OK, so here in New Jersey, Governor McGreevey is trying to open up stem cell research. This is all very well and good, and I think it has enormous potential, but it’s kind of silly, since federal legislation has already thrown a monkey wrench in the works. It does, however, bring up all kinds of questions about the nature of hypocrisy in this country. It amazes me that “devout” people will oppose it because it involves destruction of a small number of cells that could, under the right circumstances, become a human being. So, where’s the uproar about the same type of cells that are destroyed without positive result after chemical fertility treatments and in-vitro fertilization? It seems to me that it’s even more sinful to create bunches of ova that might never be fertilized, ova that will be fertilized but never implant or spontaneously abort, or fertilized ova that will be kept frozen until they’re discarded or rot. How can abortion, IUDs, morning after pills, and stem cell research be against God’s will, but when devout infertile couples turn to science, destroying eggs for no reason other than their own egomaniacal desire to continue their line (which, if it were really God’s will, wouldn’t need intervention) it becomes. . .well, God’s will.
OK, and since I’m on a tear here, why is abortion wrong, but capital punishment right? Why is one religious state that forces compliance on nonbelievers any better than another religious state that forces compliance on nonbelievers? (I’m getting impressions of Margaret Atwood’s “A Handmaid’s Tale” here. . .) If life begins at conception, is it really a good thing to keep human souls trapped frozen in a multicellular frozen state rather than set them free if they’re not going to be implanted in a human womb? If it’s a good thing to donate your body parts (not just for science, either – read Mary Roach’s “Stiff” for some perhaps less appealing but equally beneficial ways your remains can benefit humanity) then why is it bad to let your frozen embryos that will never be born, or your miscarried or aborted fetuses, become materials for research that will benefit humanity? (Current legislation prohibits all of these, not just deliberate therapeutic cloning.)
I just think that the world would be way better if people who spoke out in national public forums, people who make laws, people who make news, heck, everyone in general, thought about hypocrisy when they made blanket statements – maybe even apologized when they were called on it, rather than the more childish tack of elaborating their statements to cover their behinds (as a Mom, I can tell you that is >so< easy to see through!) Before you’re ready to tell everyone to be like you, make sure you’re not really saying “Do as I say, not as I do.”