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Spinning Stem Cell Fairy Tales |
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By Father Tadeusz Pacholczyk
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Thursday, 02 September 2010 |
Discussions about the morality of stem cell research often focus on the differences between adult stem cells and stem cells derived from embryos. The adult variety, such as those derived from bone marrow or umbilical cords, are already providing an impressive array of treatments and cures for sick people, while the embryonic kind are not. Adult stem cells can be obtained without crossing any moral boundaries, whereas embryonic stem cells cannot, because they are obtained by destroying young human beings who are still in their embryonic stages of growth.
In spite of great progress in identifying ever more powerful adult stem
cell sources, scientists still clamor for embryos. Even in the face of
impressive new technologies for making “embryonic-like” stem cells
without using embryos, the chorus of voices pushing for the sacrifice of
embryos seems only to grow louder. Indeed, one of the most common
questions I encounter when I give talks about stem cells is why
scientists and politicians are so intent on pursuing the destruction of
human embryos when so many other non-embryonic sources of stem cells are
available that are already helping countless patients with serious
diseases. What is behind this incessant drumbeat to go after the human
embryo?
One can sense a certain "logic of killing" that hovers in the wings of
these discussions. If tiny human embryos were to be safeguarded and
protected by law, this would constitute a threat, if not a frontal
assault, to legalized abortion-on-demand, which routinely allows us to
end the lives of older, almost-born humans more than 3000 times every
day in the United States by surgical means and many more each day
through chemical means. This desire to sanction current immoral
practices is certainly one reason we see continuing pressure to allow
the destruction of human embryos for research.
Pope Benedict XVI, in a recent address, spoke of resisting “…those forms
of research that provide for the planned suppression of human beings
who already exist, even if they have not yet been born. Research, in
such cases, irrespective of efficacious therapeutic results, is not
truly at the service of humanity.”
In our society, however, the hype surrounding the harvesting of human
embryos as a way to cure nearly every disease has taken on the form of a
popular mythology. A Washington Post article summarized it this way a
few years ago:
“‘To start with, people need a fairy tale,’ said Ronald D.G. Mckay, a
stem cell researcher at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders
and Stroke. ‘Maybe that’s unfair, but they need a story line that’s
relatively simple to understand.’ Human embryonic stem cells have the
capacity to morph into virtually any kind of tissue, leading many
scientists to believe they could serve as a ‘universal patch’ for
injured organs.”
This idea, though still speculative, is straightforward and easy to
sell, especially to desperate patients and patient-advocacy groups. Some
scientists are happy to perpetuate the myth, too, believing that this
kind of "master cell" from the earliest stages of human life could help
unlock some of the most primordial and tantalizing biological powers
mankind has ever seen — almost God-like powers, leading to the “Tree of
Life” itself. As some researchers ambitiously seek to wrench control of
those life-powers into their own hands, it should perhaps come as no
surprise when they yield to the seductive siren call of our day: “One
life can sometimes be taken for the benefit of another,” and “Good ends
can sometimes justify evil means.”
In a way, then, embryonic stem cells have become a great modern secular
fairy-tale, even a kind of surrogate for our yearning for immortality.
People are being told that Alzheimer’s can be addressed; Parkinson’s can
be overcome; diabetes can be defeated; and MS can be conquered. Who
knows? Perhaps we could extend our longevity, defeat aging, and live as
if we were always young. Perhaps we could even defeat death itself
through these powerful cells! Vanquishing death and achieving
immortality through science — the reality-bending power of these myths
and fairy-tales should not be underestimated.
In the final analysis, the “planned suppression of human beings” cannot
be allowed to continue to creep into the practice of modern science and
medicine. Our yearnings for various goods and blessings, like healing
and new medical therapies, must always be tempered by our duty to pursue
responsible and completely ethical science. Only by insisting on the
use of upright means to achieve good ends can we steer clear of the
Nazi-like drive to subjugate and destroy others in our quest for
desirable outcomes. Only then can science be a force for authentic
healing and truly stand at the service of humanity.
Rev. Tadeusz Pacholczyk, Ph.D. earned his doctorate in neuroscience from
Yale and did post-doctoral work at Harvard. He is a priest of the
diocese of Fall River, MA, and serves as the Director of Education at
The National Catholic Bioethics Center in Philadelphia. See www.ncbcenter.org.
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