibited. The only way to
prevent the live birth of cloned humans once this is allowed to occur, of
course, would be the odious and unacceptable solution of coercing an abortion.
In
any event, the Greenwood bill=s
Arule
of construction@
vitiates any ban in two ways. First, it exempts from the ban any use of
cloning to create Acells@
regardless of one=s
further intent on how to use them B
and a new human embryo is, of course, a cell of a very special type.
Second, it exempts A[t]he
use of in vitro fertilization, the administration of fertility-enhancing
drugs, or the use of other medical
procedures to assist a woman in becoming or remaining pregnant@
B
and of course, the transfer of an embryo (whether produced by cloning or not)
to a woman=s
womb is a medical procedure which could assist her in becoming pregnant.
This
is a cloning ban that only a supporter of cloning could love.
It combines the moral defect of establishing a regimen for the
government-mandated destruction of human lives, and the practical defect of
massive loopholes that will ensure the arrival of live-birth cloning as well.
In
short: Some would reject the most
straightforward and effective legislation against human cloning, solely to
protect the use of cloning for a practice (creating human embryos solely for
research) which is of highly questionable use and has been rejected by policy
makers on both sides of the abortion and stem cell debates.
Such advocacy should not prevent Congress from taking the right course
on this issue.
Research
in the cloning of animals, plants, and even human genes, tissues and cells
(other than embryos) can be beneficial and presents no intrinsic moral
problem. However, when research
turns its attention to human subjects, we must be sure not to undermine human
dignity in the pursuit of human progress.
Human experimentation divorced from moral considerations might progress
more quickly on a technical level -- but at the loss of our humanity.
A
ban on human cloning will help direct the scientific enterprise toward research
that benefits human beings without producing, exploiting and destroying fellow
human beings to gain those benefits. Creating
human life solely to cannibalize and destroy it is the most unconscionable use
of human cloning -- not its highest justification.
Reflections
from the Pontifical Academy for Life, AHuman
Cloning Is Immoral@
(July 9, 1997), in The Pope Speaks,
vol. 43, no. 1 (January/February 1998), p. 29. Also see: Congregation for
the Doctrine of the Faith, Donum Vitae
(Instruction on Respect for Human Life in its Origin and on the Dignity of
Procreation)(March 10, 1987), I.6 and II.B.
See
Testimony before the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Oversight and
Investigations, March 28, 2001, presented by Dr. Mark E. Westhusin and Dr.
Rudolf Jaenishch (http://test.archives.republicans.energycommerce.house.gov/107/hearings/03282001Hearing141/hearing.htm).
Lee
M. Silver, Remaking Eden: How Genetic Engineering and Cloning Will Transform the
American Family (Avon Books 1998) at 124.
See
the Fact Sheet, ADoes
Human Cloning Produce an Embryo?@,
Secretariat for Pro-Life Activities, National Conference of Catholic
Bishops, March 31, 1998 (www.nccbuscc.org/prolife/issues/bioethic/fact398.htm).
Professor
Silver, for example, agrees that cloning is accomplished at the embryonic
level, while also claiming that the cloned embryo (and all other embryos)
lack full moral significance until later in development.
To his Princeton colleague Peter Singer and some other bioethicists,
humans do not acquire the rights of persons until some time after
birth. See P. Singer, AJustifying
Infanticide,@
in Writings on an Ethical Life
(HarperCollins 2000), 186-193.
Final
Report of the Human Embryo Research Panel
(National Institutes of Health: September 27, 1994) at 2.
The National Bioethics Advisory Commission, which defined the embryo
as Athe
beginning of any organism in the early stages of development,@
likewise said that Athe
embryo merits respect as a form of human life@
(though not, the Commission thought, the level of respect owed to persons).
See Ethical Issues in Human Stem
Cell Research (National Bioethics Advisory Commission: September
1999) at 85, 50. Also see the
sources cited in the Fact Sheet, AWhat is an Embryo?@,
Secretariat for Pro-Life Activities, National Conference of Catholic
Bishops, Feb. 26, 1998 (www.nccbuscc.org/prolife/issues/bioethic/fact298.htm).
