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Home > 2008 > MayChristianity Today, May, 2008  |   |  
Presidential Clones
All three candidates have voted to fund embryonic stem-cell research.



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Scientists and ethicists are anticipating more federal funding for embryonic stem-cell research after President Bush leaves office next year.

None of the presidential candidates are as strict as Bush, who has used an executive order to keep embryonic research from receiving federal money. Senators Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and John McCain each voted last year for an unsuccessful bill that would have overturned that order.

But while the Democratic candidates have been firm in their support of embryonic stem-cell research, McCain has not.

"We don't know what McCain will do," said Nigel Cameron, president of the Institute on Biotechnology and the Human Future. "He signed on to efforts to overturn the President's policy with a heavy heart and a lot of thought. He's had a totally prolife voting record."

Even if the future President does loosen up federal funds, experts say it probably will not be a boon for embryonic stem-cell research.

"There is already an enormous amount of private and state funding for it," said science policy analyst Michelle Kirtley, a staff member of Rep. Dave Weldon (R-Fla.). "They already have access to significantly more money than NIH [the National Institutes of Health] would grant, even if the funding restrictions were completely lifted. I don't see funding making a huge amount of difference."

In addition, scientists are focusing on alternatives to embryonic research, like the discovery that adult cells can be reprogrammed to be as flexible as embryonic cells. "Since November more than 100 different stem cell lines have been developed this way," Kirtley said. "[Scientists] know the rules are likely to be more lax soon, so I don't think they'd be jumping on this other reprogramming bandwagon if they thought the future was entirely with embryonic stem cells."

Alternative research methods and a less polarizing President will likely move the stem-cell debate off the front pages, Cameron said. "If the [current] President weren't so unpopular, this issue would've gone away. You'll have a fresh game to play. I'm hoping it will focus on cloning."

Therapeutic cloning involves removing the DNA from an embryo and replacing it with DNA taken from the cell of an individual. Stem cells extracted from the resulting embryo could then be used, theoretically, to grow perfectly matched tissue or replacement organs.

Clinton told The New York Times last fall that she believed therapeutic cloning fell "within the ethical framework" that would guide her policy decisions. Obama is also thought to support such cloning, though he has not spoken publicly about it. McCain, however, supports a bill that would forbid all forms of cloning for any purpose.

"Our Christian view has to be that it is never acceptable to create human life in order to destroy it," said Robert George, a member of the President's Council on Bioethics. "It's certainly a grave violation against justice, not just for the unborn but our right as citizens." If a cloning bill were to pass, he said, Christians would be implicated in the killing of life by paying for it with their taxes.

Evangelicals are facing only the tip of the iceberg of moral questions in stem-cell research, said William Hurlbut, another member of the President's Council on Bioethics. Each generation will face a new and difficult ethical dilemma, he said, which is why it's important to get this one right.



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More articles on the 2008 presidential campaign and life ethics are available in our full-coverage sections.





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Displaying 1 - 3 of 8 comments.See all comments
Ken   Posted: April 09, 2008 11:00 AM
As a father who lost a daughter at a very young age due to a heart defect I believe we must CAREFULLY persue stem-cell research. Like most things it shows a lot of promice but not without some danger.

Leendert   Posted: April 09, 2008 11:38 PM
I just today attended a seminar about stem cell research, led by Dr. Clem Persaud. He made it very clear that adult stem cells can be just as effective (or even more effective) than embryonic cells! In the United States there are 400,000 frozen embryos, created life to be killed. Sad to see John McCain would support such research!

Anonymous Posted: April 09, 2008 3:50 PM
Robert George's comment about 'cloning' is simply ignorant. Therapeutic cloning is not creating humans; it's creating liver tissue, or pancreatic tissue, or whatever is needed, that perfectly matches the patient's needs, because it's created from his/her own stem cells. Before fundamentalists jump in with shrill rhetoric, they need to be informed about the science they seek to derail. Galileo had the last word - even though he was dead. The fundies will not be able to repress this science forever, either. Articles like this one throw fuel on the fire, without doing anything to staunch the river of ignorance that spews from politicians and pulpits alike.

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