2003 Ron Paul 26:1
Mr. PAUL. Mr. Speaker, these words are from Frederic Bastiats The Law. They are
prophetic, not only in the way they describe
legislators attempts to transform society
through socialized economic planning, but also
in the analogy to the current moral issue before
us today: human cloning.
2003 Ron Paul 26:2
Human life begins at conception. This fact is not a matter of faith. Every contemporary textbook
of human embryology teaches that the
life of the new individual human being begins
at fertilization. When an embryo is cloned, a
distinct human being is created: if implanted
into a womans uterus, he or she grows into
a human being. Those who deny the humanity
of the embryo simply deny the facts.
2003 Ron Paul 26:3
Today we see another instance of the legislator playing God, viewing himself as Bastiats
farmer or chemist. But human embryos are
not just some seeds for the farmers to
scatter! I ask those of you wishing to use taxpayer
dollars to fund human cloning: Were
you not once at this very stage of life? Is not
each of you a developed embryo? And to
those who view cloning and the accompanying
destruction of humans at the embryonic stage
of life as morally acceptable, I ask this, Are
you aware that it took 277 attempts to clone
Dolly the sheep, and when she finally was
born, she was defective and died soon after?
We must shudder to think of what this kind of
experimentation implies for humans. Many ignore
that a human is not cloned by simply
waving a magic wand — rather, embryos are
experimented upon and then discarded before
a human is created via cloning. Many prolifers
mistakenly attack the act of cloning,
when what they should address is the discarding
of humans at the embryonic stage of
development that precedes the act of cloning.
2003 Ron Paul 26:4
Today we have before us a bill that attempts to protect innocent human life from legislators
wishing to exploit it. Though well intentioned,
Congress does not have authority
under the Constitution to create a federal law
banning cloning and the accompanying destruction
of human life. The separation and
enumeration of powers reserves to the states
and local governments the power to write and
enforce laws that protect life. If this bill instead
were introduced as a constitutional amendment
banning the destruction and discarding
of human embryos, it would both accomplish
its purpose and, equally important, hold to the
letter of the law.
2003 Ron Paul 26:5
In Congress we can either pass an unconstitutional ban on cloning, or we can abide by
the law and not pass the ban, as bureaucrats
continue to have control over human cloning
and use of taxpayer funds to destroy human
life. These bureaucrats seem to have no difficulty
violating the consciences of those who
recognize cloning experimentation for what it
is. What is to be done? I fear the answer to
this question, and its implications, will continue
to haunt us in the months and years to come,
whether or not this federal ban on human
cloning passes. Mr. Speaker, when we last
considered this issue I placed the following
statement in the RECORD and wish to do so
once again.
2003 Ron Paul 26:6
Mr. PAUL. Mr. Speaker, today were being asked to choose between two options dealing
with the controversies surrounding cloning
and stem cell research. As an obstetrician
gynecologist with 30 years of experience with
strong pro-life convictions I find this debate
regarding stem cell research and human
cloning offtrack, dangerous, and missing
some very important points. This debate is
one of the most profound ethical issues of all
times. It has moral, religious, legal, and ethical
overtones. However, this debate is as
must about process as it is the problem we
are trying to solve.
2003 Ron Paul 26:7
This dilemma demonstrates so clearly why difficult problems like this are made much
more complex when we accept the notion
that a powerful centralized state should provide
the solution, while assuming it can be
done precisely and without offending either
side, which is a virtual impossibility.
2003 Ron Paul 26:8
Centralized governments solutions inevitably compound the problem were trying to
solve. The solution is always found to be offensive
to those on the losing side of the debate.
It requires that the loser contribute
through tax payments to implement the particular
program and ignores the unintended
consequences that arise. Mistakes are nationalized
when we depend on Presidential
orders or a new federal law. The assumption
that either one is capable of quickly resolving
complex issues is unfounded. We are now
obsessed with finding a quick fix for this difficult
problem.
2003 Ron Paul 26:9
Since federal funding has already been used to promote much of the research that
has inspired cloning technology, no one can
be sure that voluntary funds would have
been spent in the same manner. There are
many shortcomings of cloning and I predict
there are more to come. Private funds may
well have flowed much more slowly into this
research than when the government/taxpayer
does the funding. The notion that one person,
i.e., the President, by issuing a President
order can instantly stop or start major
research is frightening. Likewise, the U.S.
