| This
week marks the 50th anniversary of the discovery of DNA. Tothesource
sat down with Dr. Nigel Cameron to discuss with him the promises
and the perils of biotechnology since Watson and Crick's breakthrough.
Dr. Cameron is known internationally for his work on bioethics.
He is senior fellow of The Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity,
Director of the Council on Biotechnology Policy, and founding editor
of Ethics & Medicine: An International Journal of Bioethics.
He has given testimony before the United States Senate Committee
on Appropriations, Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services,
Education, and Related Agencies Hearing on Embryonic Stem Cell Research.
tothesource:
The scientific community is currently celebrating the 50th anniversary
of the discovery of the double helix by Watson and Crick. You have
recently released a biotechnology manifesto. What was the purpose
of putting that document together and getting people to sign it?
Dr.
Nigel Cameron: The purpose of the manifesto was to bring
together representative Christian leaders and to say one thing and
to say it loud and long, and that is that the sanctity of life is
not simply a term for abortion. The sanctity of life has implications
for how we handle human life right across the whole field of medicine
and bio-science and specifically the sanctity of life has profound
implications for how the new technologies in bio-science are to
be handled. The manifesto asserts that cloning must be banned comprehensively
and that we need to ban germ-line interventions resulting in inheritable
gene modifications. And
then two rather different concerns that are integral to the sanctity
of life agenda, one of which is a radical revision of our patent
law that currently permits far too much ownership of human body
parts, and secondly we need to revisit the question of genetic discrimination,
which is basically another term for eugenics. The eugenics agenda
is going to be the biggest threat to human liberty in the future.
tts:
I read the manifesto rather carefully this morning and it seems
to be
somewhat inconsistent on this point, that you promote the notion
of
scientific research for the alleviation of suffering through that
research
but you discourage any modification to the inheritable germ-line.
If
science comes up with a cure for cancer, would you not support that
cure to
be imbedded in the genetic structure of the human race?
Cameron:
There are a couple of different issues here. One is the fact
that, until just a few years ago, almost everyone working in the
trade,
quite apart from those of us who are ethicists and policy makers,
was so
alarmed by the implications of germ line changes that they opposed
them
altogether. Essentially they were opposed to them because they saw
that
there was no way to stop with narrowly therapeutic interventions,
for
example dealing with Huntington Chorea and other inheritable diseases.
They
recognized the slippery slope from life threatening diseases to
issues like baldness, or cholesterol preventatives. Once you medicalize
these you get a eugenics agenda.
This
concern in fact lead to the Wellington National Treaty on these
issues.
The European Convention on Human Rights and Bio-Medicine outlaws
all
germ-line changes, and it has been signed by many of the European
countries.
The Germans won’t sign it because they see it as too liberal
and the Brits
won’t sign it because they see it as too conservative. Most
of the European
states have signed the European Convention. There is a center ground
position that we wanted to offer (in the Biotech Manifesto). The
other
comment to make is that as I understand the science of this, anything
you
could change that would be inheritable you can also change in the
individual
so there is no reason why you couldn’t make a genetic intervention
in the individual in the embryonic stage or later to deal with a
particular
inherited disorder.
tts:
Don’t you think that would be very hard to sell, though, given
the utilitarian mindset of most Americans who would question sustaining
an inheritable disease when we could eliminate it? And then you
are exactly right. Once that starts it opens the door for everything
coming into play. In Fukuyama’s book (Our Post Human Future)
he says the real temptation for the eugenic experiment will come
from families who want the best for their kids, not from a state
imposed program like we saw in California in the thirties or in
Hitler’s Germany ten years later.
Cameron:
I think it is very difficult. There are two or three strains
here. Certainly, there is the case of dealing with genetic disease.
Plainly an inheritable disease like Huntington’s is a very
difficult one
and certainly there will be a difference of opinion among well intentioned
people on that question.
I think
we must beware of how the new eugenics is being sold to us. Some
quite articulate purveyors speak in terms of public versus private
eugenics which they see as what went wrong with eugenics in the
past. The notion is “What’s wrong with eugenics if you
privatize it?”. It reminds me of the county fairs of the thirties
with the better white baby competitions. We have to make decisions
ahead of time about what temptations we will allow ourselves to
be exposed to. As a community we could make responsible decisions
about not wanting to have some of those choices. Once those choices
are on the shelves in Walgreens it will be too late because people
will say, ‘Gee, if I pay a thousand bucks I get a better baby’,
and that will be a no-brainer. Whereas those same people might well
say now I don’t want to be in the position of commodifying
my baby at Walgreens. So I think this is a hugely difficult task
and certainly the reason we need to get this discussion going.
tts:
Let’s say that America does resist the temptation to make
this
available. I often hear people in the business community say that
such
isolationism on America’s part will ultimately be ineffective.
Cameron:
It is very easy to argue that someone will do this somewhere. We
will lose the business. This position sees ethics as a luxury rather
than a necessity. What is interesting is there is an emerging consensus
in many other countries. I mean the U.S. is unique in many respects,
one is the power of the
conservative pro-life movement in this country. Yet ironically it
is in the
European countries that are more liberal, left of center, progressive,
in
their politics that you have seen the most initiative devoted to
these
questions. The one big hold out here is the People’s Republic
of China. In
Germany there are two big forces coming together. One is the German
conscience, because the Germans have been there and done that. Consequently
Germans of all political persuasions are very conservative on these
issues. And the other is the influence of the Green movement in
Europe, the environmentalists, whose prime concern has been things
like genetically
modified food, but who have also become concerned about genetically
modified people. If the U.S. decides to act prudently and ethically
in these matters we will begin to feel the consensus in the free
world.
tts:
Another take on this argument is that if the U.S. remains isolationist
on this that we will lose the opportunity to project our moral influence
on
the course of this new technology. That by stepping aside we are
giving up
the chance to affect the outcome so it is not just a financial issue
but a
moral issue.
Cameron:
That would assume that the major areas in the emerging bio-sciences
are these unethical areas. It seems to me that is not the case.
Bio-technology will flourish within ethical constraints and it will
do very well if it sets these lines in place within which it is
permitted to flourish. It is really no different than we’ve
done with medicine always. I mean, we have the FDA along with other
things. We’ve always taken the view that there have to be
ethical practices and policy, and that is all we are talking about
doing in biotech. The stakes are higher but the principles are the
same. The converse logic seems to me to have no logic at all. If
you take the view that we should be doing these bad things to set
an examples around the world to stop even worse things from happening
I think people will come back and say you are already doing bad
things that you acknowledge to be bad things, who are you to teach
us that these worse things shouldn’t be done. I think the
most articulate alternative view is coming from the People’s
Republic of China.
tts:
What is it?
Cameron:
That anything goes. They have a huge investment in biotech,
recognizing that the West may be constrained from doing some of
these things
so they can take a leadership role. By and large, thankfully, we
don’t take our social policy orders from Beijing.
tts:
For those who want to take a deeper look at these issues, what would
you recommend?
Cameron:
The principal needs to be educational. Those of leadership in the
church and other social organizations need to begin to inform themselves
about these questions. There are websites they can use. I would
recommend Biotechpolicy.org, the web site of the Counsel for Biotech
Policy that I direct in Washington, and CBHD.org, the site for the
Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity in Deerfield, Illinois. And
of course here in Oakland, the Center for Bioethics and Culture
(CBC.org). These sites contain a lot of accessible material. It
is available to people with only high school biology.
The
biggest issues facing the culture today are the biotech
issues. There is a tremendous opportunity and need to provide leadership
on
these important questions.

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