December 17, 2004

Professor Hurlbut, Your 15 Minutes are Up

LifeSite is a sort of barometer for the day to day pulse of the anti-abortion community, and from the very moment that William Hurlbut floated his dramatic new plan to save us all from the terror of destroying frozen embryos it was clear that, as we foretold, the clock had started on his poorly thought-out "work-around" for stem cells: intentionally producing disabled embryos. True, for a bit it looked like Leon Kass would push Hurlbut's idea into the fore, with his announcement that the President's bioethics commission would be discussing it (and other ideas), and with his subsequent claim that Hurlbut's idea could save us all from having to debate stem cell ethics any longer. Catholic and protestant fundamentalist leaders jumped for joy. But it was only a matter of time before even the 'pro-life' community would wake up to realize that embracing Hurlbut's half-baked neoscientific plan meant doing all sorts of things that amount to what they typically term "playing God."

And so, exactly eight days after it showered Hurlbut with adoration for saving the tiny people, the pro-life lobby has officially turned on Professor Hurlbut for crimes against the little embryos. One biologist interviewed for the "hang hurlbut" piece in LifeSite today puts their indictment of him squarely: "...the process would not create an unknown 'new entity,' but a severely disabled, cloned human being." The anti-abortion people even have an excuse for embracing Hurlbut: they were too dizzied by all that complicated science stuff: "Possibly due to the extremely rarified nature of the technical language, few reservations were raised at the meeting, even by the pro-life Catholics present."

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November 03, 2004

w-2: Searching for Good News in a Bush Victory

It is difficult to overstate the damage that George Bush can do to the nation's health care and biomedical science in his second term. Long after the shock of a Bush victory - yes, he did win this time - has faded in the minds of Americans, the world will have to cope with this election. What are the implications for medicine and science? Hint: you won't like any of them ... this term, Bush is empowered, under pressure from conservative protestants, and a lame duck to boot.

Kiss pharmaceutical reform goodbye. There is no way George Bush will do any less for pharmaceutical companies than he has done for oil companies. In fact, if anything, the election will draw a more direct analogy between oil and drugs: Bush now has no reason to fear reprisals from those who oppose the drug industry's extraordinary pricing structure in the United States. Bush's cronies may not yet directly profit from the drug industry in the way that they do from Haliburton, but you can bet plenty of Bush appointees are thinking seriously about their future in biomedical lobbying. Pharma will need the President as its collusion with FDA officians and others comes to the fore. Pharma knew what it was buying with Bush, "make no mistake." Any reform effort that included drugs from Canada, including the one Bush said he was "looking at," and any effort to seriously curtail the price of drugs for seniors, will fall prey to the three million vote margin of victory. Drugs will cost more and fewer people will be able to afford them.

International efforts to, well, do anything that Bush opposes are in real trouble. Unfettered international drug research is part of the bargain. Advocates for research subjects have lobbied the WHO and the UN - and those organizations have lobbied the US - to stop the most lopsided and colonialist drug industry research efforts in developing nations. How many research programs in Africa have really rewarded research subjects with any kind of improvement in healthcare quality, even for the disease being researched? Not many.

Healthcare access and insurance reform? Look, no one wants to be pessimistic. Health insurance reform is long-overdue and we in the U.S. have to find a way to provide affordable healthcare to tens of millions of U.S. uninsured. Here's a great Bush solution that lots of Americans seem to support: tort reform! All we have to do is stop those big lawsuits against physicians, and we can save a whole lot of ... wait ... what? Only 3% of the cost of healthcare is in any way related to lawsuits? Ok, wait, so maybe stopping patients from recovering the damages juries want to award them in cases of malpractice won't have much financial effect ... except on physician and lawyer salaries. But Republican voters aren't weeping about that. What they will cry about is the bills that they, and all of us, will have to pay as we watch emergency rooms continue to be the provider of healthcare for the poor, the sick and the legions of uninsured - hundreds of millions of dollars in unnecessary treatment. Those costs have to come out of somewhere. Just watch your premiums skyrocket, guys. Red states will also bleed red ... ink. Maybe there will be a direct correlation between insurance increases and prices at the gas pump! Who knew anything but college tuition could go up so fast?<[> Enough has been written about Bush's war on science to establish beyond question in the mind of anyone in a blue state that Bush, as a final-term president with uniform control of the U.S. government, will be able to quietly support all sorts of insidious efforts around the nation. Just as gay marriage is quietly being outlawed around the nation, look for Bush to lend support of several kinds to state efforts to roll back protection of women's reproductive healthcare. Bush could care less about evolution, but the "intelligent design" movement can rest easy that Oklahoma's new senator and many other new elected officials around the nation are supporters of creationism in the classroom.