Congress is no more likely to do the right
thing than the President by rushing to pass
a new federal law. Political wisdom in dealing
with highly charged and emotional issues
is not likely to be found.
2003 Ron Paul 26:10
The idea that the taxpayer must fund controversial decisions, whether it be stem cell
research, or performing abortion overseas, I
find repugnant. The original concept of the
republic was much more suited to sort out
the pros and cons of such a difficult issue. It
did so with the issue of capital punishment.
It did so, until 1973, with the issue of abortion.
As with many other issues it has done
the same but now unfortunately, most difficult
problems are nationalized.
2003 Ron Paul 26:11
Decentralized decision making and privatized funding would have gone a long
way in preventing the highly charged emotional
debate going on today regarding
cloning and stem cell research.
2003 Ron Paul 26:12
There is danger in a blanket national prohibition of some questionable research in an
effort to protect what is perceived as legitimate
research. Too often there are unintended
consequences. National legalization
of cloning and financing discredits life and
insults those who are forced to pay. Even a
national law prohibiting cloning legitimizes
national approach that can later be used to
undermine this original intent. This national
approach rules out states from passing any
meaningful legislation and regulation on
these issues.
2003 Ron Paul 26:13
There are some medical questions not yet resolved and careless legislation may impede
legitimate research and use of fetal tissue.
For instance, should a spontaneously aborted
fetus, non-viable, not be used for stem cell
research or organ transplant? Should a live
fetus from an ectopic pregnancy removed
and generally discarded not be used in research?
How is a spontaneous abortion of an
embryo or fetus different from an embryo
conceived in a dish?
2003 Ron Paul 26:14
Being pro-life and pro-research makes the question profound and I might say best not
answered by political demagogues, executive
orders or emotional hype. How do problems
like this get resolved in a free society where
government power is strictly limited and
kept local? Not easily, and not perfectly, but
I am confident it would be much better than
through centralized and arbitrary authority
initiated by politicians responding to emotional
arguments. For a free society to function,
the moral standards of the people are
crucial. Personal morality, local laws, and
medical ethics should prevail in dealing with
a subject such as this. This law, the government,
the bureaucrats, the politicians cant
make the people more moral in making
these judgments.
2003 Ron Paul 26:15
Laws inevitably reflect the morality or immorality of the people. The Supreme Court
did not usher in the 60s revolution that undermined
the respect for all human life and
liberty. Instead, the peoples attitude of the
60s led to the Supreme Court Roe vs. Wade
ruling in 1973 and contributed to a steady
erosion of personal liberty. If a centralized
government is incapable of doing the right
thing, what happens when the people embrace
immorality and offer no voluntary ethical
approach to difficult questions such as
cloning? The government then takes over
and predictably makes things much worse.
The government cannot instill morality in
the people. An apathetic and immoral society
inspires centralized, rigid answers while
the many consequences to come are ignored.
Unfortunately, once centralized government
takes charge, the real victim becomes personal
liberty.
2003 Ron Paul 26:16
What can be done? The first step Congress should take is to stop all funding of research
for cloning and other controversial issues.
Obviously all research in a free society
should be done privately, thus preventing
this type of problem. If this policy were to be
followed, instead of less funding being available
for research, there would actually be
more.
2003 Ron Paul 26:17
Second, the President should issue no Executive Order because under the Constitution
he does not have the authority either to
promote or stop any particular research nor
does the Congress. And third, there should be
no sacrifice of life. Local law officials are responsible
for protecting life or should not
participate in its destruction. We should continue
the ethical debate and hope that the
medical leaders would voluntarily do the
self-policing that is required in a moral society.
Local laws, under the Constitution,
could be written and the reasonable ones
could then set the standard for the rest of
the nation.
2003 Ron Paul 26:18
This problem regarding cloning and stem cell research has been made much worse by
the federal government involved, both by the
pro and con forces in dealing with the federal
governments involvement in embryonic research.
The problem may be that a moral society
does not exist, rather than a lack of
federal laws or federal police. We need no
more federal mandates to deal with difficult
issues that for the most part were made
worse by previous government mandates.
2003 Ron Paul 26:19
If the problem is that our society lacks moral standards and governments cant impose
moral standards, hardly will this effort
to write more laws solve this perplexing and
intriguing question regarding the cloning of
a human being and stem cell research. Neither
option offered today regarding cloning
provides a satisfactory solution. Unfortunately,
the real issue is being ignored.