For
example, see La. Rev. Stat. tit. 14 '87.2
(a crime to conduct any experiment or study on a human embryo except to
preserve the health of that embryo) and tit. 40 '1299.35.13
(prohibiting experimentation on an unborn child unless it is therapeutic to
that child); Mich. Comp. Laws '333.2685
(prohibiting use of a live human embryo for nontherapeutic research that
will harm the embryo); Pa. Cons. Stat. tit. 18 '3216(a)
(nontherapeutic experimentation on an unborn child at any stage is a felony;
defining Anontherapeutic@);
S.D. Codified Laws ''34-14-16
through 34-14-20 (prohibiting nontherapeutic research that harms or destroys
a human embryo; defining Anontherapeutic
research@).
A.
Zitner, ADiabetes
Study Fuels Stem Cell Funding War,@
Los Angeles Times, April 27,
2001 (www.latimes.com/news/nation/updates2/lat_stemwar010427.htm).
Citing
eleven other studies, a study funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH)
and the Christopher Reeve Paralysis Foundation states: APluripotent
stem cells have been detected in multiple tissues in the adult,
participating in normal replacement and repair, while undergoing
self-renewal.@
D. Woodbury et al., AAdult
Rat and Human Bone Marrow Stromal Cells Differentiate Into Neurons,@
61 Journal of Neuroscience Research
364-370 (August 15, 2000) at 364.
See:
D. Colter et al., ARapid
expansion of recycling stem cells in cultures of plastic-adherent cells from
human bone marrow,@
97 Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
3213-8 (March 28, 2000)(adult stem cells amplified a billion-fold in six
weeks, retaining their multipotentiality for differentiation); E. Rosler et
al., ACocultivation
of umbilical cord blood cells with endothelial cells leads to extensive
amplification of competent CD34+CD38- cells,@
28 Exp. Hematol. 841-52 (July
2000).
A
recent report on use of adult stem cells to form new muscles, nerves, liver
cells and blood vessels observes: ANone
of these approaches use embryonic stem cells, which some oppose on ethical
grounds. Another advantage is
that they use tissue taken from the patient=s
own body, so there is no risk of rejection or need for drugs to suppress
immune system defenses.@
See AApproach
may renew worn hearts,@
Associated Press, November 12, 2000.
Cloning
Human Beings: Report and Recommendations of the National Bioethics Advisory
Commission (Rockville,
MD: June 1997) at 30-31. The
Commission outlined three alternative avenues of stem cell research, two of
which seemed not to involve creating human embryos at all.
APPL
follows Dolly with cell breakthrough,@
Financial Times, February 23,
2001.
P.
Aldhous, ACan
they rebuild us?@,
410 Nature 622-5 (5 April
2001) at 623.
Editorial,
AEmbryos:
Drawing the Line,@
The Washington Post, October
2, 1994 at C6.
Editorial,
AEmbryo
Research Is Inhuman,@
Chicago Sun-Times, October 10,
1994 at 25.
The
current version is Section 510 of the Labor/HHS appropriations bill for
Fiscal Year 2001, H.R. 5656 (enacted through Section 1(a)(1) of H.R. 4577,
the FY >01
Consolidated Appropriations Act, Public Law 106-554). It bans funding any
creation of human embryos (by cloning or other means) for research purposes,
and any research in which human embryos are harmed or destroyed.
ALet
me say that I agree with our colleagues who say that we should not be
involved in the creation of embryos for research. I completely agree with my
colleagues on that score,@
said Rep. Nancy Pelosi, arguing in favor of
research on Aspare@
embryos originally created for fertility treatment. The sponsor of the weakening amendment, Rep. Nita Lowey,
said: AI
want to make it very clear: We are not talking about creating embryos....
