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Last year, President Bush
officiated at an adopt-an-embryo ceremony at the White House. It was an
odd convention (or coven, rather), intended to symbolically protest a
vote in the House to ease restrictions on federal financing for
embryonic stem-cell research.
Back then, Bush acknowledged the promise stem-cell
research held, but disavowed a process predicated on the destruction of
embryos: “the way those cells are derived today destroys the embryo,” he
said, going on to heap praise on representatives of the “Snowflakes
Frozen Embryo Adoption Program,” and 21 of the families it had assisted
in “either adopt[ing] or giv[ing] up for adoption frozen embryos that
remained after fertility treatments.”
“Rather than discard these embryos created during in
vitro fertilization, or turn them over for research that destroys them,
these families have chosen a life-affirming alternative. Twenty-one
children here today found a chance for life with loving parents,” the
POTUS puled.
Would that Republicans fussed as much over the many
fully formed human-beings dying daily in Iraq, as they do over fetuses.
But they don’t. And for that, the GOP—“culture of life” and all—was
hurled from both houses. With the Democrats in control, we’re likely to
witness many more grand mals over stem-cell research. So, let me attempt
to untangle the issue, not least of all for Rush Limbaugh.
The pompous talk-show host’s sneering assault on a
deformed Michael J. Fox was utterly depraved. Aping Fox’s
Parkinson's-induced spasms, Limbaugh told listeners: “He is exaggerating
the effects of the disease. He's moving all around and shaking and it's
purely an act.” Rather than lampoon an-obviously afflicted human being,
someone with a head and a heart would have stuck to the issue.
And the issue is this: The founders bequeathed a central
government of delegated and enumerated powers. Intellectual property
laws are the only constitutional means at Congress’s disposal with which
to “promote the Progress of Science.” (About
their
merit Thomas Jefferson, himself an inventor,
was unconvinced.) The Constitution gives Congress only 18 specific
legislative powers. Research and development spending is nowhere among
them.
Neither are Social Security, civil rights (predicated as
they are on grotesque violations of property rights), Medicare,
Medicaid, and the elaborate public works sprung from the General Welfare
and Interstate Commerce Clauses—you name it, it’s likely
unconstitutional. There is simply no warrant in the Constitution for
most of what the Federal Frankenstein does.
Ditto the demands issued by the histrionic New-York
Democrat, Carolyn B. Maloney:
“How many more lives must be ended or ravaged? How much
more unimaginable suffering must be endured until government gives
researchers the wherewithal to simply do their jobs?” she frothed back
in 2005. Silly me, I guess
government-giving-researchers-the-wherewithal-to-do-their-jobs was what
the founders had in mind when they bequeathed a central government of
delegated and enumerated powers.
Implied, moreover, in Democratic fits over stem-cell
research is that if the House didn’t mulct taxpayers of money for
research and development, there’d be no R&D. That’s absurd—and is
contradicted by the government itself. An un-updated report issued by
the United States Department of Health & Human Services states that,
“Based on 2002 data, one study reports that private sector research and
development in stem cells was being conducted by approximately 1000
scientists in over 30 firms. Aggregate spending was estimated at $208
million. Geron Corporation alone reported that it spent more than $70
million on stem cell research by September 2003.”
“In the Stem Cell Business News Guide to Stem Cell
Companies (Feb 2003),” writes the HHS, “61 U.S. and international
companies are listed as pursuing some form of research or therapeutic
product development involving stem cells. For example, Geron Corp. has
announced plans to seek FDA approval to pursue human trials.”
What do you know? The private sector has been beavering
away for some time now, exploring the promise—or lack thereof—of
embryonic stem cells.
Limbaugh needed only to remind Fox (and his own
soon-to-be-dethroned party) of a thing called the Constitution. He
needed to berate Fox not for his spasticity, but for using his celebrity
to petition Congress for money not his. Limbaugh ought to have suggested
Fox refrain from pickpocketing the taxpayer, and raise money for private
research among his stinking rich pals. Instead—and in character—Limbaugh
beat up on a cripple.
Later, Limbaugh offered a lame apology, the main purpose
of which was self-aggrandizement, as usual: “All right then, I stand
corrected,” he boomed, “so I will bigly, hugely admit that I was wrong,
and I will apologize to Michael J. Fox, if I am wrong in characterizing
his behavior on this commercial as an act.”
Still later, Limbaugh—and a host of
other
former Bush bootlickers, who applauded the worst of
Bush’s policies and winked at the Constitution—jumped
ship. But that’s for another day.
©2006 By Ilana Mercer
WorldNetDaily.com
November 10
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