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Bushs veto: Stem cell research and the rise of American
theocracy
By Joe Kay
20 July 2006
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The decision by President Bush on Wednesday to use the first
veto of his tenure to oppose a bill loosening restrictions on
stem cell research is a cruel, inhumane and utterly backward act.
It is yet one more indication of the extraordinary decay of democratic
forms in the United States.
On Tuesday, the US Senate, by a vote of 63-37, passed a bill
that would reverse a policy order issued by Bush in 2001 limiting
federal funding of research using embryonic stem cells to already
existing stem cell lines. The 2001 decision immediately put severe
constraints on the ability of scientists to pursue the new and
very promising avenue of research, which could help develop treatments
for many diseases. The Senate bill was the same as a House bill
passed in 2005 by a vote of 238-194.
The votes in both houses of Congress fell short of the two-thirds
majority needed to override a presidential veto, and the House
held a similar vote Wednesday which failed to overturn Bushs
action.
Research in embryonic stem cells, derived from a fertilized
egg when it is in one of its earliest stages of development, is
critical because the cells have the potential to form any of the
many different cells that make up the human body. It is hoped
that by manipulating these cells, scientists can develop ways
of, for example, regenerating nervous tissue in patients suffering
from Alzheimers Disease or regenerating insulin-producing
cells in patients suffering from diabetes.
It has been less than 10 years since scientists first developed
the capacity to isolate human embryonic stem cells. The stem cells
that had been isolated and developed into self-generating lines
by 2001 are not ideal for scientific research, meaning that the
decision of the Bush administration has had a direct impact on
the ability of researchers to carry out their work. This has prevented
the development of treatments that could benefit or save the lives
of thousands if not millions of people.
On what grounds has Bush decided that he will severely crimp
this research? In the course of his remarks announcing the veto,
Bush declared: the bill would cross a moral boundary that
our decent society needs to respect; we must never abandon
our fundamental morals; we must respect the
fundamental ethical line; must not allow our nation
to cross this moral line and the bill fails to meet this
ethical test.
He went on to say that the bill would support the taking
of innocent human life in the hope of finding medical benefits
for others. Each of the embryos used in embryonic stem cell
research is a unique human life with inherent dignity and
matchless value, he said. To illustrate this claim, Bush
corralled a number of children who had been born through the artificial
implantation of frozen embryos such as those that could be used
for developing stem cell lines. These boys and girls are
not spare parts, he declared.
By themselves, the embryos under discussionand it is
more appropriate to call them pre-embryosare merely a handful
of undifferentiated stem cells enclosed in a spherical wall about
.15 to .20 mm in diameter. They are far from developing anything
resembling organs or other tissues, let alone a nervous system.
These cells differ from any other collection of human cells
(many times more of which are killed every day in
the normal process of human life) only in that, under certain
conditions, they can divide into all the different cells that
make up a human embryo.
The claim that the embryos represent a unique human life
rests entirely on the assumption that they have been implanted
with a human soul at some point within five days after the female
egg has been inseminated. In other words, Bushan intellectual
incompetent who knows nothing about sciencehas made the
religious determination that stem cell research is immoral,
while it is moral to deny funding to develop medical treatments
that can save human lives and improve the conditions of life for
millions of people.
The ignorance and hypocrisy of Bushs statements extended
even further. He declared, Human beings are not raw material
to be exploited or a commodity to be bought and sold. This
from a president who has sought to ruthlessly eliminate social
programs and facilitate the destruction of jobs and living standards
for millions of Americans who are routinely exploited for the
profit interests and personal wealth of the social layer for which
Bush speaks.
He later declared that the bill he vetoed would support
the taking of innocent life in the hope of finding medical benefits
for others. Neither the Bush administration nor any section
of the political establishment in the United States has shown
any concern for the innocent lives being destroyed in Lebanon
on a daily basis, the victims an Israeli military supplied by
the United States. Most of those who have been killed have been
civilians, many of these children.
The bill itself is actually fairly limited, allowing funding
for research only on stem cells derived from embryos that would
otherwise be discarded. Tens of thousands of such embryos are
currently stored in fertility clinics across the country, the
byproduct of attempts by many couples to have children through
in-vitro fertilization.
Bush has made the decision to sharply restrict funding for
research on these embryos in the face of overwhelming public opposition
to his position. Opinion polls indicate that 60 to 70 percent
of the population supports federal funding of embryonic stem cell
research, while only 20 to 30 percent oppose it. The development
of the research is so widely supportedpropelled no doubt
by the hope of many people that the new technologies could be
used to save the lives of loved onesthat a section of the
Republican Party voted for the bill, in part for fear of a political
backlash.
Those who support Bushs positionand to whom the
president is appealing by vetoing the billare generally
those who believe that political decisions in the United States
should be guided by the Bible and the conceptions of Christian
fundamentalism. They believe that evolution should not be taught
in schools, the rights of homosexuals should be eliminated, and
abortion should be proscribed.
In the United States today, these backward and medieval religious
conceptions are promoted by the political establishment and, through
the person of the president, given veto power over the entire
country.
The development of the fundamentalist tendency in American
politics is rooted in deeper social processes. Bushs veto
must be understood within the context of a government that is
carrying out a brutal and unpopular occupation of Iraqand
is planning for further military aggression in the coming months
and yearsand is overseeing a massive increase in social
inequality, as resources are redistributed from the majority of
the population in the United States into the hands of the top
1 percent. Both the Democrats and Republicans have contributed
to these policies, which have been demanded by their backers in
the American ruling class.
Politics has a definite logic. The growth of inequality is
inextricable bound up with the attack on democratic rights, and
the integration of church and state is one aspect of this attack.
As the American ruling class abandons even the most limited programs
of social reform, as it demands that thousands of young people
go off to kill and be killed in wars of aggression, it will increasingly
seek to actively build a base of support on the basis of religion,
promoting the idea that the actions of the state express the demands
of God. Such are the makings of a theocracy.
See Also:
Bush pledges to veto
stem cell bill
[26 May 2005]
The Republican Party
and the Christian right: sowing the seeds of an American fascist
movement
[28 April 2005]
The case of Terri
Schiavo and the crisis of politics and culture in the United States
[4 April 2005]
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