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« What Would You Think If You Saw This? | Main | Life Has Even Less Time To Get Started »

July 22, 2006

Comments

Jeff:

I think the problem with this is that you're viewing it through a religious lens instead of through a political one. The act itself, as well as the Bush veto, were almost entirely political in nature.

Basically, somewhere between 70% and 75% of Americans support ESCR. Meanwhile, Bush's approval ratings are ever lower. How to resolve this? Get this bill passed, wherein conservative senators can vote for it and say "see, we don't walk lockstep with Bush," but know that Bush would veto it (he announced it before the bill was voted on), so that their vote wouldn't actually do anything.

This allows these conservative lawmakers to pass themselves off as more moderate, in an election year when many of them desparately need to do so. But they can do so in a way that doesn't actually change anything.

Further, it's doubtful that the evangelicals will abandon these candidates over this one issue, especially if the candidates are consistently pro-life in other ways.

So basically, this was little more than a tactical move.

As to the merits of the veto itself, given the fact that even if you concede that embryos are full human lives worthy of the same protections as, say, a newborn baby (I don't, but will stipulate it for sake of argument), this veto saved zero lives. Not a single one. Because for all the wailing and gnashing of teeth that goes on about the horror of destroying embryos any time the subject of ESCR comes up, nobody ever seems to complain about the process that creates the doomed embryos in the first place -- IVF.

Again, this is entirely political. Coming out against fertility clinics would be a political kiss of death. Yet from a moral and ethical standpoint, if ESCR is a great crime, IVF is a far greater crime. The former cannot exist without the latter, yet nobody seems to care about the latter.

Also, I'm not sure I buy the slippery slope thing. Ignoring for the moment that we're already farming embryos and destroying them, and that nobody's complaining about this, there's a vast chasm between "feeble-minded" and an embryo, which doesn't even have a mind (or, for that matter, nerves). What you have in an embryo is something that is quite literally incapable of suffering of any kind. It's a stretch (to say the very least) to suggest that research on embryos necessarily leads to devaluation of fully-formed human life. This simply does not follow.

The vast majority of embryos that are created for IVF are destroyed (either as part of failed implantations, or for lack of use). Somewhere between half and three quarters of all human embryos created naturally (i.e., via sexual intercourse) are destroyed, too. Like it or not, embyro destruction (even in nature) is remarkably common. It is the rule, rather than the exception.

But I just keep going back to the cognitive dissonance on the part of most pro-lifers and evangelicals on this issue. ESCR is vehemently opposed, with nary a peep said in protest of IVF, even though it is IVF that is responsible for embryo creation and destruction.

Occasionally, you'll have someone attempting to be consistent and state their opposition to IVF in addition to their opposition to ESCR, but this always comes up in the context of the ESCR debate. When ESCR isn't on the table, objections to IVF simply disappear.

So in that sense, I'm "calling out" the pro-life movement. You should actively oppose IVF, with at least the zeal you oppose abortion and ESCR. There should be pro-life protesters constantly camped outside of fertility clinics, decrying the countless "murders" these clinics are responsible for. That this doesn't happen is an inexplicable inconsistency. (Well, it can be explained in cynical terms...)

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