Posted on 05/17/2006 11:38:22 AM PDT by Mr. Silverback
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) is under increasing pressure to allow debate on a measure that would allow research using 400,000 frozen embryos created for in-vitro [fertilization] treatment.
This debate over embryonic stem-cell research is a good example of how the confluence of two worldviews has put the vulnerable in the crosshairs.
The proponents of this measure, passed by the House last year, argue that since most of the embryos will wind up being destroyed anyway, we might as well put them to good use. Why not? Theyre going to die anyway. Of course, so are you and I.
While the argument is rarely stated that bluntly, thats what it amounts to. President Bush has promised to veto it, opposing science which destroys life in order to save life. But advocates of embryonic stem-cell research are taking advantage of the presidents political weakness to push for their goals now.
But thats not the only weakness being exploited here. The most obvious one is that of the embryos. Their plight literally embodies two ideas that have come together to cause great suffering: utilitarianism and Darwinism.
Both of these ideas originated in Victorian England at a time when Christianitys influence, especially among the elite, was beginning to wane. In his book Utilitarianism, John Stuart Mill wrote that actions are right in proportion as they tend to promote happiness, wrong as they tend to produce the reverse of happiness. By happiness Mill meant pleasure, and the absence of pain . . .
What was appropriate for individuals was also appropriate for the state. So utilitarianism held that societies should promote the greatest good for the greatest number. You can see where that leaves 400,000 frozen embryos, especially given the exaggerated claims about the potential of embryonic stem-cell research.
Darwinisms contribution to the suffering of the vulnerable was to diminish mans special status within creation. Instead of being created in the image of God and endowed with a unique dignity, man became just another animalan especially clever ape, if you will. Life was not a gift from God, but a result of purposeless chance.
This combination of utilitarianism and Darwinism changed the way elites thought about the poor and the vulnerable. Instead of feeling an obligation to care for them, they increasingly felt free to target them in the name of the greatest good.
The most obvious example of this was the eugenics movement, started by Darwins cousin, which, in the name of racial betterment, sterilized and even killed those it deemed defective. But this targeting did not end with eugenics.
There are still many instances where a vulnerable class is being asked to sacrifice its well-being or even, as with embryos, its very existence, for the greatest good. These include children, families, the sick, prisoners, and the elderly. Over the next couple of weeks, Mark Earley and I will chronicle some of the more egregious examples of this targeting of the vulnerable in this series called War on the Weak.
Because its time for another blunt truth: Happiness obtained through the suffering of others is cruelty by another name.
This is part one in the War on the Weak series.
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A cogent analysis, IMO.
Sure does ...
We should not have these frozen embryoes in the first place.
The opposite view is that it leads to this. The photo shows the shoes and clothing salvaged from prisoners gassed at Auschwitz. Why, after all, waste resources?
AUSCHWITZ WAREHOUSE
The photo is captioned, "A warehouse full of shoes and clothing confiscated from the prisoners and deportees gassed upon their arrival."
and those concentration camp victims are an awful lot of waste of good skin. Let's make lampshades! -- a Nazi's quote (who is now in Hell).
This is, unfortunately, a religious debate: the secular progressives hold, by faith, that humans are nothing more than organic machines; Theists believe, by faith, that human beings were made by God in His image. Absent anything else, this is just a semantical tug-of-war.
I don't think those are the only options or the best ones. We cannot allow anyone to profit from evil. That legitimizes the evil and creates an economic incentive for future wrong-doing. Ill-gotten gains such as these clothes should therefore be taken away from the thieves and returned, as nearly as possible, to the owners or their heirs. Unclaimed property could be auctioned, with proceeds to be distributed similarly to survivors and to victims' families.
Something of the sort might solve the problem with the frozen embryos. Assuming they are viable, they could be put up for adoption. If they are not viable, they should be laid to rest.
Scruton says in passing, "Mill's rebellion against utilitarianism did not prevent him from writing a qualified defense of it, and his Utilitarianism is acknowledged today as one of the few readable accounts of a moral disorder that would have died out two centuries ago, had people not discovered that the utilitarian can excuse every crime. Lenin and Hitler were pious utilitarians, as were Stalin and Mao, as are most members of the Mafia...."
You might wish to note the WSJ reference in #17. The writer argues that utilitarianism is a "moral disorder," the appeal of which is that it can excuse any crime.
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