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Religious Consultation on Population, Reproductive Health & Ethics
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THEOCRACY
U.S.A.by
Daniel C. MaguireThe
most important thing about the stem cell debate is the further glaring proof it
provides that the United States is a functioning theocracy. The debate, and now
government policy, is dominated not by science or by reasonable ethics but by
mythology. The
framers of the First Amendment were not trying to banish religion from life. Many
of them were pious believers. Their goal was to make sure that claims of divine
inspiration did not supplant reasoned discourse in the making of public policy.
The ruling dogma of Bush's stem cell policy, which happens to run counter to the
mainstream wisdom of the world's major religions, is based on a religious mythological
belief that small clusters of embryonic cells, small enough to fit on the point
of the needle where angels dance, are "people," "unborn children,"
"human beings" "eligible for adoption", endowed with human
rights such as you and I enjoy. A cluster of embryonic stem cells with huge therapeutic
promise has been granted the status of an untouchable citizen of the United States
with all the rights there unto appertaining. This
is the stuff of fanciful faith, not of science or of reason. It sides with one
narrow religiously inspired viewpoint espoused by authorities such as Pope John
Paul II but it effectively excommunicates all other religious and scientific views
and makes this peculiar conservative view the one and only American orthodoxy.
President Bush threatens to veto any legislative effort to honor other religious
and scientific views. This is theocracy at work, not democracy. Also, forty years
ago a Catholic senator and presidential candidate had to go to Houston to assure
Protestant Americans that he would not allow the pope to set public policy. Now
a President from Texas has followed papal teaching in his stem cell ruling. The
embryonic cell cluster in question here is so biologically primitive that it could
in the first 14 days split into two, producing twins...or recombine into a single
embryo. Persons cannot do that. In Christian tradition, only after three or four
months could a fetus be considered a person or be eligible for baptism, or, if
miscarried, for Christian burial. St. Augustine actually compared early embryonic
tissue to vegetation, saying it had the moral status of a plant. St. Thomas Aquinas
agreed, saying life in the womb started out at a vegetative level of reality.
As it became more complex, it acquired an "animal soul" but only after
some three months was it developed enough to receive a "spiritual soul."
Only then could it be called a child. Most Jewish theologians put the moment of
personhood much later in the pregnancy and do not give personal status to the
early embryo or fetus. Much
of Buddhism allows a comparable gradual approach to the conferring of full personal
status. All of these and other mainstream religious views would permit the use
of the 100,000 stem cells available in fertility clinics and could support "therapeutic
cloning," inserting the nucleus from a patient's cell to replace the nucleus
of a fertilized egg to provide tissue that would be a perfect genetic match for
the patient. This could prevent rejection. On
the fateful day of September 11, 2001, THE NEW YORK TIMES reported that
the National Academy of Sciences, the nation's most eminent organization of scientists,
issued a 59 page report calling for embryonic stem cell research beyond what the
president would allow, saying that as many as 100 million Americans could benefit
from its possible results. This report embodies the reasoned discourse that the
framers of the Constitution said should be the foundation of public policy in
this nation. So far, the creedal dogma of stem cell personhood trumps this sane
report. The ironies
in all of this abound. Our foreparents left England in search of religious freedom.
Now we must return there to find that freedom, since England has done a better
job separating church and state. Scientists must now go to England to pursue their
research on embryonic stem cells, free of U.S. theocratic controls. When you leave
reason for alleged divine inspiration anomalies abound. In our theocracy, persons
may donate a kidney for medical advancement but may not now donate the unused
cell-clusters from their fertility treatments. How strange too, and even macabre,
that there is more concern about the life of these microscopic cell clusters than
the life of Afghan citizens killed by our bombs, dismissed with unemotional "regret"
expressed at Pentagon briefings. These deaths are sanitized as "collateral
damage"while the use of embryonic clusters to produce cures is called "destruction
of life." Actually the extraction of stem cells is the transformation of
these primitive but talented tissues into new life forms rich in therapeutic promise.
There is more of resurrection here than of death. But to say that is heresy in
this theocratic nation. Daniel
C. Maguire

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