There is still one winable battle, although I fear it is not in Ohio or Iowa. The battle is to reform or reject the President's Council on Bioethics. Leon Kass is no doubt gearing up to lead all the President's ethicists for another term of 'moral seriousness'. He must be put on notice that bioethics cannot afford four more years of feckless, xenophobic neocon posturing, even if it is delivered with austerity. Kass should have apologized to the nation for selling the proceedings of his Council through a for-profit, conservative commercial press. He should not have abused the reputation of one of the world's most prestigious biomedical scientists, Elizabeth Blackburn, named by Bush to the PCB and then shown the door under the pretense that she did not attend enough meetings. Blackburn was by all accounts one of the most active participants in the dialog about stem cell research, emailing Kass and others constantly. Kass could not find another way to defend the PCB against the charge that it sat idly by while the Bush administration (or he) fired one of two moderate scholars, and "retired" the other one, replacing both with ultraconservatives. So Kass resorted to distortion and blame in broad public view. To this day he has neither apologized nor attempted any kind of rapprochement with Blackburn or for that matter with anyone more moderate than William Kristol.

The new generation of conservative bioethicists seems dedicated to the proposition that debate is the enemy, or more accurately that opponents are best left ignored. The PCB virtually ignores the bioethics literature in its writing and anthologies. There are passing references to those who agree with them on matters at hand, most noticeably Carl Elliott, but it has become a hallmark of Bush Bioethics that no position is argued by the PCB while there are people 'in the room' with whom one must argue, unless absolutely necessary. This Council must go, or at least be made to play a peripheral role in the bioethics scene, unless it is radically remade with voices from both sides of the aisle. Supposedly even Wesley Smith agrees that there should be such voices. Now it is time for the American Enterprise Institute's Hertog Fellow Leon Kass to act with courage so that we really can have a "richer" bioethics.

It is a pretty terrible day for those of us in bioethics who supported the right to choose, hES research, and dozens of other areas I have not taken the space to discuss. But the real tragedy would be if bioethics did not take from this mess the lesson that not all battles must be fought nationally. State-by-state we will see the new changes made in bioethics-relevant law. California's Proposition 71 is just the beginning of some very important new shifts that deserve some real pragmatic consideration. Bioethics may not be as prestigious when it is fought out in the states, but that is where the battles now lie, at least for four more years. - Glenn McGee (UPDATED 11/3;11/20 )

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November 01, 2004

The Ever-Increasing Misuse of Science UPDATED

Chris Mooney's great piece on the role of pseudoscience ideology in the discussion of scientific problems is just out in Columbia Journalism Review. Mooney highlights several particularly eggregious cases in which "moral seriousness" (the new Bush/Kass pseudonym for "neocon-friendliness") trumps rigorous science, e.g. the abortion/breast cancer link. Simultaneously, Art Caplan saw this piece in New York Review of Books on the same book that Mooney is discussing. NYRB also discussed the Union of Concerned Scientists' own manuscript on the same phenomenon.

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October 20, 2004

Kass Will Now Officially Say Anything

The Independent UK reports on Leon Kass' latest extraordinary statements. Kass is on the stump, although this time not so much for the President as against every nation that wants to do hES research using nuclear transfer. He is speaking on behalf of all the, um, yet to be created. "Britain is wrong. A woman's body should not be a laboratory for research or a factory for spare body parts. No child should be forced to say, 'My father or mother is an embryonic stem cell'." For what it is worth, there is no evidence that producing 5 day-old blastocyst-like organisms through nuclear transfer would make reproductive cloning any more likely to work. But the metaphor is great: little people alone and alienated, crying out "my mommy is a cell! my mommy is a cell!" The other members of the Presidential Bioethics Council must be so proud of this heroic effort.

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October 19, 2004

Another Op Ed Asks Why the Bioethics Council Head is Stumping for Bush

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October 09, 2004

Updated: Leon Kass on Playing Politics?

Playing Politics With the Sick is the title of Leon Kass' editorial concerning politics and stem cells. Given the title of his Op Ed, it is particularly interesting that he does not distance himself or recuse himself from his official political role or from the opinions of other members of the Presidential Bioethics Council. In fact his affiliation in the piece is listed as chairman of the President's Council of Bioethics. Kass is speaking at ASBH this month; it will be interesting to see if that is raised. Is it a problem?? UPDATE: Chris Mooney argues that Kass' use of science in the editorial is ironic and incredibly misleading.

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