Word Games
By
Wesley J. Smith
Imagine the difficulty of engaging in a political
debate in front of an audience that didn't speak your language.
Empirical analysis would mean nothing: What use would be the marshalling
of facts and evidence when your audience wouldn't be able to understand
what you were saying? And as for the art of persuasion, forget about
it. No matter how brilliant your argument, to your audience, it
would just be confusing noise.
Unfortunately, confusing noise is what much of the
public is hearing in the political debate over biotechnology. This
isn't an accident. Promoters of human cloning and other controversial
biotechnologies know that if the American people heard the plain,
unvarnished truth about what biotechnologists want to do and where
the research would be likely to lead, popular support for Big Biotech's
political agendas would collapse.
So, industry boosters have seized upon a deeply cynical
tactic of using scientifically inaccurate words and terms to obfuscate
the entire debate to the point of incomprehensibility. Take the
controversy over human cloning, as just one example. Cloning is
accomplished via a process known as somatic cell nuclear transfer
(SCNT). According to the unanimous conclusion of the President's
Council on Bioethics, the act of human SCNT creates a "cloned
human embryo." Moreover, as the Council rightly reported, "The
same activity [SCNT] may be undertaken for purposes of producing
children or for purposes of scientific and medical investigation
and use." In other words, cloning, is cloning, is cloning.
Whether this matters or not is a moral and ethical
issue, not a scientific one. But to engage in proper moral analysis,
people must be allowed to know the biological fact that SCNT cloning
creates a new human organism, a new human life. But that is precisely
what cloning proponents will not admit. Look at how Senator Dianne
Feinstein described a cloned embryo in her argument on the floor
of the United States Senate in support of legislation to explicitly
legalize human cloning for biomedical research:
The beauty of our legislation is that it would allow
this most promising form of stem cell research, somatic cell nuclear
transplantation, to be conducted on a human egg for up to 14 days
only, under strict standards of Federal regulation…The reason
for this 14 days is to limit any research before the so-called
primitive streak [the beginning of the nervous system] can take
over that egg. This stem cell research can only take place on
an unfertilized egg…An unfertilized egg is not capable of
becoming a human being. Therefore we limit stem cell research
to unfertilized eggs.
This is nonsensical on its face. An unfertilized egg
doesn't develop embryonic stem cells; embryos do. An unfertilized
egg cannot develop a primitive streak on its own. An unfertilized
egg could never be capable of becoming a human being, by which Feinstein
undoubtedly meant a born baby. It is merely a cell, a "gamete"
in scientific lexicon. Pretending that a cloned embryo is merely
an unfertilized egg distorts the moral stakes in the debate through
the use of false definitions and junk science.
Here's another example. "The California Stem
Cell Research and Cures Act," The now infamous Proposition
71 grants researchers in California a constitutional right to engage
in human SCNT cloning and embryonic stem cell research. But look
at how these acts are described in the initiative:
There is hereby established a right to conduct stem
cell research which includes research involving adult stem cells,
cord blood stem cells, pluripotent stem cells, and or progenitor
cells…Pluripotent stem cells may be derived from somatic
cell nuclear transfer or from surplus products of in vitro fertilization
treatments when such products are donated under appropriate informed
consent procedures.
Notice that while the popular terms "adult stem
cells" and "cord blood stem cells" are used-both
of which are utterly uncontroversial-while the term "embryonic
stem cells," which is highly controversial, is completely absent.
Instead, the authors used the eye glazing "pluripotent stem
cells," with the clear intent of hiding the fact that the initiative
would grant a right to engage in research that destroys embryos.
More than that, the authors of the initiative are so disingenuous
that the they don't even call embryos-whether natural or cloned-embryos!
They are merely called "surplus products of in vitro fertilization
treatments" or pluripotent cells "derived from somatic
cell nuclear transfer." And even this latter phrase is inaccurate,
since SCNT does not create pluripotent cells. It creates cloned
embryos, which must be destroyed to derive pluripotent cells.
Does the crucial word "cloning" appear in
the initiative? Yes, but only in connection with barring funding
for research into "reproductive cloning." Thus, even though
the act of SCNT is the one and only act of cloning, cloning for
biomedical research is called SCNT, while the same procedure when
undertaken for making babies is still called cloning. The purpose
of this false dichotomy, of course, is to make it appear to voters
that the initiative is against cloning, when it actually creates
an explicit constitutional right to engage in that very activity.
This is all profoundly disrespectful of the American
people by impeding an honest debate. But boosters of Big Biotech
don't care. They know that the more confusion their word games sow,
the more likely they are to get their way.
Wesley J. Smith is an award winning author and a senior fellow
at the Discovery Institute and a special consultant to the Center
for Bioethics and Culture. This article was originally printed in
www.thecbc.org and ws reprinted with permission from the Center
for Bioethics and Culture"
|