National Right to
Life
What appears below is a press release issued by the National Right to Life
Committee (NRLC) in Washington, D.C., Thursday, July 11, 2002, at noon Eastern
Time.
National Right to Life Response
to Bioethics Council Report on Human Cloning
The President's Council on Bioethics today issued its report on human cloning.
The National Right to Life Committee (NRLC), the nation's major pro-life
organization, issued the following statement, which may be attributed to Douglas
Johnson, legislative director:
Senators Feinstein, Specter, Hatch, Daschle, and others are pushing for
legislation that would authorize the cloning of human embryos and make the FBI
responsible for enforcing a 14-day deadline for killing them. Any senator who
votes for this clone-to-kill bill would be directly repudiating the Council's
majority recommendation, which is to ban all cloning of human embryos for at
least four years. Any such senator would also be rejecting the position of the
61% of the public who, in a May Gallup poll, opposed "cloning of human embryos
for medical research."
We strongly favor a permanent ban on all human cloning, such as the House has
passed and President Bush supports. However, we could support legislation to
temporarily ban human cloning, but such a moratorium should apply equally to
human cloning for any purpose.
We welcome the Council's rejection, apparently unanimous, of attempts by the
pro-cloning advocacy groups to deceive the public into believing that cloning
human embryos is not really "cloning" or does not really produce "human
embryos." (For example, on June 14 Senator Feinstein said on the Senate floor
that the bill she supports would permit research on what she called
"unfertilized eggs" up to 14 days old, and she even asserted that an
"unfertilized egg is not capable of becoming a human being.") The Council
declares that somatic cell nuclear transfer using human genetic material is
indeed "human cloning," and indeed produces a "human embryo" – not merely
"cells" or "stem cells" as some journalists have recently written.
In short, the Council implicitly repudiates the rhetorical evasions of many
senators who say that they favor a "ban on human cloning," when they actually
support the cloning of human embryos and what the Council report refers to as
"embryo cultivation."
Key documents on human cloning, including the Justice Department's May 15
testimony explaining the enforcement implications of the bill that would ban
only cloning-for-birth and President Bush's April 10 speech in favor of a
complete ban on human cloning, are posted on the National Right to Life
Committee website at
www.nrlc.org/Killing_Embryos/Index.html