October 3, 2005
FIRST THEY CAME FOR MENGELE (via Robert Schwartz):
Criminalizing Science (Virginia Postrel, 10.17.05, Forbes)
At a business conference this summer in Toronto Richard Florida, author of The Rise of the Creative Class, told the Canadians again and again how wonderful they are--how open to new ideas, how tolerant, how diverse and therefore how potentially creative. Unlike the U.S., which is afflicted by divisiveness and the religious right, Canada is a model country. That was his story, at any rate.A few hours later I picked up a newspaper and got a different view. On the op-ed page a scientist was pleading for Canada to repeal its law against cloning human embryos for research. In tolerant, open-minded, diverse and creative Canada therapeutic cloning--defined as creating an in vitro embryo with the same chromosomes as any other individual--is a crime punishable by ten years in prison.
In the divisive, religiously addled U.S. a similar measure has failed repeatedly to become federal law. (Some states ban therapeutic cloning.)
U.S. scientists and their supporters tend to assume biomedical research is threatened by know-nothings on religious crusades. But as the Canadian law illustrates, the long-term threat to genetic research comes less from the religious right than from the secular left. Canada's law forbids all sorts of genetic manipulations, many of them currently theoretical. It's a crime, for instance, to alter inheritable genes.
And the law has provisions the fabled religious right never even talks about. It's a crime to pay a surrogate mother or to make or accept payment for arranging a surrogate. It's a crime to pay egg or sperm donors anything more than "receipted expenses," like taxi fares. Since eggs are used not just in fertility treatments but in research, this prohibition stifles both.
It's always only the Left and the religious against Applied Darwinism. Posted by Orrin Judd at October 3, 2005 5:15 PM
Florida is a quack, his "Creative Class" litany is all about local governments catering to young, unattached bohemian types with the expectation that the influx of "creative" people will bring an economic boom in its wake.
Postrel is being a bit tedious here. Rather than arguing genetic engineering on its merits or taking on the arguments of its critics, she is playing the role of shrill alarmist, as if unfettered scientific experimentation and development in any field and any direction is an assumed good, and any restriction based on considerations for the common good are the result of religious superstition.
Posted by: Robert Duquette at October 4, 2005 9:57 AMLibertarians are tedious by nature.
Posted by: oj at October 4, 2005 10:00 AMHave you gone environmentalist on us?
Posted by: Joseph Hertzlinger at October 6, 2005 12:39 AMGone? Am. Conservatives have a moral obligation to be environmentalists:
http://www.brothersjudd.com/index.cfm/fuseaction/reviews.detail/book_id/1273/Conservative.htm
Posted by: oj at October 6, 2005 7:38 AM