I realize I should know better, but the transparent stupidity of the White House’s line on stem-cell policy was simply overwhelming yesterday.
President Bush on Wednesday issued his second veto of a measure lifting his restrictions on human embryonic stem cell experiments. The move effectively pushed the contentious scientific and ethical debate surrounding the research into the 2008 presidential campaign.
“Destroying human life in the hopes of saving human life is not ethical,” Mr. Bush said in a brief ceremony in the East Room of the White House. He called the United States “a nation founded on the principle that all human life is sacred.”
Really? “Destroying” human life is wrong? “All” human life is sacred? Even if we put aside the president’s war policy and his propensity for executing American criminals, Bush’s guiding principle can’t be protecting the sanctity of embryonic life because his policies show otherwise.
The president supports, for example, private funding of embryonic stem cell research. He also supports IVF and medical research using old stem-cell lines. It’s not just that Bush’s policy is wrong — though it is wrong — it’s that it contradicts itself.
Tony Snow’s defense was almost comical.
“The President also has never declared it against the law to engage in embryonic stem cell research — he simply thinks it involves, as do many other people, the taking of a human life.”
See? Bush hasn’t banned murder, he’s just blocked some funding for taxpayer-subsidized murder. Privately-funded murder is still fine, and entirely consistent with the president’s values and commitment to a culture of life.
I find it genuinely hard to believe how anyone, anywhere on the ideological spectrum, would find this persuasive.
Indeed, Snow was in rare form yesterday, providing a clinic on how best to lie to the White House press corps with a straight face. Consider these gems:
* “This actually is the President putting science before ideology.”
* “To the extent that there is embryonic stem cell research, it’s being done not because Bill Clinton made it possible, but because George W. Bush made it possible.” (Yes, moments after describing the research as “taking of a human life,” Snow bragged about Bush’s support for the research.)
* “I think you will find that the President’s reverence for life is shared by a majority of the American public.” (Americans disagree with Bush’s policy on stem-cell research, 3 to 1.)
All I want is some coherence. Well, that’s not quite right. All I really want is for Bush to stop blocking promising research that could offer hope to millions of suffering Americans.
But politically, what I want is for the White House to be honest. In 1998, the Clinton administration’s HHS conducted some research on needle-exchange programs. Officials found that the programs curtailed the spread of AIDS and did not lead to more drug abuse, but the administration decided not to pursue the policy anyway. They acknowledged what the research told them, but said they’d decided to go in a different direction anyway.
In contrast, the Bush administration just makes up nonsense, denies reality, and intentionally deceives. It’s rather embarrassing.