President Clinton again has made it very clear that early‑stage embryo
research may be permitted but that the use of Federal funds to create
embryos solely for research purposes would be prohibited. We
can all be assured that the research at the National Institutes of Health
will be conducted with the highest level of integrity. No embryos will be
created for research purposes...@
142 Cong. Record at H7343
(July 11, 1996)(emphasis added). The
weakening amendment failed nonetheless, 167 to 256.
Id. at H7364. While this
debate concerned federal funding, supporters of the Lowey amendment said it
was Avery
hard to understand@
why standards for ethical research should be different for publicly funded
and privately funded research. See
remarks of Rep. Fazio at H7341-2.
The
NIH guidelines deny funding for Aresearch
utilizing pluripotent stem cells that were derived from human embryos
created for research purposes,@
and Aresearch
in which human pluripotent stem cells are derived using somatic cell nuclear
transfer, i.e., the transfer
of a human somatic cell nucleus into a human or animal egg.@
National Institutes of Health
Guidelines for Research Using Human Pluripotent Stem Cells, 65 Fed. Reg. 51976-81 (August 25, 2000) at 51981.
Senator Specter=s
bill supports embryonic stem cell research but insists that Athe
research involved shall not result in the creation of human embryos.@
107th Congress, S. 723, Sec. 2.
In
Louisiana, for example, a human embryo fertilized in the laboratory may
generally be used only for efforts at a live birth, not for research.
La. Rev. Stat. tit. 9 '122.
What would happen if a new federal law turned this on its head, and
banned creating embryos for live birth while allowing their creation for
destructive research B
keeping in mind that cloned embryos may be biologically indistinguishable
from IVF embryos once created?
Testimony
of Dr. Thomas Okarma on behalf of the Biotechnology Industry Organization
(BIO) before the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Oversight and
Investigations, March 28, 2001.
In
his December 2, 1998 testimony before the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee
on Labor, Health and Human Services and Education, Dr. Okarma joined other
scientists and ethicists in agreeing that a stem cell is not a human Aorganism@
as a human embryo is, and therefore is not covered by the statutory ban on
federal funding for human embryo research.
HHS General Counsel Harriet Rabb also relied heavily on this
distinction (and this testimony) in finding that the federal government may
fund embryonic stem cell research. If
this distinction between human embryos and all other cells were problematic,
unclear or unenforceable, the current NIH guidelines for stem cell research
would clearly be illegal. (As I
pointed out to the same Senate subcommittee in my January 26, 1999
testimony, the NIH guidelines are in fact illegal but on other grounds.
See www.nccbuscc.org/prolife/issues/bioethic/test99.htm.)
Actually
the bill=s
Aintent@
standard makes its enforceability doubtful.
A researcher=s
Aintent@
for future use of a cloned embryo is inherently changeable and unknowable,
so it will be extremely difficult to prove until he or she acts
on that intent by using the embryo to initiate a pregnancy B
at which point it is too late for any morally defensible or constitutionally
sound way to prevent the birth of cloned humans. If BIO=s
charges about a chilling effect on legitimate research are also correct, the
Greenwood bill will be an unusual achievement B
a bill that would never lead to a conviction against its supposed targets,
but in the meantime would harass and frighten those who conduct research the
bill ostensibly seeks to protect.
See
BIO=s
criteria for cloning legislation, posted on the organization=s
Web site at www.bio.org/laws/cloning_paper2.html.
Indeed
BIO, which now supports the Greenwood bill, previously announced on several
occasions that it favors no
new legislation against human cloning.
BIO recommended to the National Bioethics Advisory Commission that a Avoluntary
moratorium@
on cloning (which is to say, no moratorium at all) be continued Ain
lieu of any new federal law or regulation regarding the cloning of an entire
human being.@
See www.bio.org/bioethics/nbac.html.
In its recent March 28 testimony BIO reaffirmed its opposition to any
new federal ban on human cloning. The Greenwood bill is exempt from this
policy because it is no ban at all. It
would even preempt and thus invalidate any effective future ban a state may
enact, creating a situation better for the most irresponsible researchers
(and far worse for the nation) than if no federal law were enacted at all.
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