WDRB TV, Fox 41,
did a story on the stem cell issue in light of President Barack Obama's
new policy. I was interviewed for this report. The video is available
here.
The package by WDRB put a focus on John Swarts, a patient with
Parkinson's Disease, who is planning to go ahead with a surgical
attempt to alleviate the disease's symptoms.
The print version of their story includes these two paragraphs:
But surgery might not be his only option. On Monday, President
Barack Obama signed an executive order overturning an eight-year
restriction on stem cell research. "It's so good to see that the
country is moving in the direction now where there is going to be more
experimentation with different procedures that might be able to help
us."
But Dr. Albert Mohler Jr., president of The Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary, has a different view: "I see this as a
tragedy." He supports stem cell research, but not the use of embryos:
"Anytime we take human beings at any stage of development and treat
them as commodities, and in this case treat them as laboratory material
for destruction, we're really devaluing human life and every single
human being."
I certainly hope and pray that Mr. Swarts is healed of this disease
or at least relieved of its effects, but this report implies that
treatments for such diseases based in the use of human embryonic stem
cells are just around the corner -- which is certainly not the case.
As a matter of fact, the use of adult stem cells is now leading to more
direct applications of stem cell research.
The use of human embryos for medical research is immoral. There is
every good reason to support research using adult stem cells or cells
derived without the need for the destruction of the human embryo, but
President Obama's new policy opens the door for even more morally
dangerous developments to come.